Curvature form

In differential geometry, the curvature form describes curvature of a connection on a principal bundle. It can be considered as an alternative to or generalization of curvature tensor in Riemannian geometry.

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Definition

Let G be a Lie group with Lie algebra \mathfrak g, and PB be a principal G-bundle. Let ω be an Ehresmann connection on P (which is a \mathfrak g-valued one-form on P).

Then the curvature form is the \mathfrak g-valued 2-form on P defined by

\Omega=d\omega %2B{1\over 2}[\omega,\omega]=D\omega.

Here d stands for exterior derivative, [\cdot,\cdot] is defined by [\alpha \otimes X, \beta \otimes Y]�:= \alpha \wedge \beta \otimes [X, Y]_\mathfrak{g} and D denotes the exterior covariant derivative. In other terms,

\,\Omega(X,Y)=d\omega(X,Y) %2B [\omega(X),\omega(Y)].

Curvature form in a vector bundle

If EB is a vector bundle. then one can also think of ω as a matrix of 1-forms and the above formula becomes the structure equation:

\,\Omega=d\omega %2B\omega\wedge \omega,

where \wedge is the wedge product. More precisely, if \omega^i_{\ j} and \Omega^i_{\ j} denote components of ω and Ω correspondingly, (so each \omega^i_{\ j} is a usual 1-form and each \Omega^i_{\ j} is a usual 2-form) then

\Omega^i_{\ j}=d\omega^i_{\ j} %2B\sum_k \omega^i_{\ k}\wedge\omega^k_{\ j}.

For example, for the tangent bundle of a Riemannian manifold, the structure group is O(n) and Ω is a 2-form with values in o(n), the antisymmetric matrices. In this case the form Ω is an alternative description of the curvature tensor, i.e.

\,R(X,Y)=\Omega(X,Y),

using the standard notation for the Riemannian curvature tensor,

Bianchi identities

If \theta is the canonical vector-valued 1-form on the frame bundle, the torsion \Theta of the connection form \omega is the vector-valued 2-form defined by the structure equation

\Theta=d\theta %2B \omega\wedge\theta = D\theta,

where as above D denotes the exterior covariant derivative.

The first Bianchi identity takes the form

D\Theta=\Omega\wedge\theta.

The second Bianchi identity takes the form

\, D \Omega = 0

and is valid more generally for any connection in a principal bundle.

References

See also