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Chap8 Lie Brackets

1) The Lie bracket [u,v] of two vector fields u and v is defined as the commutator uv - vu. 2) The Lie bracket is antisymmetric and satisfies the Jacobi identity. 3) For a set of vector fields to form a coordinate system, their Lie brackets must vanish, meaning they must commute with one another. Their integral curves then define the coordinate lines.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
103 views

Chap8 Lie Brackets

1) The Lie bracket [u,v] of two vector fields u and v is defined as the commutator uv - vu. 2) The Lie bracket is antisymmetric and satisfies the Jacobi identity. 3) For a set of vector fields to form a coordinate system, their Lie brackets must vanish, meaning they must commute with one another. Their integral curves then define the coordinate lines.

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hammoudeh13
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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c Amitabha Lahiri: Lecture Notes on Differential Geometry for Physicists 2011

Chapter 8

Lie brackets
A vector field v is a linear map C (M) C (M) since it is basically a derivation at each point, v : f 7 v(f ) . In other words, given
a smooth function f , v(f ) is a smooth function on M . Suppose we
consider two vector fields u , v . Then u(v(f )) is also a smooth function, linear in f . But is uv u v a vector field? To find out, we
consider
u(v(f g)) = u(f v(g) + v(f )g)
= u(f )v(g) + f u(v(g)) + u(v(f ))g + v(f )u(g) . (8.1)
We reorder the terms to write this as
uv(f g) = f uv(g) + uv(f )g + u(f )v(g) + v(f )u(g) ,

(8.2)

so Leibniz rule is not satisfied by uv . But if we also consider the


combination vu , we get
vu(f g) = f (vu(g) + vu(f )g + v(f )u(g) + u(f )v(g) .

(8.3)

Thus
(uv vu)(f g) = f (uv vu)(g) + (uv vu)(f )g ,

(8.4)

which means that the combination


[u , v] := uv vu

(8.5)

is a vector field on M , with the product uv signifying successive


operation on any smooth function on M .
28

c Amitabha Lahiri: Lecture Notes on Differential Geometry for Physicists 2011


29

This combination is called the commutator or Lie bracket of


the vector fields u and v .
2
In any chart around the point P M , we can write a vector
field in local coordinates
v(f ) = v i

f
,
xi

(8.6)

so that



i f
u(v(f )) = u
v
xj
xi
v i f
2f
= uj j i + uj v i j i ,
x x
x x
i
u f
2f
v(u(f )) = v j j i + uj v i j i .
x x
x x
j

(8.7)

Subtracting, we get
u(v(f )) v(u(f )) = uj

i
v i f
j u f

v
,
xj xi
xj xi

(8.8)

from which we can read off the components of the commutator,


[u , v]i = uj

i
v i
j u

v
xj
xj

(8.9)

The commutator is antisymmetric, [u , v] = [v , u] , and satisfies


the Jacobi identity
[[u , v] , w] + [[v , w] , u] + [[w , u] , v] = 0 .

(8.10)

The commutator is
 useful
 for the following reason: Once we have a

chart, we can use


as a basis for vector fields in a neighbourxi
hood.
Any set of n linearly independent vector fields may be chosen as
a basis, but they need not form a coordinate system. In a coordinate
system,



,
= 0,
(8.11)
xi xj
because partial derivatives commute. So n vector fields will form a
coordinate system only if they commute, i.e., have vanishing commutators with one another. Then the coordinate lines are the integral

c Amitabha Lahiri: Lecture Notes on Differential Geometry for Physicists 2011


30

Chapter 8. Lie brackets

curves of the vector fields. For analytic manifolds, this condition is


sufficient as well.
A simple example is the polar coordinate system in R2 . The unit
vectors are
er = ex cos + ey sin
e = ex sin + ey cos ,

(8.12)

and ey =
being the Cartesian coordinate basis
x
y
vectors, and
p
x
y
cos = ,
sin = ,
r = x2 + y 2
(8.13)
r
r
with ex =

Using these expressions, it is easy to show that [er , e ] 6= 0 , so


{er , e } do not form a coordinate basis.

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