- Tangent space
In
mathematics , the tangent space of amanifold is a concept which facilitates the generalization of vectors fromaffine space s to general manifolds, since in the latter case one cannot simply subtract two points to obtain a vector pointing from one to the other.Informal description
In
differential geometry , one can attach to every point "x" of a differentiablemanifold a tangent space, a realvector space which intuitively contains the possible "directions" in which one can pass through "x". The elements of the tangent space are called tangent vectors at "x". All the tangent spaces have the same dimension, equal to the dimension of the manifold.For example, if the given manifold is a 2-
sphere , one can picture the tangent space at a point as the plane which touches the sphere at that point and isperpendicular to the sphere's radius through the point. More generally, if a given manifold is thought of as an embedded submanifold ofEuclidean space one can picture the tangent space in this literal fashion.In
algebraic geometry , in contrast, there is an intrinsic definition of tangent space at a point P of a variety "V", that gives a vector space of dimension at least that of "V". The points P at which the dimension is exactly that of "V" are called the non-singular points; the others are singular points. For example, a curve that crosses itself doesn't have a unique tangent line at that point. The singular points of "V" are those where the 'test to be a manifold' fails. SeeZariski tangent space .Once tangent spaces have been introduced, one can define
vector field s, which are abstractions of the velocity field of particles moving on a manifold. A vector field attaches to every point of the manifold a vector from the tangent space at that point, in a smooth manner. Such a vector field serves to define a generalizedordinary differential equation on a manifold: a solution to such a differential equation is a differentiablecurve on the manifold whose derivative at any point is equal to the tangent vector attached to that point by the vector field.All the tangent spaces can be "glued together" to form a new differentiable manifold of twice the dimension, the
tangent bundle of the manifold.Formal definitions
There are various equivalent ways of defining the tangent spaces of a manifold. While the definition via directions of curves is quite straightforward given the above intuition, it is also the most cumbersome to work with. More elegant and abstract approaches are described below.
Definition as directions of curves
Suppose "M" is a C"k" manifold ("k" ≥ 1) and "x" is a point in "M". Pick a chart φ : "U" → R"n" where "U" is an open subset of "M" containing "x". Suppose two curves γ1 : (-1,1) → "M" and γ2 : (-1,1) → "M" with γ1(0) = γ2(0) = "x" are given such that φ o γ1 and φ o γ2 are both differentiable at 0. Then γ1 and γ2 are called "tangent at 0" if the ordinary derivatives of φ o γ1 and φ o γ2 at 0 coincide. This defines an
equivalence relation on such curves, and theequivalence class es are known as the tangent vectors of "M" at "x". The equivalence class of the curve γ is written as γ'(0). The tangent space of "M" at "x", denoted by T"x""M", is defined as the set of all tangent vectors; it does not depend on the choice of chart φ.To define the vector space operations on T"x""M", we use a chart φ : "U" → R"n" and define the map (dφ)"x" : T"x""M" → R"n" by (dφ)"x"(γ'(0)) = scriptstylefrac{d}{dt}(φ o γ)(0). It turns out that this map is
bijective and can thus be used to transfer the vector space operations from R"n" over to T"x""M", turning the latter into an "n"-dimensional real vector space. Again, one needs to check that this construction does not depend on the particular chart φ chosen, and in fact it does not.Definition via derivations
Suppose "M" is a C∞ manifold. A real-valued function "f" : "M" → R belongs to C∞("M") if "f" o φ-1 is infinitely often differentiable for every chart φ : "U" → R"n". C∞("M") is a real
associative algebra for thepointwise product and sum of functions and scalar multiplication.Pick a point "x" in "M". A "derivation" at "x" is a
linear map "D" : C∞("M") → R which has the property that for all "f", "g" in C∞("M")::"D"("fg") = "D"("f")·"g"("x") + "f"("x")·"D"("g")modeled on theproduct rule of calculus. These derivations form a real vector space in a natural manner; this is the tangent space T"x""M".The relation between the tangent vectors defined earlier and derivations is as follows: if γ is a curve with tangent vector γ'(0), then the corresponding derivation is "D"("f") = ("f" o γ)'(0) (where the derivative is taken in the ordinary sense, since "f" o γ is a function from (-1,1) to R).
