Higher Dimensions. Introduction. Differential Forms

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8 Vector Analysis in Higher Dimensions 8.1 An Introduction to Differential Forms 8.2 Manifolds and Integrals of k-forms 8.3 The Generalized Stokes s Theorem True/False Exercises for Chapter 8 Miscellaneous Exercises for Chapter 8 Introduction In this concluding chapter, our goal is to find a way to unify and extend the three main theorems of vector analysis (namely, the theorems of Green, Gauss, and Stokes). To accomplish such a task, we need to develop the notion of a differential form whose integral embraces and generalizes line, surface, and volume integrals. 8.1 An Introduction to Differential Forms Throughout this section, U will denote an open set in R n, where R n has coordinates (x 1, x 2,..., x n ), as usual. Any functions that appear are assumed to be appropriately differentiable. Differential Forms We begin by giving a new name to an old friend. If f : U R n R is a scalarvalued function (of class C k ), we will also refer to f as a differential 0-form, or just a 0-form for short. 0-forms can be added to one another and multiplied together, as well we know. The next step is to describe differential 1-forms. Ultimately, we will see that a differential 1-form is a generalization of f (x) dx that is, of something that can be integrated with respect to a single variable, such as with a line integral. More precisely, in R n, the basic differential 1-forms are denoted dx 1, dx 2,..., dx n. A general (differential) 1-form ω is an expression that is built from the basic 1-forms as ω = F 1 (x 1,..., x n ) dx 1 + F 2 (x 1,..., x n ) dx 2 +... + F n (x 1,..., x n ) dx n, where, for j = 1,..., n, F j is a scalar-valued function (of class C k ) on U R n. Differential 1-forms can be added to one another, and we can multiply a 0-form f and a 1-form ω (both defined on U R n ) in the obvious way: If then ω = F 1 dx 1 + F 2 dx 2 + + F n dx n, f ω = f F 1 dx 1 + f F 2 dx 2 + + f F n dx n.

8.1 An Introduction to Differential Forms 531 EXAMPLE 1 In R 3, let ω = xyz dx + z 2 cos y dy + ze x dz and η = (y z) dx + z 2 sin y dy 2 dz. Then ω + η = (xyz + y z) dx + z 2 (cos y + sin y) dy + (ze x 2) dz. If f (x, y, z) = xe y z, then f ω = (xe y z)xyz dx + (xe y z)z 2 cos y dy + (xe y z)ze x dz. Thus far, we have described 1-forms merely as formal expressions in certain symbols. But 1-forms can also be thought of as functions. The basic 1-forms dx 1,..., dx n take as argument a vector a = (a 1, a 2,..., a n ) in R n ; the value of dx i on a is dx i (a) = a i. In others words, dx i extracts the ith component of the vector a. More generally, for each x 0 U, the 1-form ω gives rise to a combination ω x0 of basic 1-forms ω x0 acts on the vector a R n as ω x0 = F 1 (x 0 ) dx 1 + + F n (x 0 ) dx n ; ω x0 (a) = F 1 (x 0 ) dx 1 (a) + F 2 (x 0 ) dx 2 (a) + + F n (x 0 ) dx n (a). EXAMPLE 2 Suppose ω is the 1-form defined on R 3 by ω = x 2 yz dx + y 2 z dy 3xyz dz. If x 0 = (1, 2, 5) and a = (a 1, a 2, a 3 ), then and, if x 0 = (3, 4, 6), then ω (1, 2,5) (a) = 10 dx(a) + 20 dy(a) + 30 dz(a) = 10a 1 + 20a 2 + 30a 3, ω (3,4,6) (a) = 216 dx(a) + 96 dy(a) 216 dz(a) = 216a 1 + 96a 2 216a 3. The notation suggests that a 1-form is a function of the vector a but that this function varies from point to point as x 0 changes. Indeed, 1-forms are actually functions on vector fields. A basic (differential) 2-form on R n is an expression of the form dx i dx j, i, j = 1,..., n. It is also a function that requires two vector arguments a and b, and we evaluate this function as dx i dx j (a, b) = dx i(a) dx i (b) dx j (a) dx j (b). (The determinant represents, up to sign, the area of the parallelogram spanned by the projections of a and b in the x i x j -plane.) It is not difficult to see that, for i, j = 1,..., n,

