algebraic topology – application of higher algebra and higher category theory to the study of (stable) homotopy theory
group cohomology, nonabelian group cohomology, Lie group cohomology
cohomology with constant coefficients / with a local system of coefficients
differential cohomology
The Euler class (or ) is a characteristic class of the special orthogonal group, hence of oriented real vector bundles.
The Euler class of the tangent bundle of a smooth manifold , evaluated on its fundamental class, is its Euler characteristic .
For a vector bundle of even rank , the cup product of the Euler class with itself equals the th Pontryagin class
(e.g. Walschap 04, Section 6.3, p. 187)
When the Euler class is represented by the Euler form of a connection on , which then is fiber-wise proportional to the Pfaffian of the curvature form of , the relation (1) corresponds to the fact that the product of a Pfaffian with itself is the determinant: .
(Euler class takes Whitney sum to cup product)
The Euler class of the Whitney sum of two oriented real vector bundles to the cup product of the separate Euler classes:
(e.g. Walschap 04, Section 6.4)
The top Chern class of a complex vector bundle equals the Euler class of the underlying real vector bundle :
(e.g. Bott-Tu 82 (20.10.6))
For more see at top Chern class.
We spell out the formulas for the images under the Chern-Weil homomorphism of the Chern classes, Pontrjagin classes and Euler classes as characteristic forms over smooth manifolds.
Let be a smooth manifold.
Write
for the commutative algebra over the real numbers of even-degree differential forms on , under the wedge product of differential forms. This is naturally a graded commutative algebra, graded by form degree, but since we consider only forms in even degree it is actually a plain commutative algebra, too, after forgetting the grading.
Let be a semisimple Lie algebra (such as or ) with Lie algebra representation over the complex numbers of finite dimension (for instance the adjoint representation or the fundamental representation), hence a homomorphism of Lie algebras
to the linear endomorphism ring , regarded here through its commutator as the endomorphism Lie algebra of .
When regarded as an associative ring this is isomorphic to the matrix algebra of square matrices
The tensor product of the -algebras (2) and (3)
is equivalently the matrix algebra with coefficients in the complexification of even-degree differential forms:
The multiplicative unit
in this algebra is the smooth function (differential 0-forms) which is constant on the identity matrix and independent of .
Given a connection on a -principal bundle, we regard its -valued curvature form as an element of this algebra
The total Chern form is the determinant of the sum of the unit (4) with the curvature form (5), and its component in degree , for , is the th Chern form :
By the relation between determinant and trace, this is equal to the exponential of the trace of the logarithm of , this being the exponential series in the trace of the Mercator series in :
Setting in these expressions (6) yields the total Pontrjagin form with degree=-components the Pontrjagin forms :
Hence the first couple of Pontrjagin forms are
(See also, e.g., Nakahara 2003, Exp. 11.5)
For and with the curvature form again regarded as a 2-form valued -square matrix
the Euler form is its Pfaffian of this matrix, hence the following sum over permutations with summands signed by the the signature :
The first of these is, using the Einstein summation convention and the Levi-Civita symbol:
(See also, e.g., Nakahara 2003, Exp. 11.7)
Let be a smooth manifold and an oriented real vector bundle of even rank, .
For any choice of connection on (-connection), let denote the corresponding Euler form.
Then the pullback of the Euler form to the unit sphere bundle is exact
such that the trivializing form has (minus) unit integral over any of the (2k+1)-sphere-fibers :
(e.g. Walschap 04, Chapter 6.6, Thm. 6.1, p. 201-202, Poor 07, 3.68, Nie 09)
Let
be the spherical fibration of classifying spaces induced from the canonical inclusion of Spin(4) into Spin(5) and using that the 4-sphere is equivalently the coset space (this Prop.).
Then the fiber integration of the odd cup powers of the Euler class (see this Prop) are proportional to cup powers of the second Pontryagin class
for instance
while the fiber integration of the even cup powers vanishes
Raoul Bott, Loring Tu, Chapter 11 of Differential Forms in Algebraic Topology, Graduate Texts in Mathematics 82, Springer 1982 (doi:10.1007/BFb0063500)
Allen Hatcher, Euler and Pontryagin classes, section 3.2 in Vector bundles and K-theory (pdf)
Anant R. Shastri, section 2.1 of Vector bundles and Characteristic Classes (pdf)
Michael Hutchings, section 5 of Cup product and intersections (pdf)
Gerard Walschap, chapter 6.3 of: Metric Structures in Differential Geometry, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, Springer 2004 (doi:10.1007/978-0-387-21826-7)
Discussion of fiber integration:
Discussion for projective modules
See also
Wikipedia Euler class
Robert F. Brown, On the Lefschetz number and the Euler class, Transactions of the AMS 118, (1965) (JSTOR)
Solomon Jekel, A simplicial formula and bound for the Euler class, Israel Journal of Mathematics 66, n. 1-3, 247-259 (1989)
Discussion of Euler forms (differential form-representatives of Euler classes in de Rham cohomology) as Pfaffians of curvature forms:
Shiing-Shen Chern, A Simple Intrinsic Proof of the Gauss-Bonnet Formula for Closed Riemannian Manifolds, Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, Vol. 45, No. 4 (1944), pp. 747-752 (jstor:1969302)
Raoul Bott, Loring Tu, Chapter 11 of Differential Forms in Algebraic Topology, Graduate Texts in Mathematics 82, Springer 1982 (doi:10.1007/BFb0063500)
Varghese Mathai, Daniel Quillen, below (7.3) of Superconnections, Thom classes, and equivariant differential forms, Topology Volume 25, Issue 1, 1986 (10.1016/0040-9383(86)90007-8)
Mikio Nakahara, Section 11.4.2 of: Geometry, Topology and Physics, IOP 2003 (doi:10.1201/9781315275826, pdf)
Siye Wu, Section 2.2 of Mathai-Quillen Formalism, pages 390-399 in Encyclopedia of Mathematical Physics 2006 (arXiv:hep-th/0505003)
Walter A. Poor, 3.58 of Differential Geometric Structures, Dover Books on Mathematics, 2007
Zhaohu Nie, Secondary Chern-Euler forms and the Law of Vector Fields (arXiv:0909.4754
Hiro Lee Tanaka, Pfaffians and the Euler class, 2014 (pdf)
Liviu Nicolaescu, Section 8.3.2 of Lectures on the Geometry of Manifolds, 2018 (pdf, MO comment)
Last revised on October 7, 2023 at 09:06:03. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.