synthetic differential geometry
Introductions
from point-set topology to differentiable manifolds
geometry of physics: coordinate systems, smooth spaces, manifolds, smooth homotopy types, supergeometry
Differentials
Tangency
The magic algebraic facts
Theorems
Axiomatics
Models
differential equations, variational calculus
Chern-Weil theory, ∞-Chern-Weil theory
Cartan geometry (super, higher)
equality (definitional, propositional, computational, judgemental, extensional, intensional, decidable)
identity type, equivalence of types, definitional isomorphism
isomorphism, weak equivalence, homotopy equivalence, weak homotopy equivalence, equivalence in an (∞,1)-category
Examples.
A differential equation is an equation involving terms that are derivatives (or differentials). One sometimes distinguishes partial differential equations (which involve partial derivatives) from ordinary differential equations (which don't).
Analogous to how ordinary equations determine and are determined by their spaces of solutions – the corresponding schemes – accordingly differential equations on sections of a bundle determine and are determined by their solution spaces, which are sub-D-schemes of the jet bundle D-scheme:
In fact there is an equivalence of categories between the Eilenberg-Moore category of the jet comonad over and the category of partial differential equations with variables in (Marvan 86).
At least in nice cases for differential equations on functions on this is equivalently modeled by sub-Lie algebroids of tangent Lie algebroids.
see exterior differential system for details
A perspective on differential equations from the nPOV of synthetic differential geometry is given in
William Lawvere, Toposes of laws of motion , transcript of a talk in Montreal, Sept. 1997 (pdf)
(on the description of differential equations in terms of synthetic differential geometry)
See also the appendix of
In a smooth topos with and any two objects and the abstract tangent vector, a diagram, of the form
may be read as
is a smooth function on with values in ;
whose derivative along the tangent vector …
…is the tangent vector .
Accordingly, the diagram
may be read as encoding the differential equation (at one point) whose solutions are the extensions that complete this diagram.
To get differential equations in the more common sense that they impose a condition on the derivative of at each single point of and varying smoothly with , we think of in terms of the exponential map
and consider
In this diagram now
is the adjunct of a vector field on ;
(the commutativity of the top right triangle ensures that indeed this is a section of the tangent bundle projection );
is the adjunct of a map that sends each point to a tangent vector in
(enforced by the commutativity of the left bottom triangle)
and the commutativity of the right lower triangle is the differential equation
ordinary differential equation, partial differential equation
integrable differential equation, formally integrable differential equation
General accounts:
Jean-François Pommaret, Partial Differential Equations and Group Theory, Springer (1994) [doi:10.1007/978-94-017-2539-2]
Sergiu Klainerman, PDE as a unified subject 2000 [pdf]
Boris Kruglikov, Valentin Lychagin, Geometry of differential equations [pdf]
Arthemy Kiselev, The twelve lectures in the (non)commutative geometry of differential equations, preprint IHES M/12/13 pdf
Yves Andre, Solution algebras of differential equations and quasi-homogeneous varieties, arXiv:1107.1179
Mikhail Gromov, Partial differential relations, Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete (3) [Results in Mathematics and Related Areas (3)], 9. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1986. x+363 pp.
Peter Olver, Applications of Lie groups to differential equations, Springer; Equivalence, invariants, and symmetry, Cambridge Univ. Press 1995.
On the partial differential equations appearing in mathematical physics:
Cliff P. Burgess, Primer on Partial Differential Equations for Physicists, lecture notes (1990) [pdf, pdf]
Robert Geroch, Partial Differential Equations of Physics, in: General Relativity: Proceedings Edited by G.S. Hall and J.R. Pulham. Edinburgh, IOP Publishing, 1996. p. 19 (arXiv:gr-qc/9602055)
Bijan Kumar Bagchi, Partial Differential Equations for Mathematical Physicists, Routledge (2020) [ISBN:9780367227029]
Discussion of the spaces of solutions is in
Characterization of the category of partial differential equations as the Eilenberg-Moore category of coalgebras over the jet comonad:
Discussion in differential cohesion:
Discussion in differentially cohesive modal homotopy type theory:
In the language of D-modules and hence for the special case of linear differential equations, this appears as prop. 3.4.1.1 in
A domain specific programming language for differential equations is presented in
See also
Last revised on December 11, 2023 at 14:49:42. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.