532 Chapter 8 Vector Analysis in Higher Dimensions and dx i dx j = dx j dx i (1) dx i dx i = 0. (2) Formula (1) can be established by comparing dx i dx j (a, b) with dx j dx i (a, b). Formula (2) follows from formula (1). Given formulas (1) and (2), we see that we can generate all the linearly independent, nontrivial basic 2-forms on R n by listing all possible terms dx i dx j, where i and j are integers between 1 and n with i < j: dx 1 dx 2, dx 1 dx 3,..., dx 1 dx n, dx 2 dx 3,..., dx 2 dx n,. dx n 1 dx n. To count how many 2-forms are in this list, note that there are n choices for dx i and n 1 choices for dx j (so that dx i dx j in view of (2)), and a correction factor of 2 so as not to count both dx i dx j and dx j dx i in light of (1). Hence, there are n(n 1)/2 independent 2-forms. Let x = (x 1, x 2,..., x n ). A general (differential) 2-form on U R n is an expression ω = F 12 (x) dx 1 dx 2 + F 13 (x) dx 1 dx 3 + + F n 1n (x) dx n 1 dx n, where each F i j is a real-valued function F i j : U R n R. The idea here is to generalize something that can be integrated with respect to two variables such as with a surface integral. EXAMPLE 3 In R 3, a general 2-form may be written as F 1 (x, y, z) dy dz + F 2 (x, y, z) dz dx + F 3 (x, y, z) dx dy. The reason for using this somewhat curious ordering of the terms in the sum will, we hope, become clear later in the chapter. Given a point x 0 U R n, to evaluate a general 2-form on the ordered pair (a, b) of vectors, we have ω x0 (a, b) = F 12 (x 0 ) dx 1 dx 2 (a, b) + F 13 (x 0 ) dx 1 dx 3 (a, b) + + F n 1n (x 0 ) dx n 1 dx n (a, b). EXAMPLE 4 In R 3, let ω = 3xy dy dz + (2y + z) dz dx + (x z) dx dy. Then ω (1,2, 3) (a, b) = 6 dy dz(a, b) + dz dx(a, b) + 4 dx dy(a, b) = 6 a 2 b 2 a 3 b 3 + a 3 b 3 a 1 b 1 + 4 a 1 b 1 a 2 b 2 = 6(a 2 b 3 a 3 b 2 ) + (a 3 b 1 a 1 b 3 ) + 4(a 1 b 2 a 2 b 1 ).

8.1 An Introduction to Differential Forms 533 Finally, we generalize the notions of 1-forms and 2-forms to provide a definition of a k-form. DEFINITION 1.1 Let k be a positive integer. A basic (differential) k-form on R n is an expression of the form dx i1 dx i2 dx ik, where 1 i j n for j = 1,..., k. The basic k-forms are also functions that require k vector arguments a 1, a 2,..., a k and are evaluated as dx i1 (a 1 ) dx i1 (a 2 ) dx i1 (a k ) dx i2 (a 1 ) dx i2 (a 2 ) dx i2 (a k ) dx i1 dx ik (a 1,..., a k ) = det....... dx ik (a 1 ) dx ik (a 2 ) dx ik (a k ) EXAMPLE 5 Let a 1 = (1, 2, 1, 3, 0), a 2 = (5, 4, 3, 2, 1), and a 3 = (0, 1, 3, 2, 0) be three vectors in R 5. Then we have dx 1 dx 3 dx 5 (a 1, a 2, a 3 ) = det 1 3 3 = 3. 0 1 0 Using properties of determinants, we can show that dx i1 dx i j dx il dx ik (3) and = dx i1 dx il dx i j dx ik dx i1 dx i j dx i j... dx ik = 0. (4) Formula (3) says that switching two terms (namely, dx i j and dx il ) in the basic k-form dx i1 dx ik causes a sign change, and formula (4) says that a basic k-form containing two identical terms is zero. Formulas (3) and (4) generalize formulas (1) and (2). A general (differential) k-form on U R n is an expres- DEFINITION 1.2 sion of the form ω = n F i1...i k (x) dx i1 dx ik, i 1,...,i k =1 where each F i1...i k is a real-valued function F i1...i k : U R. Given a point x 0 U, we evaluate ω on an ordered k-tuple (a 1,..., a k ) of vectors as n ω x0 (a 1,..., a k ) = F i1...i k (x 0 ) dx i1 dx ik (a 1,..., a k ). i 1,...,i k =1

