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DifferentialForm
A differential form is a concept used in calculus, specifically in the field of differential geometry and multivariable calculus. It provides a unified approach to define integrals of functions over curves, surfaces, volumes, and higher-dimensional manifolds.
Before delving into the details, let's set up some notations and conventions. Suppose we're working in a smooth manifold
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Tangent Space: The tangent space at
$p$ , denoted$T_pM$ , is the vector space of all tangent vectors at$p$ . The dimension of$T_pM$ is the same as that of$M$ . -
Cotangent Space: The cotangent space at
$p$ , denoted$T^*_pM$ , is the dual space of$T_pM$ . It consists of all linear maps from$T_pM$ to the real numbers$\mathbb{R}$ . It is also a vector space of the same dimension as$M$ .
A differential form on
Specifically, a differential 1-form is a smooth function that assigns to every point
In coordinates
where
A differential
In coordinates, a differential
where
The set of all
The exterior derivative is an operation
- Linearity:
and
- Leibniz rule (product rule):
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$d^2 = 0$ : applying$d$ twice gives the zero map.
Differential forms, along with the exterior derivative, form the basis for de Rham cohomology, a topological invariant of manifolds. Integral calculus on manifolds, including the fundamental theorem of calculus, Stokes' theorem, and others, can be formulated in terms of differential forms.