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Encyclopedia > Finsler geometry


In mathematics, a Finsler manifold is a differential manifold M with a Banach norm defined over each tangent space such that the Banach norm as a function of position is smooth and satisfies the following property:

For each point x of M, and for every vector v in the tangent space TxM, the second derivative of the function L:TxM->R given by
at v is positive definite.

Riemannian manifolds (but not pseudo Riemannian manifolds) are special cases of Finsler manifolds.


The length of γ, a differentiable curve in M is given by

.

Note that this is reparametrization-invariant. Geodesics are curves in M whose length is extremal under functional derivatives.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Differential geometry and topology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1115 words)
Differential geometry is the study of geometry using calculus.
Initially and up to the middle of the nineteenth century, differential geometry was studied from the extrinsic point of view: curves, surfaces were considered as lying in a Euclidean space of higher dimension (for example a surface in an ambient space of three dimensions).
Finsler geometry has the Finsler manifold as the main object of study — this is a differential manifold with a Finsler metric, i.e.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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