Density on a manifold

Section of a certain line bundle

In mathematics, and specifically differential geometry, a density is a spatially varying quantity on a differentiable manifold that can be integrated in an intrinsic manner. Abstractly, a density is a section of a certain line bundle, called the density bundle. An element of the density bundle at x is a function that assigns a volume for the parallelotope spanned by the n given tangent vectors at x.

From the operational point of view, a density is a collection of functions on coordinate charts which become multiplied by the absolute value of the Jacobian determinant in the change of coordinates. Densities can be generalized into s-densities, whose coordinate representations become multiplied by the s-th power of the absolute value of the jacobian determinant. On an oriented manifold, 1-densities can be canonically identified with the n-forms on M. On non-orientable manifolds this identification cannot be made, since the density bundle is the tensor product of the orientation bundle of M and the n-th exterior product bundle of TM (see pseudotensor).

Motivation (densities in vector spaces)

In general, there does not exist a natural concept of a "volume" for a parallelotope generated by vectors v1, ..., vn in a n-dimensional vector space V. However, if one wishes to define a function μ : V × ... × VR that assigns a volume for any such parallelotope, it should satisfy the following properties:

  • If any of the vectors vk is multiplied by λR, the volume should be multiplied by |λ|.
  • If any linear combination of the vectors v1, ..., vj−1, vj+1, ..., vn is added to the vector vj, the volume should stay invariant.

These conditions are equivalent to the statement that μ is given by a translation-invariant measure on V, and they can be rephrased as

μ ( A v 1 , , A v n ) = | det A | μ ( v 1 , , v n ) , A GL ( V ) . {\displaystyle \mu (Av_{1},\ldots ,Av_{n})=\left|\det A\right|\mu (v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n}),\quad A\in \operatorname {GL} (V).}

Any such mapping μ : V × ... × VR is called a density on the vector space V. Note that if (v1, ..., vn) is any basis for V, then fixing μ(v1, ..., vn) will fix μ entirely; it follows that the set Vol(V) of all densities on V forms a one-dimensional vector space. Any n-form ω on V defines a density |ω| on V by

| ω | ( v 1 , , v n ) := | ω ( v 1 , , v n ) | . {\displaystyle |\omega |(v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n}):=|\omega (v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n})|.}

Orientations on a vector space

The set Or(V) of all functions o : V × ... × VR that satisfy

o ( A v 1 , , A v n ) = sign ( det A ) o ( v 1 , , v n ) , A GL ( V ) {\displaystyle o(Av_{1},\ldots ,Av_{n})=\operatorname {sign} (\det A)o(v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n}),\quad A\in \operatorname {GL} (V)}

forms a one-dimensional vector space, and an orientation on V is one of the two elements o ∈ Or(V) such that |o(v1, ..., vn)| = 1 for any linearly independent v1, ..., vn. Any non-zero n-form ω on V defines an orientation o ∈ Or(V) such that

o ( v 1 , , v n ) | ω | ( v 1 , , v n ) = ω ( v 1 , , v n ) , {\displaystyle o(v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n})|\omega |(v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n})=\omega (v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n}),}

and vice versa, any o ∈ Or(V) and any density μ ∈ Vol(V) define an n-form ω on V by

ω ( v 1 , , v n ) = o ( v 1 , , v n ) μ ( v 1 , , v n ) . {\displaystyle \omega (v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n})=o(v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n})\mu (v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n}).}

In terms of tensor product spaces,

Or ( V ) Vol ( V ) = n V , Vol ( V ) = Or ( V ) n V . {\displaystyle \operatorname {Or} (V)\otimes \operatorname {Vol} (V)=\bigwedge ^{n}V^{*},\quad \operatorname {Vol} (V)=\operatorname {Or} (V)\otimes \bigwedge ^{n}V^{*}.}

s-densities on a vector space

The s-densities on V are functions μ : V × ... × VR such that

μ ( A v 1 , , A v n ) = | det A | s μ ( v 1 , , v n ) , A GL ( V ) . {\displaystyle \mu (Av_{1},\ldots ,Av_{n})=\left|\det A\right|^{s}\mu (v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n}),\quad A\in \operatorname {GL} (V).}

Just like densities, s-densities form a one-dimensional vector space Vols(V), and any n-form ω on V defines an s-density |ω|s on V by

| ω | s ( v 1 , , v n ) := | ω ( v 1 , , v n ) | s . {\displaystyle |\omega |^{s}(v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n}):=|\omega (v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n})|^{s}.}

