The formal notion of curvature is a formalization and generalization of the intuitive notion of the (“extrinsic”) curvature of a surface embedded in a Cartesian space .
This extrinsic curvature of a surface is called Gaussian curvature?. It may also be understood intrinsically as a property of just the surface without reference to the ambient Cartesian space that it is embedded in: the canonical metric on induces a Riemannian metric on the surface and the surface’s curvature is encoded in the Levi-Civita connection on the tangent bundle of the surface.
This notion of curvature of a Levi-Civita connection in turn generalizes straightforwardly to a notion of curvature of any connection on a bundle and thus gives the name to the general concept.
For instance in the first-order formulation of gravity the curvature of spacetime is literally the curvature of the Levi-Civita connection on spacetime in this sense. But also the Yang-Mills field is a connection on a principal bundle and its curvature encodes the field strength of the Yang-Mills field, which is a concept rather remote from the intuition of a curved surface (thogh not unrelated).
Even more generally, the notion of a connection on a bundle and of a Lie algebra-valued 1-form generalizes to connections on principal 2-bundles and principal ∞-bundles and curvature of ∞-Lie algebroid valued differential forms.
In Eilenberg-Steenrod-type differential cohomology describing abelian such higher connections these curvatures appear in the form of generalized Chern character curvature characteristic forms.
Curvature of a smooth curve at a point of a smooth curve is the (signed) inverse radius of the (oriented) circle having tangency of order 1 with the curve at the point . Every smooth curve in a 3-dimensional space is determined up to isometry by its (parametrised) curvature and torsion. Intuitively, the curvature measures how much curves are bent, when measured in some metrics. Frenet-Serret formulas express the derivative of Frenet moving frame with respect to the parameter of a naturally parametrized curve in -dimensional Euclidean space as an antisymmetric matrix times the Frenet moving frame. The nonzero coefficients of the matrix are, up to the sign, the curvature of the curve, torsion and higher analogues. For higher dimensional surfaces one can look at normal curvature which is the curvature of the curve which is intersection of a plane determined by the normal vector to the surface and a given tangent vector. For any 2-dimensional tangent plane, the normal curvature has two extreme values. Their product is called the Gaussian curvature.
Sectional curvature of a higher dimensional smooth surface at its point in an Euclidean space along a tangent 2-dimensional plane is the Gaussian curvature of the curve which is the intersection of the surface with the plane. As a plane is determined by two vectors, the sectional curvature is determined by a surface and a pair of vectors, and all possible sectional curvatures can be read form that 2-form; therefore we talk about the operator of the curvature.
Curvature can be described also intrinsically, without recourse to the ambient space and its metric. Therefore it makes sense in Riemannian geometry based on the metric tensor just on a manifold. In 1917, Herman Weyl postulated a more fundamental quantity than a Riemannian metric, the connection on a fibre bundle, giving hence rise to a modern, generalized idea of the curvature. While Riemannian metric gives rise to a Levi-Civita connection on the tangent bundle of the Riemannian manifold, not every connection on a vector or principal bundles is induced by metrics. In that sense the connection is a more basic notion in geometry.
The curvature of a connection on a bundle measures how the connection is locally non-trivial.
In as far as the notion of connection on a bundle is generalized by the notion of a cocycle in differential cohomology, curvature is essentially the Chern character.
In as far as cocycles in differential cohomology represent gauge fields in physics, the curvature is the field strength of these gauge fields.
After the conception of gauge theory, the term curvature was firmly established in its generalization from this special case to the case of connections on all kinds of bundles and higher bundles.
A connection on a trivial line bundle on a space is just a 1-form
The curvature in this case is the 2-form .
A connection on a trivial -principal bundle for a Lie group with Lie algebra is a -valued 1-form (see groupoid of Lie-algebra valued forms)
Its curvature is the Lie-algebra valued 2-form
where is the Lie bracket in .
According to the discussion at ∞-Chern-Weil theory, a connection on a trivial principal ∞-bundle is given by a collection of ∞-Lie algebroid valued differential forms. The notion of curvature in this general context is discussed at curvature of ∞-Lie algebroid valued differential forms.
For the geometric interpretation of the curvature 2-form of a -valued 1-form
it is useful to recall that both the deRham complex as well as the Chevalley-Eilenberg algebra are naturally interpreted as function algebras on infinitesimal objects, as discussed at ∞-Lie algebroid.
The deRham complex may be thought of as the algebra of functions on the infinitesimal path ∞-groupoid . This has as objects the points of , as morphisms infinitesimal paths
in
as 2-morphisms infinitesimal little surfaces
in , and so on.
On the other hand, is the algebra of functions on the infinitesimal version of what is called the delooping groupoid of the Lie group of which is a Lie algebra. This has a single object , and a morphism is an infinitesimal group element
for the neutral element of the group (the identity), for an element of the Lie algebra as before and for some coefficient.
