Differential-geometric structure
One of the fundamental concepts in modern differential geometry including the specific structures studied in classical differential geometry. It is defined for a given differentiable manifold as a differentiable section in a fibre space
with base
associated with a certain principal bundle
or, according to another terminology, as a differentiable field of geometric objects on
. Here
is some differentiable
-space where
is the structure Lie group of the principal bundle
or, in another terminology, the representation space of the Lie group
.
If is the principal bundle of frames in the tangent space to
,
is some closed subgroup in
, and
is the homogeneous space
, the corresponding differential-geometric structure on
is called a
-structure or an infinitesimal structure of the first order. For example, if
consists of those linear transformations (elements of
) which leave an
-dimensional space in
invariant, the corresponding
-structure defines a distribution of
-dimensional subspaces on
. If
is the orthogonal group
— the subgroup of elements of
which preserve the scalar product in
—, then the
-structure is a Riemannian metric on
, i.e. the field of a positive-definite symmetric tensor
. In a similar manner, almost-complex and complex structures are special cases of
-structures on
. A generalization of the concept of a
-structure is an infinitesimal structure of order
,
(or
-structure of a higher order); here
is the principal bundle of frames of the order
on
, and
is a closed subgroup of its structure group
.
All kinds of connections (cf. Connection) are important special cases of differential-geometric structures. For instance, a connection in a principal bundle is obtained if the role of is played by the space
of some principal bundle
, and the
-structure on
is the distribution of
-dimensional,
, subspaces complementary to the tangent spaces of the fibres which is invariant with respect to the action on
of the structure group of the bundle. Connections on a manifold
are special cases of differential-geometric structures on
, but more general ones than
-structures on
. For instance, an affine connection on
, definable by a field of connection objects
, is obtained as the differential-geometric structure on
for which
is the principal bundle of frames of second order,
is its structure group
, and the representation space
of
is the space
with coordinates
, where the representation is defined by the formulas
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where
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are the coordinates of an element of the group , and
. In the case of a projective connection on
one deals with a certain representation of
in
, while in cases of connections of a higher order, one deals with representations of
. By this approach the theory of differential-geometric structures becomes closely related to the theory of geometric objects (Cf. Geometric objects, theory of).
References
[1] | O. Veblen, J.H.C. Whitehead, "The foundations of differential geometry" , Cambridge Univ. Press (1932) (Appendix by V.V. Vagner in the Russian translation) |
[2] | G.F. Laptev, "Differential geometry of imbedded manifolds. Group-theoretical method of differential geometric investigation" Trudy Moskov. Mat. Obshch. , 2 (1953) pp. 275–382 (In Russian) |
[3] | D. Husemoller, "Fibre bundles" , McGraw-Hill (1966) |
[4] | S. Sternberg, "Lectures on differential geometry" , Prentice-Hall (1964) |
Comments
References
[a1] | M. Spivak, "A comprehensive introduction to differential geometry" , 1979 , Publish or Perish (1972–1975) pp. 1–5 |
Differential-geometric structure. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Differential-geometric_structure&oldid=46661