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mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, a pullback bundle or induced bundle is the
fiber bundle In mathematics, and particularly topology, a fiber bundle (or, in Commonwealth English: fibre bundle) is a space that is a product space, but may have a different topological structure. Specifically, the similarity between a space E and a p ...
that is induced by a map of its base-space. Given a fiber bundle and a continuous map one can define a "pullback" of by as a bundle over . The fiber of over a point in is just the fiber of over . Thus is the disjoint union of all these fibers equipped with a suitable topology.


Formal definition

Let be a fiber bundle with abstract fiber and let be a continuous map. Define the pullback bundle by :f^E = \\subseteq B'\times E and equip it with the subspace topology and the projection map given by the projection onto the first factor, i.e., :\pi'(b',e) = b'.\, The projection onto the second factor gives a map :h \colon f^E \to E such that the following diagram commutes: :\begin f^E & \stackrel & E\\ ' \downarrow & & \downarrow \pi\\ B' & \stackrel f & B \end If is a local trivialization of then is a local trivialization of where :\psi(b',e) = (b', \mbox_2(\varphi(e))).\, It then follows that is a fiber bundle over with fiber . The bundle is called the pullback of ''E'' by or the bundle induced by . The map is then a bundle morphism covering .


Properties

Any section of over induces a section of , called the pullback section , simply by defining :f^*s(b') := (b', s(f(b'))\ ) for all b' \in B'. If the bundle has
structure group In mathematics, and particularly topology, a fiber bundle (or, in Commonwealth English: fibre bundle) is a space that is a product space, but may have a different topological structure. Specifically, the similarity between a space E and a ...
with transition functions (with respect to a family of local trivializations ) then the pullback bundle also has structure group . The transition functions in are given by :f^t_ = t_ \circ f. If is a vector bundle or principal bundle then so is the pullback . In the case of a principal bundle the right action of on is given by :(x,e)\cdot g = (x,e\cdot g) It then follows that the map covering is equivariant and so defines a morphism of principal bundles. In the language of
category theory Category theory is a general theory of mathematical structures and their relations that was introduced by Samuel Eilenberg and Saunders Mac Lane in the middle of the 20th century in their foundational work on algebraic topology. Nowadays, cate ...
, the pullback bundle construction is an example of the more general
categorical pullback In category theory, a branch of mathematics, a pullback (also called a fiber product, fibre product, fibered product or Cartesian square) is the limit of a diagram consisting of two morphisms and with a common codomain. The pullback is often w ...
. As such it satisfies the corresponding universal property. The construction of the pullback bundle can be carried out in subcategories of the category of topological spaces, such as the category of smooth manifolds. The latter construction is useful in differential geometry and topology.


Bundles and sheaves

Bundles may also be described by their sheaves of sections. The pullback of bundles then corresponds to the inverse image of sheaves, which is a contravariant functor. A sheaf, however, is more naturally a covariant object, since it has a pushforward, called the
direct image of a sheaf In mathematics, the direct image functor is a construction in sheaf theory that generalizes the global sections functor to the relative case. It is of fundamental importance in topology and algebraic geometry. Given a sheaf ''F'' defined on a to ...
. The tension and interplay between bundles and sheaves, or inverse and direct image, can be advantageous in many areas of geometry. However, the direct image of a sheaf of sections of a bundle is ''not'' in general the sheaf of sections of some direct image bundle, so that although the notion of a 'pushforward of a bundle' is defined in some contexts (for example, the pushforward by a diffeomorphism), in general it is better understood in the category of sheaves, because the objects it creates cannot in general be bundles.


References


Sources

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Further reading

*{{cite book , last = Sharpe , first = R. W. , title = Differential Geometry: Cartan's Generalization of Klein's Erlangen Program , series = Graduate Texts in Mathematics , volume = 166 , publisher = Springer-Verlag , location = New York , year=1997 , isbn=0-387-94732-9 Fiber bundles