User:Silly rabbit/Sandbox/Torsion tensor

Torsion along a geodesic.

In differential geometry, the notion of torsion is a manner of characterizing a twist or screw of a moving frame around a curve. The torsion of a curve, as it appears in the Frenet-Serret formulas, for instance, quantifies the twist of a curve about its tangent vector as the curve evolves (or rather the rotation of the Frenet-Serret frame about the tangent vector.) In the geometry of surfaces, the geodesic torsion describes how a surface twists about a curve on the surface. The companion notion of curvature measures how moving frames "roll" along a curve "without twisting."

More generally, on a differentiable manifold equipped with an affine connection (that is, a connection in the tangent bundle), torsion — together with curvature — form the two fundamental invariants of the connection. In this context, torsion gives an intrinsic characterization of how tangent spaces twist about a curve when they are parallel transported; whereas curvature describes how the tangent spaces roll along the curve. Torsion may be described concretely as a tensor, or as a vector-valued two-form on the manifold. If ∇ is an affine connection on a differential manifold, then the torsion tensor is defined, in terms of vector fields X and Y, by

where [X,Y] is the Lie bracket of vector fields.

Torsion is particularly useful in the study of the geometry of geodesics. Given a system of parametrized geodesics, one can specify a class of affine connections having those geodesics, but differing by their torsions. There is a unique connection which absorbs the torsion, generalizing the Levi-Civita connection to other, possibly non-metric situations (such as Finsler geometry.) Absorption of torsion also plays a fundamental role in the study of G-structures and Cartan's equivalence method. Torsion is also useful in the study of unparametrized families of geodesics, via the associated projective connection. In relativity theory, such ideas have been implemented in the form of Einstein-Cartan theory.

The torsion tensor edit

Let M be a manifold with a connection ∇ on the tangent bundle. The torsion tensor (sometimes called the Cartan (torsion) tensor) is a vector-valued 2-form defined on vector fields X and Y by

 

where [X,Y] is the Lie bracket of two vector fields. By the Leibniz rule, T(fX,Y) = T(X,fY) = fT(X,Y) for any smooth function f. So T is tensorial, despite being defined in terms of the non-tensorial covariant derivative: it gives a 2-form on tangent vectors, while the covariant derivative is only defined for vector fields.

Curvature and the Bianchi identities edit

The curvature tensor of ∇ is a mapping TM ∧ TM → End(TM) defined on vector fields X, Y, and Z by

 

Note that, for vectors at a point, this definition is independent of how the vectors are extended to vector fields away from the point (thus it defines a tensor, much like the torsion).

The Bianchi identities relate the curvature and torsion as follows.[1] Let   denote the cyclic sum over X, Y, and Z. For instance,

 

Then the following identities hold

1. Bianchi's first identity:

 

2. Bianchi's second identity:

 

Components of the torsion tensor edit

The components of the torsion tensor   in terms of a local basis of sections (e1, ..., en) of the tangent bundle can be derived by setting X=ei, Y=ej and by introducing the commutator coefficients γkijek := [ei,ej]. The components of the torsion are then

 

If the basis is holonomic then the Lie brackets vanish,  . So  . In particular (see below) while the geodesic equations determine the symmetric part of the connection, the torsion tensor determines the antisymmetric part.

The torsion form edit

The torsion form, an alternative characterization of torsion, applies to the frame bundle FM of the manifold M. This principal bundle is equipped with a connection form ω, a gl(n)-valued one-form which maps vertical vectors to the generators of the right action in gl(n) and is equivariantly intertwines the the right action of GL(n) on the tangent bundle of FM with the adjoint representation on gl(n). The frame bundle also carries a canonical one-form θ, with values in Rn, defined at a frame u ∈ FxM (regarded as a linear function u : Rn → TxM) by

 

where π : FMM is the projection mapping for the principal bundle. The torsion form is then

 

Equivalently, Θ = Dθ, where D is the exterior covariant derivative determined by the connection.

The torsion form is a (horizontal) tensorial form with values in Rn, meaning that under the right action of g ∈ Gl(n) it transforms equivariantly:

 

where g acts on the right-hand side through its fundamental representation on Rn.

The curvature form and Bianchi identities edit

The curvature form is the gl(n)-valued 2-form

 

where, again, D denotes the exterior covariant derivative. In terms of the curvature form and torsion form, the corresponding Bianchi identities are[2]

  1.  
  2.  

Moreover, one can recover the curvature and torsion tensors from the curvature and torsion forms as follows. At a point u of FxM, one has[3]

 
 

where again u : Rn → TxM is the function specifying the frame in the fibre, and the choice of lift of the vectors via π−1 is irrelevant since the curvature and torsion forms are horizontal (they vanish on the ambiguous vertical vectors).

Torsion form in a frame edit

The torsion form may be expressed in terms of a connection form on the base manifold M, written in a particular frame of the tangent bundle (e1,...,en). The connection form expresses the exterior covariant derivative of these basic sections:

 

The solder form for the tangent bundle (relative to this frame) is the dual basis θi ∈ T*M of the ei, so that θi(ej) = δij (the Kronecker delta.) Then the torsion 2-form has components

 

In the rightmost expression,

 

are the frame-components of the torsion tensor, as given in the previous definition.

It can be easily shown that Θi transforms tensorially in the sense that if a different frame

 

for some invertible matrix-valued function (gij), then

 

In other terms, Θ is a tensor of type (1,2) (carrying one contravariant and two covariant indices).

