Cotangent bundle
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In differential geometry, the cotangent bundle of a manifold is the vector bundle of all the cotangent spaces at every point in the manifold.
The cotangent sheaf
Smooth sections of the cotangent bundle are differential one-forms.
Definition of the cotangent sheaf
Let M×M be the Cartesian product of M with itself. The diagonal mapping Δ sends a point p in M to the point (p,p) of M×M. The image of Δ is called the diagonal. Let [\mathcal] be the sheaf of germs of smooth functions on M×M which vanish on the diagonal. Then the quotient sheaf [\mathcal/\mathcal^2] consists of equivalence classes of functions which vanish on the diagonal modulo higher order terms. The cotangent sheaf is the pullback of this sheaf to M:
- [\Gamma T^*M=\Delta^*(\mathcal/\mathcal^2).]
The cotangent bundle as phase space
- See main article tautological one-form for details.
The canonical one-form
The cotangent bundle carries a tautological one-form θ (usually called the canonical one-form, although this can sometimes lead to confusion). This means that if we regard T*M as a manifold in its own right, there is a canonical section of the vector bundle T*(T*M) over T*M. This section can be constructed in several ways. The most elementary method is to use local coordinates. Suppose that xi are local coordinates on the base manifold M. In terms of these base coordinates, there are fibre coordinates pi: a one-form at a particular point of T*M has the form pidxi (Einstein summation convention implied). So the manifold T*M itself caries local coordinates (xi,pi) where the x are coordinates on the base and the p are coordinates in the fibre. The canonical one-form is given in these coordinates by
- [\theta_=\sum_=1}^n p_idx^i]
- [\theta_=\pi^*\omega.]
Symplectic form
The cotangent bundle has a canonical symplectic 2-form on it, as an exterior derivative of the canonical one-form, the symplectic potential. Proving this form is, indeed, symplectic can be done by noting that being symplectic is a local property: since the cotangent bundle is locally trivial, this definition need only be checked on [\mathbb^n \times \mathbb^n]. But there the one form defined is the sum of [y_dx_i], and the differential is the canonical symplectic form, the sum of [dy_idx_i].
Phase space
If the manifold [M] represents the set of possible positions in a dynamical system, then the cotangent bundle [\!\,T^\!M] can be thought of as the set of possible positions and momenta. For example, this is a way to describe the phase space of a pendulum. The state of the pendulum is determined by its position (an angle) and its momentum (or equivalently, its velocity, since its mass is not changing). The entire state space looks like a cylinder. The cylinder is the cotangent bundle of the circle. The above symplectic construction, along with an appropriate energy function, gives a complete determination of the physics of system. See Hamiltonian mechanics for more information, and the article on geodesic flow for an explicit construction of the Hamiltonian equations of motion.
See also
References
- Jurgen Jost, Riemannian Geometry and Geometric Analysis, (2002) Springer-Verlag, Berlin ISBN 3-540-4267-2.
- Ralph Abraham and Jerrold E. Marsden, Foundations of Mechanics, (1978) Benjamin-Cummings, London ISBN 0-8053-0102-X.
- Stephanie Frank Singer, Symmetry in Mechanics: A Gentle Modern Introduction, (2001) Birkhauser, Boston.
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