Generalizations of this definition are possible, for instance to
complex manifold s and algebraic varieties. However, instead of examining derivations "D" from the full algebra of functions, one must instead work at the level of germs of functions. The reason is that thestructure sheaf may not be fine for such structures. For instance, let "X" be an algebraic variety withstructure sheaf "F". Then theZariski tangent space at a point "p"∈"X" is the collection of "K"-derivations "D":"F"p→"K", where "K" is the groundfield and "F"p is the stalk of "F" at "p".Definition via the cotangent space
Again we start with a C∞ manifold "M" and a point "x" in "M". Consider the ideal "I" in C∞("M") consisting of all functions "f" such that "f"("x") = 0. Then "I" and "I" 2 are real vector spaces, and T"x""M" may be defined as the
dual space of the quotient space "I" / "I" 2. This latter quotient space is also known as thecotangent space of "M" at "x".While this definition is the most abstract, it is also the one most easily transferred to other settings, for instance to the varieties considered in
algebraic geometry .If "D" is a derivation, then "D"("f") = 0 for every "f" in "I"2, and this means that "D" gives rise to a linear map "I" / "I"2 → R. Conversely, if "r" : "I" / "I"2 → R is a linear map, then "D"("f") = "r"(("f" - "f"("x")) + "I" 2) is a derivation. This yields the correspondence between the tangent space defined via derivations and the tangent space defined via the cotangent space.
Properties
If "M" is an open subset of R"n", then "M" is a C∞ manifold in a natural manner (take the charts to be the
identity map s), and the tangent spaces are all naturally identified with R"n".Tangent vectors as directional derivatives
One way to think about tangent vectors is as
directional derivative s. Given a vector "v" in R"n" one defines the directional derivative of a smooth map "f" : R"n"→R at a point "x" by:scriptstyle D_v f(x) = frac{d}{dt}igg|_{t=0}f(x+tv)=sum_{i=1}^{n}v^ifrac{partial f}{partial x^i}(x).This map is naturally a derivation. Moreover, it turns out that every derivation of C∞(R"n") is of this form. So there is a one-to-one map between vectors (thought of as tangent vectors at a point) and derivations.Since tangent vectors to a general manifold can be defined as derivations it is natural to think of them as directional derivatives. Specifically, if "v" is a tangent vector of "M" at a point "x" (thought of as a derivation) then define the directional derivative in the direction "v" by:scriptstyle D_v(f) = v(f),where "f" : "M" → R is an element of C∞("M").If we think of "v" as the direction of a curve, "v" = γ'(0), then we write:scriptstyle D_v(f) = (fcircgamma)'(0).
The derivative of a map
"Main article:
Pushforward (differential) "Every smooth (or differentiable) map "φ" : "M" → "N" between smooth (or differentiable) manifolds induces natural
linear map s between the corresponding tangent spaces::scriptstyle mathrm dvarphi_xcolon T_xM o T_{varphi(x)}N.If the tangent space is defined via curves, the map is defined as:scriptstylemathrm dvarphi_x(gamma'(0)) = (varphicircgamma)'(0).If instead the tangent space is defined via derivations, then:scriptstylemathrm dvarphi_x(X)(f) = X(fcirc varphi).The linear map d"φ""x" is called variously the "derivative", "total derivative", "differential", or "pushforward" of "φ" at "x". It is frequently expressed using a variety of other notations::scriptstyle Dvarphi_x,quad (varphi_*)_x,quad varphi'(x).In a sense, the derivative is the best linear approximation to "φ" near "x". Note that when "N" = R, the map d"φ""x" : T"x""M"→R coincides with the usual notion of the differential of the function "φ". In
local coordinates the derivative of "f" is given by theJacobian .An important result regarding the derivative map is the following::Theorem. If "φ" : "M" → "N" is a
local diffeomorphism at "x" in "M" then d"φ""x" : T"x""M" → T"φ"("x")"N" is a linearisomorphism . Conversely, if d"φ""x" is an isomorphism then there is an open neighborhood "U" of "x" such that "φ" maps "U" diffeomorphically onto its image.This is a generalization of theinverse function theorem to maps between manifolds.References
* ("to appear").
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.