Alternatively, the solder form can be characterized in a frame-independent fashion as the TM-valued one-form θ on M corresponding to the identity endomorphism of the tangent bundle under the duality isomorphism End(TM) ≈ TM ⊗ T*M. Then the torsion two-form is a section of

 

given by

 

where D is the exterior covariant derivative. (See connection form for further details.)

Characterizations and interpretations edit

Throughout this section, M is assumed to be a differentiable manifold, and ∇ a covariant derivative on the tangent bundle of M unless otherwise noted.

Affine developments edit

Suppose that xt is a curve in M. The affine development of xt is the unique curve Ct in Tx0M such that

 

where

 

is the parallel transport associated to ∇.

In particular, if xt is a closed loop, then Ct may or may not also be closed depending on the torsion of the connection. Thus the torsion is interpreted as a screw dislocation of the development of a curve. In this way, the torsion is associated with a translational component to the holonomy of the connection. The companion notion of curvature represents an infinitesimal linear transformation (or a rotation in the case of a Riemannian connection.)

Twisting of reference frames edit

In the classical differential geometry of curves, the Frenet-Serret formulas describe how a particular moving frame (the Frenet-Serret frame) twists along a curve. In physical terms, the torsion corresponds to the angular momentum of an idealized top pointing along the tangent of the curve.

In the general case, suppose that an observer is moving along a geodesic for the connection. Such an observer is ordinarily thought of as inertial since she experiences no acceleration. But suppose that the observer also carries with herself a system of measuring rods (a coordinate system). The fact that these rods are physically carried along the trajectory means that they are Lie-dragged, or propagated so that the Lie derivative of each rod along the tangent vanishes. They may, however, experience torque (or torsional forces) analogous to the torque felt by the top in the Frenet-Serret frame. This force is measured by the torsion.

This interpretation of torsion plays a role in the theory of teleparallelism, also known as Einstein-Cartan theory, an alternative formulation of relativity theory.

The torsion of a filament edit

In materials science, and especially elasticity theory, ideas of torsion also play an important role. One problem[4] models the growth of vines, focusing on the question of how vines manage to twist around objects. The vine itself is modeled as a pair of elastic filaments twisted around one another. In its energy-minimizing state, the vine naturally grows in the shape of a helix. But the vine may also be stretched out to minimize its length. In this case, the torsion of the vine is related to the torsion of the pair of filaments (or equivalently the surface torsion of the ribbon connecting the filaments), and it reflects the difference between the length-minimizing configuration of the vine and its energy-minimizing configuration.

Torsion and vorticity edit

In fluid dynamics, torsion is naturally associated to vortex lines.

Geodesics and the absorption of torsion edit

Suppose that γ(t) is a curve on M. Then γ is an affinely parametrized geodesic provided that

 

for all time t in the domain of γ. (Here the dot denotes differentiation with respect to t, which associates with γ the tangent vector pointing along it.) Each geodesic is uniquely determined by its initial tangent vector at time t=0,  .

One application of the torsion of a connection involves the geodesic spray of the connection: roughly the family of all affinely parametrized geodesics. Torsion is the ambiguity of classifying connections in terms of their geodesic sprays:

  • Two connections ∇ and ∇′ which have the same affinely parametrized geodesics (i.e., the same geodesic spray) differ only by torsion.[5]

More precisely, if X and Y are a pair of tangent vectors at pM, then let

 

be the difference of the two connections, calculated in terms of arbitrary extensions of X and Y away from p. By the Leibniz product rule, one sees that Δ does not actually depend on how X and Y' are extended (so it defines a tensor on M). Let S and A be the symmmetric and alternating parts of Δ:

 
 

Then

  •   is the difference of the torsion tensors.
  • ∇ and ∇′ define the same families of affinely parametrized geodesics if and only if S(X,Y) = 0.

In other words, the symmetric part of the difference of two connections determines whether they have the same parametrized geodesics, whereas the skew part of the difference is determined by the relative torsions of the two connections. Another consequence is:

  • Given any affine connection ∇, there is a unique torsion-free connection ∇′ with the same family of affinely parametrized geodesics.

This is a generalization of the fundamental theorem of Riemannian geometry to general affine (possibly non-metric) connections. Picking out the unique connection subordinate to a family of parametrized geodesics is known as absorption of torsion, and it is one of the stages of Cartan's equivalence method.

Notes edit

  1. ^ See Kobayashi-Nomizu (1996) Volume 1, Proposition III.5.2.
  2. ^ Kobayashi-Nomizu (1996) Volume 1, III.2.
  3. ^ Kobayashi-Nomizu (1996) Volume 1, III.5.
  4. ^ Goriely et al (2006).
  5. ^ See Spivak (1999) Volume II, Addendum 1 to Chapter 6. See also Bishop and Goldberg (1980), section 5.10.

References edit

  • Bishop, R.L. and Goldberg, S.I. (1980). Tensor analysis on manifolds. Dover.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Goriely, A., Robertson-Tessi, M., Tabor, M., Vandiver, R. (2006) Elastic growth models, BIOMAT-2006, Springer-Verlag.
  • Kobayashi, Shoshichi and Nomizu, Katsumi (1996 (New edition)). Foundations of Differential Geometry, Vol. 1 & 2. Wiley-Interscience. ISBN 0471157333. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |year= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Spivak, Michael (1999). A comprehensive introduction to differential geometry, Volume II. Houston, Texas: Publish or Perish. ISBN 0914098713.

Further reading edit

  • Nakahara M., Geometry, Topology and Physics, IoP, 2003.

See also edit

Category:Differential geometry Category:connection (mathematics)


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