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Encyclopedia > Riemann tensor

In differential geometry, the Riemann curvature tensor is the most standard way to express curvature of Riemannian manifolds, or more generally, any manifold with an affine connection, torsionless or with torsion. The curvature tensor is given in terms of a Levi-Civita connection (more generally, an affine connection) (or covariant differentiation) by the following formula:

Here R(u,v) is a linear transformation of the tangent space of the manifold; it is linear in each argument.


NB. Some authors define the curvature tensor with the opposite sign.


If and are coordinate vector fields then [u,v] = 0 and therefore the formula simplifies to

i.e. the curvature tensor measures anticommutativity of the covariant derivative.


The linear transformation is also called the curvature transformation.


Symmetries and identities

The curvature tensor has the following symmetries:

The last identity was discovered by Ricci, but is often called the first Bianchi identity, because it looks similar to the Bianchi identity below. These three identities form a complete list of symmetries of the curvature tensor, i.e. given any tensor which satisfies the identities above, one can find a Riemannian manifold with such a curvature tensor at some point. Simple calculations show that such a tensor has n2(n2 - 1) / 12 independent components. Yet another useful identity follows from these three:

The Bianchi identity (often the second Bianchi identity) involves the covariant derivatives:

See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Riemann curvature tensor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (399 words)
In differential geometry, the Riemann curvature tensor is the most standard way to express curvature of Riemannian manifolds, or more generally, any manifold with an affine connection, torsionless or with torsion.
the curvature tensor measures noncommutativity of the covariant derivative.
is the metric tensor and K is a function called the Gauss curvature.
Bernhard Riemann - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (990 words)
The theory of Riemann surfaces was elaborated by Felix Klein and particularly Adolf Hurwitz.
Riemann was born in Breselenz on September 17 1826, a village near Dannenberg in the Kingdom of Hanover in what is today Germany.
Riemann found that in four spatial dimensions, one needs a collection of ten numbers at each point to describe the properties of a manifold, no matter how distorted it is. This is the famous metric tensor.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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