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Differential forms and chain rule

asked 2021-02-25 18:55:17 +0100

Ovoctar gravatar image

Is there any way to use the chain rule on differential forms in Sage e.g. d(1/z) = -z^(-2)dz ?

From what I've understood in the reference manual, differential forms are defined via a manifold and coordinate charts which doesn't seem to allow it. I am working with forms that can be arbitrarily big, so I think it would be better for me to treat this as a purely algebraic object with no reference to any charts, but I guess this cannot be avoided ?

Sorry for the somewhat naive question, I am new to Sage.

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The basic abilities of Sage include the use of chain rule :

sage: f=function("f")
sage: diff(1/f(x),x)
-diff(f(x), x)/f(x)^2

This entails the solution of your differential form, reformulated as an ordinary differential equation :

sage: S=desolve(E,f(x),x) ; S
_C - x
sage: var("_C")
_C
sage: bool(E.substitute_function(f, S.function(x)))
True

But this is outside the differential geometry framework, so I'm not sure that I address your question.

Emmanuel Charpentier gravatar imageEmmanuel Charpentier ( 2021-02-25 21:53:02 +0100 )edit

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answered 2021-02-26 14:12:17 +0100

eric_g gravatar image

Building on @Emmanuel_Charpentier's comment, the closest thing you can do to use the chain rule with unspecified differential forms is something like

sage: E.<x,y> = EuclideanSpace()                                                                    
sage: z = E.scalar_field(function('Z')(x,y), name='z')                                              
sage: z.display()                                                                                   
z: E^2 --> R
   (x, y) |--> Z(x, y)
sage: diff(z)                                                                                       
1-form dz on the Euclidean plane E^2
sage: diff(z).display()                                                                             
dz = d(Z)/dx dx + d(Z)/dy dy
sage: diff(1/z)                                                                                     
1-form d1/z on the Euclidean plane E^2
sage: diff(1/z).display()                                                                           
d1/z = -d(Z)/dx/Z(x, y)^2 dx - d(Z)/dy/Z(x, y)^2 dy
sage: diff(1/z) == -1/z^2 * diff(z)                                                                 
True
sage: diff(z).wedge(diff(1/z))                                                                      
2-form dz/\d1/z on the Euclidean plane E^2
sage: diff(z).wedge(diff(1/z)).display()                                                            
dz/\d1/z = 0

But as you can see, all computations use the underlying coordinates (x,y), even in assessing coordinate-free statements like in

sage: diff(1/z) == -z^(-2) * diff(z)                                                                
True
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Asked: 2021-02-25 18:55:17 +0100

Seen: 330 times

Last updated: Feb 26 '21