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Natural bundle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In differential geometry, a field in mathematics, a natural bundle is any fiber bundle associated to the s-frame bundle for some . It turns out that its transition functions depend functionally on local changes of coordinates in the base manifold together with their partial derivatives up to order at most .[1]

The concept of a natural bundle was introduced by Albert Nijenhuis as a modern reformulation of the classical concept of an arbitrary bundle of geometric objects.[2]

Definition

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Let denote the category of smooth manifolds and smooth maps and the category of smooth -dimensional manifolds and local diffeomorphisms. Consider also the category of fibred manifolds and bundle morphisms, and the functor associating to any fibred manifold its base manifold.

A natural bundle (or bundle functor) is a functor satisfying the following three properties:

  1. , i.e. is a fibred manifold over , with projection denoted by ;
  2. if is an open submanifold, with inclusion map , then coincides with , and is the inclusion ;
  3. for any smooth map such that is a local diffeomorphism for every , then the function is smooth.

As a consequence of the first condition, one has a natural transformation .

Finite order natural bundles

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A natural bundle is called of finite order if, for every local diffeomorphism and every point , the map depends only on the jet . Equivalently, for every local diffeomorphisms and every point , one hasNatural bundles of order coincide with the associated fibre bundles to the -th order frame bundles .

A classical result by Epstein and Thurston shows that all natural bundles have finite order.[3]

Examples

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An example of natural bundle (of first order) is the tangent bundle of a manifold .

Other examples include the cotangent bundles, the bundles of metrics of signature and the bundle of linear connections.[4]

Notes

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  1. ^ Palais, Richard; Terng, Chuu-Lian (1977), "Natural bundles have finite order", Topology, 16: 271–277, doi:10.1016/0040-9383(77)90008-8, hdl:10338.dmlcz/102222
  2. ^ A. Nijenhuis (1972), Natural bundles and their general properties, Tokyo: Diff. Geom. in Honour of K. Yano, pp. 317–334
  3. ^ Epstein, D. B. A.; Thurston, W. P. (1979). "Transformation Groups and Natural Bundles". Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. s3-38 (2): 219–236. doi:10.1112/plms/s3-38.2.219.
  4. ^ Fatibene, Lorenzo; Francaviglia, Mauro (2003). Natural and Gauge Natural Formalism for Classical Field Theorie. Springer. doi:10.1007/978-94-017-2384-8. ISBN 978-1-4020-1703-2.

References

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