Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Connection (fibred manifold)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit

In differential geometry, a fibered manifold is surjective submersion of smooth manifolds YX. Locally trivial fibered manifolds are fiber bundles. Therefore, a notion of connection on fibered manifolds provides a general framework of a connection on fiber bundles.

Contents

Formal definition

Let π : YX be a fibered manifold. A generalized connection on Y is a section Γ : Y → J1Y, where J1Y is the jet manifold of Y.

Connection as a horizontal splitting

With the above manifold π there is the following canonical short exact sequence of vector bundles over Y:

where TY and TX are the tangent bundles of Y, respectively, VY is the vertical tangent bundle of Y, and Y ×X TX is the pullback bundle of TX onto Y.

A connection on a fibered manifold YX is defined as a linear bundle morphism

over Y which splits the exact sequence 1. A connection always exists.

Sometimes, this connection Γ is called the Ehresmann connection because it yields the horizontal distribution

H Y = Γ ( Y × X T X ) T Y

of TY and its horizontal decomposition TY = VY ⊕ HY.

At the same time, by an Ehresmann connection also is meant the following construction. Any connection Γ on a fibered manifold YX yields a horizontal lift Γ ∘ τ of a vector field τ on X onto Y, but need not defines the similar lift of a path in X into Y. Let

R [ , ] t x ( t ) X R t y ( t ) Y

be two smooth paths in X and Y, respectively. Then ty(t) is called the horizontal lift of x(t) if

π ( y ( t ) ) = x ( t ) , y ˙ ( t ) H Y , t R .

A connection Γ is said to be the Ehresmann connection if, for each path x([0,1]) in X, there exists its horizontal lift through any point yπ−1(x([0,1])). A fibered manifold is a fiber bundle if and only if it admits such an Ehresmann connection.

Connection as a tangent-valued form

Given a fibered manifold YX, let it be endowed with an atlas of fibered coordinates (xμ, yi), and let Γ be a connection on YX. It yields uniquely the horizontal tangent-valued one-form

on Y which projects onto the canonical tangent-valued form (tautological one-form or solder form)

θ X = d x μ μ

on X, and vice versa. With this form, the horizontal splitting 2 reads

Γ : λ λ Γ = λ + Γ λ i i .

In particular, the connection Γ in 3 yields the horizontal lift of any vector field τ = τμμ on X to a projectable vector field

Γ τ = τ Γ = τ λ ( λ + Γ λ i i ) H Y

on Y.

Connection as a vertical-valued form

The horizontal splitting 2 of the exact sequence 1 defines the corresponding splitting of the dual exact sequence

0 Y × X T X T Y V Y 0 ,

where T*Y and T*X are the cotangent bundles of Y, respectively, and V*YY is the dual bundle to VYY, called the vertical cotangent bundle. This splitting is given by the vertical-valued form

Γ = ( d y i Γ λ i d x λ ) i ,

which also represents a connection on a fibered manifold.

Treating a connection as a vertical-valued form, one comes to the following important construction. Given a fibered manifold YX, let f : X′ → X be a morphism and fYX the pullback bundle of Y by f. Then any connection Γ 3 on YX induces the pullback connection

f Γ = ( d y i ( Γ f ~ ) λ i f λ x μ d x μ ) i

on fYX.

Connection as a jet bundle section

Let J1Y be the jet manifold of sections of a fibered manifold YX, with coordinates (xμ, yi, yi
μ
)
. Due to the canonical imbedding

J 1 Y Y ( Y × X T X ) Y T Y , ( y μ i ) d x μ ( μ + y μ i i ) ,

any connection Γ 3 on a fibered manifold YX is represented by a global section

Γ : Y J 1 Y , y λ i Γ = Γ λ i ,

of the jet bundle J1YY, and vice versa. It is an affine bundle modelled on a vector bundle

There are the following corollaries of this fact.

Curvature and torsion

Given the connection Γ 3 on a fibered manifold YX, its curvature is defined as the Nijenhuis differential

R = 1 2 d Γ Γ = 1 2 [ Γ , Γ ] F N = 1 2 R λ μ i d x λ d x μ i , R λ μ i = λ Γ μ i μ Γ λ i + Γ λ j j Γ μ i Γ μ j j Γ λ i .

This is a vertical-valued horizontal two-form on Y.

Given the connection Γ 3 and the soldering form σ 5, a torsion of Γ with respect to σ is defined as

T = d Γ σ = ( λ σ μ i + Γ λ j j σ μ i j Γ λ i σ μ j ) d x λ d x μ i .

Bundle of principal connections

Let π : PM be a principal bundle with a structure Lie group G. A principal connection on P usually is described by a Lie algebra-valued connection one-form on P. At the same time, a principal connection on P is a global section of the jet bundle J1PP which is equivariant with respect to the canonical right action of G in P. Therefore, it is represented by a global section of the quotient bundle C = J1P/GM, called the bundle of principal connections. It is an affine bundle modelled on the vector bundle VP/GM whose typical fiber is the Lie algebra g of structure group G, and where G acts on by the adjoint representation. There is the canonical imbedding of C to the quotient bundle TP/G which also is called the bundle of principal connections.

Given a basis {em} for a Lie algebra of G, the fiber bundle C is endowed with bundle coordinates (xμ, am
μ
)
, and its sections are represented by vector-valued one-forms

A = d x λ ( λ + a λ m e m ) ,

where

a λ m d x λ e m

are the familiar local connection forms on M.

Let us note that the jet bundle J1C of C is a configuration space of Yang–Mills gauge theory. It admits the canonical decomposition

a λ μ r = 1 2 ( F λ μ r + S λ μ r ) = 1 2 ( a λ μ r + a μ λ r c p q r a λ p a μ q ) + 1 2 ( a λ μ r a μ λ r + c p q r a λ p a μ q ) ,

where

F = 1 2 F λ μ m d x λ d x μ e m

is called the strength form of a principal connection.

References

Connection (fibred manifold) Wikipedia