Integration Along The Fiber
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In differential geometry, the integration along fibers of a ''k''-form yields a (k-m)-form where ''m'' is the dimension of the fiber, via "integration". It is also called the fiber integration.


Definition

Let \pi: E \to B be a fiber bundle over a manifold with compact oriented fibers. If \alpha is a ''k''-form on ''E'', then for tangent vectors ''w''''i'''s at ''b'', let : (\pi_* \alpha)_b(w_1, \dots, w_) = \int_ \beta where \beta is the induced top-form on the fiber \pi^(b); i.e., an m-form given by: with \widetilde lifts of w_i to E, :\beta(v_1, \dots, v_m) = \alpha(v_1, \dots, v_m, \widetilde, \dots, \widetilde). (To see b \mapsto (\pi_* \alpha)_b is smooth, work it out in coordinates; cf. an example below.) Then \pi_* is a linear map \Omega^k(E) \to \Omega^(B). By Stokes' formula, if the fibers have no boundaries(i.e. ,\int0), the map descends to de Rham cohomology: :\pi_*: \operatorname^k(E; \mathbb) \to \operatorname^(B; \mathbb). This is also called the fiber integration. Now, suppose \pi is a
sphere bundle In the mathematical field of topology, a sphere bundle is a fiber bundle in which the fibers are spheres S^n of some dimension ''n''. Similarly, in a disk bundle, the fibers are disks D^n. From a topological perspective, there is no difference betw ...
; i.e., the typical fiber is a sphere. Then there is an
exact sequence An exact sequence is a sequence of morphisms between objects (for example, groups, rings, modules, and, more generally, objects of an abelian category) such that the image of one morphism equals the kernel of the next. Definition In the context ...
0 \to K \to \Omega^*(E) \overset\to \Omega^*(B) \to 0, ''K'' the kernel, which leads to a long exact sequence, dropping the coefficient \mathbb and using \operatorname^k(B) \simeq \operatorname^(K): :\cdots \rightarrow \operatorname^k(B) \overset\to \operatorname^(B) \overset \rightarrow \operatorname^(E) \overset \rightarrow \operatorname^(B) \rightarrow \cdots, called the
Gysin sequence In the field of mathematics known as algebraic topology, the Gysin sequence is a long exact sequence which relates the cohomology classes of the base space, the fiber and the total space of a sphere bundle. The Gysin sequence is a useful tool f ...
.


Example

Let \pi: M \times
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\to M be an obvious projection. First assume M = \mathbb^n with coordinates x_j and consider a ''k''-form: :\alpha = f \, dx_ \wedge \dots \wedge dx_ + g \, dt \wedge dx_ \wedge \dots \wedge dx_. Then, at each point in ''M'', :\pi_*(\alpha) = \pi_*(g \, dt \wedge dx_ \wedge \dots \wedge dx_) = \left( \int_0^1 g(\cdot, t) \, dt \right) \, . From this local calculation, the next formula follows easily (see Poincaré_lemma#Direct_proof): if \alpha is any ''k''-form on M \times
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:\pi_*(d \alpha) = \alpha_1 - \alpha_0 - d \pi_*(\alpha) where \alpha_i is the restriction of \alpha to M \times \. As an application of this formula, let f: M \times
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\to N be a smooth map (thought of as a homotopy). Then the composition h = \pi_* \circ f^* is a
homotopy operator In homological algebra in mathematics, the homotopy category ''K(A)'' of chain complexes in an additive category ''A'' is a framework for working with chain homotopies and homotopy equivalences. It lies intermediate between the category of chain ...
(also called a chain homotopy): :d \circ h + h \circ d = f_1^* - f_0^*: \Omega^k(N) \to \Omega^k(M), which implies f_1, f_0 induce the same map on cohomology, the fact known as the
homotopy invariance of de Rham cohomology In mathematics, de Rham cohomology (named after Georges de Rham) is a tool belonging both to algebraic topology and to differential topology, capable of expressing basic topological information about smooth manifolds in a form particularly adapt ...
. As a corollary, for example, let ''U'' be an open ball in R''n'' with center at the origin and let f_t: U \to U, x \mapsto tx. Then \operatorname^k(U; \mathbb) = \operatorname^k(pt; \mathbb), the fact known as the
Poincaré lemma In mathematics, especially vector calculus and differential topology, a closed form is a differential form ''α'' whose exterior derivative is zero (), and an exact form is a differential form, ''α'', that is the exterior derivative of another ...
.


Projection formula

Given a vector bundle ''π'' : ''E'' → ''B'' over a manifold, we say a differential form ''α'' on ''E'' has vertical-compact support if the restriction \alpha, _ has compact support for each ''b'' in ''B''. We write \Omega_^*(E) for the vector space of differential forms on ''E'' with vertical-compact support. If ''E'' is oriented as a vector bundle, exactly as before, we can define the integration along the fiber: :\pi_*: \Omega_^*(E) \to \Omega^*(B). The following is known as the projection formula.; note they use a different definition than the one here, resulting in change in sign. We make \Omega_^*(E) a right \Omega^*(B)-module by setting \alpha \cdot \beta = \alpha \wedge \pi^* \beta. Proof: 1. Since the assertion is local, we can assume ''π'' is trivial: i.e., \pi: E = B \times \mathbb^n \to B is a projection. Let t_j be the coordinates on the fiber. If \alpha = g \, dt_1 \wedge \cdots \wedge dt_n \wedge \pi^* \eta, then, since \pi^* is a ring homomorphism, :\pi_*(\alpha \wedge \pi^* \beta) = \left( \int_ g(\cdot, t_1, \dots, t_n) dt_1 \dots dt_n \right) \eta \wedge \beta = \pi_*(\alpha) \wedge \beta. Similarly, both sides are zero if ''α'' does not contain ''dt''. The proof of 2. is similar. \square


See also

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Transgression map In algebraic topology, a transgression map is a way to transfer cohomology classes. It occurs, for example in the inflation-restriction exact sequence in group cohomology, and in integration in fibers. It also naturally arises in many spectral sequ ...


Notes


References

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Michele Audin Michele (), is an Italian male given name, akin to the English male name Michael. Michele (pronounced ), is also an English female given name that is derived from the French Michèle. It is a variant spelling of the more common (and identically ...
, Torus actions on symplectic manifolds, Birkhauser, 2004 *{{citation , last1 = Bott , first1 = Raoul , authorlink = Raoul Bott , last2=Tu , first2= Loring , title = Differential Forms in Algebraic Topology , year = 1982 , publisher = Springer , location = New York , isbn = 0-387-90613-4 Differential geometry