|  Vector Fields on Manifolds | 
In General > s.a. integration on manifolds;
  lie groups; vector calculus; vectors.
  $ Def 1: A cross section of the tangent bundle TX.
  $ Def 2: A derivation
    v: Ck(X)
    → Ck−1(X)
    on the algebra of Ck functions on X
    taking f ∈ Ck(X)
    to v(f):= vf.
  * Complex vector field:
    It can be visualized as a field of ellipses [@ M Berry].
  @ Generalizations: Chatterjee et al JPA(06)mp [and forms];
    Chatterjee & Lahiri a0705-conf;
    > s.a. tangent structures [second-order].
  > In physics: see low-spin field theories.
  > Online resources:
    see MathWorld page
    [2015.11, the (y, x) and (–y, x) fields are incorrectly drawn];
    Wikipedia page.
Special Types of Vector Fields > s.a. decomposition
  of tensor fields; Projectable Vector Field.
  * Complete vector field: One that
    generates a global one-parameter group of transformations.
  * Hypersurface-orthogonal:
    va is hypersurface-orthogonal
    if v[a
    ∇b vc]
    = 0; > s.a. Newman-Penrose formalism.
  * Solenoidal: One whose divergence
    vanishes, ∇ · v = 0.
  $ Invariant: A vector field v
    ∈ TX is invariant under the diffeomorphism f : X →
    X if f '(x)vx
    = vf(x), for all x
    ∈ X; This can also be written f 'v = v, or f*
    \(\circ\) v = v \(\circ\) f*.
  @ References: Hall CQG(06) [covariantly constant, and curvature tensor].
Related Concepts
  > s.a. 2D manifolds [Lie elgebras of vector fields]; Flux;
  tangent structures [tangent map, push-forward]; vector calculus.
  * Flow: Given a C1
    vector field v on a manifold X, the flow of v on X is the
    mapping σ: Σv → X
    given by (x, t) \(\mapsto\) σ(x, t),
    where Σv:= {(x, t)
    | x ∈ X, t ∈ I, x = σ(t),
    σ: I → X} ⊂ X × \(\mathbb R\).
  * Integral curve: Given v ∈ TX,
    a curve σ: I → X, I ⊂ \(\mathbb R\), is an integral curve of
    v if dσ(t)/dt = v(σ(t));
    The orbit is the image σ(I) ⊂ X.
  * Weinstein conjecture:
    Every Reeb vector field on a closed oriented three-manifold has a closed orbit;
    Proved by Taubes using Seiberg-Witten theory; > s.a.
    Wikipedia page.
  * Moving frame: A set of n linearly independent
    differentiable vector fields on X (of dimension n) which form a basis for the module
    χ(U), U ⊂ X; > s.a. tetrad or vielbein.
  @ References: Clark T&A(05) [topological invariant for flows];
    Hutchings BAMS(10) [3D Weinstein conjecture, Taubes proof].
Vector Bundle > s.a. tangent structures.
  $ Def: A fiber bundle whose fiber is a vector space.
  * Examples: The tangent bundle
    TM or cotangent bundle T*M of any manifold M.
  $ Vertical vector field:
    A vector field in a fiber bundle is vertical if it is tangent to the fiber.
  $ Vertical covector field:
    Given a preferred horizontal subspace on a fiber bundle, a covector field is
    vertical if its contraction with any horizontal vector vanishes.
  * Remark: This can now be
    easily extended to a tensor field with any index structure.
  $ Linear vector field: A
    projectable vector field v ∈ TX is linear if every
    flow σp is a morphism
    of vector bundles over vt,
    where σp is a flow of
    v, or σp : E
    → E, restricted to each fiber Ex
    is a linear mapping σp:
    Ex →
    Eσt(x).
On a Lie Group
  $ Invariant vector field: The vector field v
    ∈ TG is invariant under the left action Lg:
    G → G if for all g, h ∈ G,
    L'g(v(h))
    = v(Lg(h)) ≡ v(gh).
  * Relationships: There
    is a bijection between left invariant vector fields on G and
    tangent vectors of G at the identity e.
  * Remark: There is a
    similar definition for right-invariant vector fields.
On Spaces with Other Structures > see poisson manifolds.
 main page
  – abbreviations
  – journals – comments
  – other sites – acknowledgements
  send feedback and suggestions to bombelli at olemiss.edu – modified 22 jan 2016