534 Chapter 8 Vector Analysis in Higher Dimensions Note that a 0-form is so named because, in order to be consistent with a 1-form or 2-form, it must take zero vector arguments! In view of formulas (3) and (4), we write a general k-form as ω = F i1...i k dx i1 dx ik. 1 i 1 < <i k n (That is, the sum may be taken over strictly increasing indices i 1,..., i k.) For example, the 4-form ω = x 2 dx 1 dx 3 dx 4 dx 5 + (x 3 x 2 5 ) dx 1 dx 2 dx 5 dx 3 + x 1 x 3 dx 5 dx 3 dx 4 dx 1 may be written in the standard form with increasing indices as ω = (x 2 x 1 x 3 ) dx 1 dx 3 dx 4 dx 5 + (x 2 5 x 3) dx 1 dx 2 dx 3 dx 5. Two k-forms may be added in the obvious way, and the product of a 0-form f and a k-form ω is analogous to the product of a 0-form and a 1-form. Exterior Product The symbol that we have been using does, in fact, denote a type of multiplication called the exterior (or wedge) product. The exterior product can be extended to general differential forms in the following manner: DEFINITION 1.3 LetU R n be open. Let f denote a 0-form on U. Letω = Fi1...i k dx i1 dx ik denote a k-form on U and η = G j1... j l dx j1 dx jl an l-form. Then we define f ω = f ω = f F i1...i k dx i1 dx ik, ω η = F i1...i k G j1... j l dx i1 dx ik dx j1 dx jl. Thus, the wedge product of a k-form and an l-form is a (k + l)-form. EXAMPLE 6 Let ω = x1 2 dx 1 dx 2 + (2x 3 x 2 ) dx 1 dx 3 + e x 3 dx 3 dx 4 and η = x 4 dx 1 dx 3 dx 5 + x 6 dx 2 dx 4 dx 6 be, respectively, a 2-form and a 3-form on R 6. Then Definition 1.3 yields ω η = x1 2 x 4 dx 1 dx 2 dx 1 dx 3 dx 5 + (2x 3 x 2 )x 4 dx 1 dx 3 dx 1 dx 3 dx 5 + e x 3 x 4 dx 3 dx 4 dx 1 dx 3 dx 5 + x1 2 x 6 dx 1 dx 2 dx 2 dx 4 dx 6 + (2x 3 x 2 )x 6 dx 1 dx 3 dx 2 dx 4 dx 6 + e x 3 x 6 dx 3 dx 4 dx 2 dx 4 dx 6.

8.1 Exercises 535 Because of formula (4), most of the terms in this sum are zero. In fact, using formula (3). ω η = (2x 3 x 2 )x 6 dx 1 dx 3 dx 2 dx 4 dx 6 = (x 2 2x 3 )x 6 dx 1 dx 2 dx 3 dx 4 dx 6, From the various definitions and observations made so far, we can establish the following results, which are useful when computing with differential forms: PROPOSITION 1.4 (PROPERTIES OF THE EXTERIOR PRODUCT) Assume that all the differential forms that follow are defined on U R n : 1. Distributivity. If ω 1 and ω 2 are k-forms and η is an l-form, then (ω 1 + ω 2 ) η = ω 1 η + ω 2 η. 2. Anticommutativity. If ω is a k-form and η an l-form, then ω η = ( 1) kl η ω. 3. Associativity. If ω is a k-form, η an l-form, and τ a p-form, then (ω η) τ = ω (η τ). 4. Homogeneity. If ω is a k-form, η an l-form, and f a 0-form, then ( f ω) η = f (ω η) = ω ( f η). 8.1 Exercises Determine the values of the following differential forms on the ordered sets of vectors indicated in Exercises 1 7. 1. dx 1 3 dx 2 ; a = (7, 3) 2. 2 dx + 6 dy 5 dz; a = (1, 1, 2) 3. 3 dx 1 dx 2 ; a = (4, 1), b = (2, 0) 4. 4 dx dy 7 dy dz; a = (0, 1, 1), b = (1, 3, 2) 5. 7 dx dy dz; a = (1, 0, 3), b = (2, 1, 0), c = (5, 2, 1) 6. dx 1 dx 2 + 2 dx 2 dx 3 + 3 dx 3 dx 4 ; a = (1, 2, 3, 4), b = (4, 3, 2, 1) 7. 2 dx 1 dx 3 dx 4 + dx 2 dx 3 dx 5 ; a = (1, 0, 1, 4, 2), b = (0, 0, 9, 1, 1), c = (5, 0, 0, 0, 2) 8. Let ω be the 1-form on R 3 defined by ω = x 2 y dx + y 2 z dy + z 3 x dz. Find ω (3, 1,4) (a), where a = (a 1, a 2, a 3 ). 9. Let ω be the 2-form on R 4 given by ω = x 1 x 3 dx 1 dx 3 x 2 x 4 dx 2 dx 4. Find ω (2, 1, 3,1) (a, b). 10. Let ω be the 2-form on R 3 given by ω = cos xdx dy sin z dy dz + (y 2 + 3)dx dz. Find ω (0, 1,π/2) (a, b), where a = (a 1, a 2, a 3 ) and b = (b 1, b 2, b 3 ). 11. Let ω be as in Exercise 10. Find ω (x,y,z) ((2, 0, 1), (1, 7, 5)). 12. Let ω be the 3-form on R 3 given by ω = ( e x cos y + (y 2 + 2)e 2z) dx dy dz. Find ω (0,0,0) (a, b, c), where a = (a 1, a 2, a 3 ), b = (b 1, b 2, b 3 ), and c = (c 1, c 2, c 3 ). 13. Let ω be as in Exercise 12. Find ω (x,y,z) ((1, 0, 0), (0, 2, 0), (0, 0, 3)). In Exercises 14 19, determine ω η. 14. On R 3 : ω = 3 dx + 2 dy x dz; η = x 2 dx cos y dy + 7 dz. 15. On R 3 : ω = y dx x dy; η = z dx dy + y dx dz + x dy dz.