The product of s1- and s2-densities μ1 and μ2 form an (s1+s2)-density μ by

μ ( v 1 , , v n ) := μ 1 ( v 1 , , v n ) μ 2 ( v 1 , , v n ) . {\displaystyle \mu (v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n}):=\mu _{1}(v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n})\mu _{2}(v_{1},\ldots ,v_{n}).}

In terms of tensor product spaces this fact can be stated as

Vol s 1 ( V ) Vol s 2 ( V ) = Vol s 1 + s 2 ( V ) . {\displaystyle \operatorname {Vol} ^{s_{1}}(V)\otimes \operatorname {Vol} ^{s_{2}}(V)=\operatorname {Vol} ^{s_{1}+s_{2}}(V).}

Definition

Formally, the s-density bundle Vols(M) of a differentiable manifold M is obtained by an associated bundle construction, intertwining the one-dimensional group representation

ρ ( A ) = | det A | s , A GL ( n ) {\displaystyle \rho (A)=\left|\det A\right|^{-s},\quad A\in \operatorname {GL} (n)}

of the general linear group with the frame bundle of M.

The resulting line bundle is known as the bundle of s-densities, and is denoted by

| Λ | M s = | Λ | s ( T M ) . {\displaystyle \left|\Lambda \right|_{M}^{s}=\left|\Lambda \right|^{s}(TM).}

A 1-density is also referred to simply as a density.

More generally, the associated bundle construction also allows densities to be constructed from any vector bundle E on M.

In detail, if (Uαα) is an atlas of coordinate charts on M, then there is associated a local trivialization of | Λ | M s {\displaystyle \left|\Lambda \right|_{M}^{s}}

t α : | Λ | M s | U α ϕ α ( U α ) × R {\displaystyle t_{\alpha }:\left|\Lambda \right|_{M}^{s}|_{U_{\alpha }}\to \phi _{\alpha }(U_{\alpha })\times \mathbb {R} }

subordinate to the open cover Uα such that the associated GL(1)-cocycle satisfies

t α β = | det ( d ϕ α d ϕ β 1 ) | s . {\displaystyle t_{\alpha \beta }=\left|\det(d\phi _{\alpha }\circ d\phi _{\beta }^{-1})\right|^{-s}.}

Integration

Densities play a significant role in the theory of integration on manifolds. Indeed, the definition of a density is motivated by how a measure dx changes under a change of coordinates (Folland 1999, Section 11.4, pp. 361-362).

Given a 1-density ƒ supported in a coordinate chart Uα, the integral is defined by

U α f = ϕ α ( U α ) t α f ϕ α 1 d μ {\displaystyle \int _{U_{\alpha }}f=\int _{\phi _{\alpha }(U_{\alpha })}t_{\alpha }\circ f\circ \phi _{\alpha }^{-1}d\mu }

where the latter integral is with respect to the Lebesgue measure on Rn. The transformation law for 1-densities together with the Jacobian change of variables ensures compatibility on the overlaps of different coordinate charts, and so the integral of a general compactly supported 1-density can be defined by a partition of unity argument. Thus 1-densities are a generalization of the notion of a volume form that does not necessarily require the manifold to be oriented or even orientable. One can more generally develop a general theory of Radon measures as distributional sections of | Λ | M 1 {\displaystyle |\Lambda |_{M}^{1}} using the Riesz-Markov-Kakutani representation theorem.

The set of 1/p-densities such that | ϕ | p = ( | ϕ | p ) 1 / p < {\displaystyle |\phi |_{p}=\left(\int |\phi |^{p}\right)^{1/p}<\infty } is a normed linear space whose completion L p ( M ) {\displaystyle L^{p}(M)} is called the intrinsic Lp space of M.

Conventions

In some areas, particularly conformal geometry, a different weighting convention is used: the bundle of s-densities is instead associated with the character

ρ ( A ) = | det A | s / n . {\displaystyle \rho (A)=\left|\det A\right|^{-s/n}.}

With this convention, for instance, one integrates n-densities (rather than 1-densities). Also in these conventions, a conformal metric is identified with a tensor density of weight 2.

Properties

References

  • Berline, Nicole; Getzler, Ezra; Vergne, Michèle (2004), Heat Kernels and Dirac Operators, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-3-540-20062-8.
  • Folland, Gerald B. (1999), Real Analysis: Modern Techniques and Their Applications (Second ed.), ISBN 978-0-471-31716-6, provides a brief discussion of densities in the last section.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Nicolaescu, Liviu I. (1996), Lectures on the geometry of manifolds, River Edge, NJ: World Scientific Publishing Co. Inc., ISBN 978-981-02-2836-1, MR 1435504
  • Lee, John M (2003), Introduction to Smooth Manifolds, Springer-Verlag
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