Kosmann lift
In differential geometry, the Kosmann lift,[1][2][3] named after Yvette Kosmann-Schwarzbach, of a vector field on a Riemannian manifold is the canonical projection on the orthonormal frame bundle of its natural lift defined on the bundle of linear frames.[4]
Generalisations exist for any given reductive G-structure.
Introduction
In general, given a subbundle of a fiber bundle over and a vector field on , its restriction to is a vector field "along" not on (i.e., tangent to) . If one denotes by the canonical embedding, then is a section of the pullback bundle , where
and is the tangent bundle of the fiber bundle . Let us assume that we are given a Kosmann decomposition of the pullback bundle , such that
i.e., at each one has where is a vector subspace of and we assume to be a vector bundle over , called the transversal bundle of the Kosmann decomposition. It follows that the restriction to splits into a tangent vector field on and a transverse vector field being a section of the vector bundle
Definition
Let be the oriented orthonormal frame bundle of an oriented -dimensional Riemannian manifold with given metric . This is a principal -subbundle of , the tangent frame bundle of linear frames over with structure group . By definition, one may say that we are given with a classical reductive -structure. The special orthogonal group is a reductive Lie subgroup of . In fact, there exists a direct sum decomposition , where is the Lie algebra of , is the Lie algebra of , and is the -invariant vector subspace of symmetric matrices, i.e. for all
Let be the canonical embedding.
One then can prove that there exists a canonical Kosmann decomposition of the pullback bundle such that
i.e., at each one has being the fiber over of the subbundle of . Here, is the vertical subbundle of and at each the fiber is isomorphic to the vector space of symmetric matrices .
From the above canonical and equivariant decomposition, it follows that the restriction of an -invariant vector field on to splits into a -invariant vector field on , called the Kosmann vector field associated with , and a transverse vector field .
In particular, for a generic vector field on the base manifold , it follows that the restriction to of its natural lift onto splits into a -invariant vector field on , called the Kosmann lift of , and a transverse vector field .
See also
- Frame bundle
- Orthonormal frame bundle
- Principal bundle
- Spin bundle
- Connection (mathematics)
- G-structure
- Spin manifold
- Spin structure
Notes
- ↑ Fatibene L., Ferraris M., Francaviglia M. and Godina M. (1996), A geometric definition of Lie derivative for Spinor Fields, in: Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Differential Geometry and Applications, August 28th–September 1st 1995 (Brno, Czech Republic), Janyska J., Kolář I. & J. Slovák J. (Eds.), Masaryk University, Brno, pp. 549–558
- ↑ Godina M. and Matteucci P. (2003), Reductive G-structures and Lie derivatives, Journal of Geometry and Physics 47, 66–86
- ↑ Fatibene L. and Francaviglia M. (2011), General theory of Lie derivatives for Lorentz tensors, Communications in Mathematics 19, 11–25
- ↑ Kobayashi, Shoshichi; Nomizu, Katsumi (1996), Foundations of Differential Geometry, Vol. 1, Wiley-Interscience, ISBN 0-470-49647-9 (Example 5.2) pp. 55-56
References
- Kobayashi, Shoshichi; Nomizu, Katsumi (1996), Foundations of Differential Geometry, Vol. 1 (New ed.), Wiley-Interscience, ISBN 0-471-15733-3
- Kolář, Ivan; Michor, Peter; Slovák, Jan (1993), Natural operators in differential geometry (PDF), Springer-Verlag
- Sternberg, S. (1983), Lectures on Differential Geometry (2nd ed.), New York: Chelsea Publishing Co., ISBN 0-8218-1385-4
- Fatibene, Lorenzo; Francaviglia, Mauro (2003), Natural and Gauge Natural Formalism for Classical Field Theories, Kluwer Academic Publishers, ISBN 978-1-4020-1703-2