A 2-morphism is an infinitesimal surface bounded by such infinitesimal 1-morphisms such that going either way around the surface
produces the same result when then morphisms are composed using the product in the Lie group: the top right way around the square here yields
and the other way round yields
A morphism of dg-algebras of the form we have been considering
is now evidently equivalenty a morphism
that sends infinitesimal paths in to infinitesimal group elements of the form :
If we denote by
the tangent vector that connects the infinitesimally close points and and write as a function of the first point and the vector pointing away from it, then this reads
We can now look at what this assignment of infinitesimal group elements to infinitesimal paths does to a little square in as above, with sides spanned by tangent vectors and . We find
For the result on the right to qualify as a 2-morphism in we need that
going around the top right edges, which yields
is the same as
To express what this means as a condition at the point , we may Taylor expand to first order
and
Then some terms cancel and the above condition becomes, to second order
In other words, the expression
has to vanish. This is the curvature form that we already found above by more algebraic means.
If this does not vanish, then we don’t really have a morphism . But then we instead have some morphism that uses the 1-forms to assigns data to little edges, and that uses the 2-forms to assign data to little surfaces. That morphism then will respect a condition as above, but now on little cubes. That condition is the Bianchi identity
on the curvature 2-form.
The notion of curvature of a Lie-algebra valued 1-form discussed above generalizes to that of ∞-Lie algebroid valued differential forms.
Let be an ∞-Lie algebra. A -valued differential form on a smooth manifold is a morphism
of dg-algebras, where is the de Rham complex and is the Weil algebra.
There is a canonical inclusion of graded vector spaces
The curvature of the -Lie algebroid valued form is the composite
This consists, in general, of a tower of components: write for the degree -part of the -Lie algebra, then we have the further restrictions
So
is a -valued -form on .
One may speak of the 2-form curvature, the 3-form curvature, the 4-form curvature and so on.
If instead of just an -Lie algebra we take more generally an ∞-Lie algebroid, then there is also a 1-form curvature component.
Remark In some places in the literature, the lower curvature form components have been called fake curvature (BreenMessing).
Precisely if the curvatures vanish does the morphism factor through the Chevalley-Eilenberg algebra .
in which case we call flat.
By the fact that is a dg-algebra homomorphism, its curvature forms satisfy
This is the Bianchi identity.
The algebra of invariant polynomials embeds into the Weil algebra
For a -valued form, and , the ordinary closed -form
is the corresponding curvature characteristic form.
(TO ADD: Something about curved algebras and curved dg algebras.)
curvature in Riemannian geometry |
---|
Riemann curvature |
Ricci curvature |
scalar curvature |
sectional curvature |
p-curvature |
gauge field: models and components
On Cartan structural equations and their Bianchi identities for curvature and torsion of Cartan moving frames and (Cartan-)connections on tangent bundles (especially in first-order formulation of gravity):
The original account:
Historical review:
Further discussion:
Shiing-Shen Chern, p. 748 of: A Simple Intrinsic Proof of the Gauss-Bonnet Formula for Closed Riemannian Manifolds, Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 45 4 (1944) 747-752 [doi:10.2307/1969302]
Leonardo Castellani, Riccardo D'Auria, Pietro Fré, §I.2 in: Supergravity and Superstrings - A Geometric Perspective, World Scientific (1991) [doi:10.1142/0224, toc: pdf, ch I.2: pdf]
Sigurdur Helgason, §I.8 in: Differential geometry, Lie groups and symmetric spaces, Graduate Studies in Mathematics 34 (2001) [ams:gsm-34]
C. C. Briggs, A Sequence of Generalizations of Cartan’s Conservation of Torsion Theorem [arXiv:gr-qc/9908034]
Loring Tu, §22 in: Differential Geometry – Connections, Curvature, and Characteristic Classes, Springer (2017) [ISBN:978-3-319-55082-4]
Thoan Do, Geoff Prince, An intrinsic and exterior form of the Bianchi identities, International Journal of Geometric Methods in Modern Physics 14 01 (2017) 1750001 [doi:10.1142/S0219887817500013, arXiv:1501.01123]
Ivo Terek Couto, Cartan Formalism and some computations [pdf, pdf]
Generalization to supergeometry (motivated by supergravity):
Julius Wess, Bruno Zumino, p. 362 of: Superspace formulation of supergravity, Phys. Lett. B 66 (1977) 361-364 [doi:10.1016/0370-2693(77)90015-6]
Richard Grimm, Julius Wess, Bruno Zumino, §2 in: A complete solution of the Bianchi identities in superspace with supergravity constraints, Nuclear Phys. B 152 (1979) 255-265 [doi:10.1016/0550-3213(79)90102-0]
Leonardo Castellani, Riccardo D'Auria, Pietro Fré, §III.3.2 in: Supergravity and Superstrings - A Geometric Perspective, World Scientific (1991) [doi:10.1142/0224, toc: pdf, ch III.3: pdf]
Last revised on May 14, 2024 at 10:42:07. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.