|  Principal Fiber Bundles | 
In General > s.a. fiber bundles [including triviality criteria].
  $ Def: A fiber bundle
    (E, M, π, G), where F ~ G,
    and G acts on the fiber F by left translations.
  * Dimension: dim(E) = dim(M) + dim(G).
  * Right action of the group:
    A group action (a realization) that preserves the fibers, i.e., Rg:
    π−1(x) →
    π−1(x),
    by Rg(p)
    = φi,x−1
    \(\circ\) Rg \(\circ\)
    φi,x(p), for all
    i such that x ∈ Ui
    (we can denote this by pg); The group acts transitively on each fiber.
  @ References: Typed notes on fiber bundles by Geroch (*);
    > s.a. Wikipedia page.
Associated Principal Fiber Bundle
  * Idea: Given a fiber bundle
    (E, M, π, G), one can construct a
    principal fiber bundle P(E) using the same M and
    gij as for E,
    and G both as structure group and fiber, with the reconstruction method.
  * Example: If E = T(M),
    then P(E) = F(M), the frame bundle on M.
  * Use: See triviality criteria.
Reduction
  * Idea: A principal fiber bundle
    (E, M, π, G) is reducible to (E',
    M, π', G') if G'  is a subgroup of G,
    and E' a subspace of E such that the injection f
    : E' → E be a bundle morphism commuting with the action
    of G':
π f(p) = π'p for all p ∈ E', and f(Rg p) = Rg f(p) for all p ∈ E', g ∈ G' .
  * Or: A reduction of E to
    a subgroup G' is a submanifold  Q' which meets each G-orbit
    in exactly one G'-orbit (and a similar condition for tgt spaces).
  * Use: The possibility of having
    different structures on a manifold M can often be cast into the question
    of whether the frame bundle can be reduced to some subgroup of GL(n,
    \(\mathbb R\)) or GL(n, \(\mathbb C\)); > see e.g.
    orientation and lorentzian structure.
  * Remark: Reductions need not exist
    nor be unique; E is reducible to {e} iff it is trivial.
Extension of the Group
  * Remark: May not exist nor be unique.
  * Example: A spinor bundle (spin structure)
    is an extension of the bundle of space and time oriented tetrads.
Other Operations
  * Product:
    Given (P, M, G) and
    (P', M', G'), the action of G
    × G' on P × P' is defined by
    (p, p') \(\mapsto\) (pg, p'g').
  * Pullback Bundle:
  * Disjoint Union:
  @ References: Bunke & Schick RVMP(05)m.GT/04 [T-duality for U(1)-principal fiber bundles].
Classification
  > s.a. characteristic classes.
  * In principle: An answer to
    the question of classification of principal fiber bundles can be given as follows;
    Given a base space M and a group G, any G-principal
    fiber bundle Pon M is the pullback f*ξ,
    for some f: M → O(n)/(G ×
    O(n−k)), of the (n−k−1)
    universal principal fiber bundle with fiber G, for some n large enough;
    Thus, the principal fiber bundles are classified by the homotopy classes of such
    maps f; The calculations are difficult if not impossible, in general.
  * In general: Classified by
    H2(M, π1(X)).
  * Over 4D, oriented, simply connected,
    compact M: The possible G-bundles are classified by
    homotopy classes of maps f : M → B(G), where
    B(G) is the classifying space.
  * Over M = Sn:
    The classification is given by πn−1(G), and
    the U(1)-bundles over X are classified by H2(X).
  @ Over 2D CW-complexes: Kubyshin m.AT/99-proc.
Examples, Types and Generalizations
  > see bundle [gerbes]; Frame Bundle.
  * Examples: Any frame bundle; Any
    Lie group G, with a closed subgroup H as fiber and base manifold
    G/H; The Universal covering space of a topological space X,
    with fiber π1(X) and base manifold X.
  * Generalizations: Stratified manifolds
    (> see gauge theories, geometrodynamics).
  @ References: Rossi m.DG/04 [with grupoid structure];
    Oriti et al CQG(05)gq/04 [simplicial base space]
    Masson JPCS(08)-a0709 [SU(n) principal fiber bundle].
 main page
  – abbreviations
  – journals – comments
  – other sites – acknowledgements
  send feedback and suggestions to bombelli at olemiss.edu – modified 6 feb 2016