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mathematics Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, the Hodge star operator or Hodge star is a
linear map In mathematics, and more specifically in linear algebra, a linear map (also called a linear mapping, linear transformation, vector space homomorphism, or in some contexts linear function) is a mapping V \to W between two vector spaces that p ...
defined on the exterior algebra of a finite-dimensional oriented
vector space In mathematics and physics, a vector space (also called a linear space) is a set (mathematics), set whose elements, often called vector (mathematics and physics), ''vectors'', can be added together and multiplied ("scaled") by numbers called sc ...
endowed with a nondegenerate symmetric bilinear form. Applying the operator to an element of the algebra produces the Hodge dual of the element. This map was introduced by W. V. D. Hodge. For example, in an oriented 3-dimensional Euclidean space, an oriented plane can be represented by the
exterior product In mathematics, specifically in topology, the interior of a subset of a topological space is the union of all subsets of that are open in . A point that is in the interior of is an interior point of . The interior of is the complement of ...
of two basis vectors, and its Hodge dual is the normal vector given by their
cross product In mathematics, the cross product or vector product (occasionally directed area product, to emphasize its geometric significance) is a binary operation on two vectors in a three-dimensional oriented Euclidean vector space (named here E), and ...
; conversely, any vector is dual to the oriented plane perpendicular to it, endowed with a suitable bivector. Generalizing this to an -dimensional vector space, the Hodge star is a one-to-one mapping of -vectors to -vectors; the dimensions of these spaces are the
binomial coefficient In mathematics, the binomial coefficients are the positive integers that occur as coefficients in the binomial theorem. Commonly, a binomial coefficient is indexed by a pair of integers and is written \tbinom. It is the coefficient of the t ...
s \tbinom nk = \tbinom. The naturalness of the star operator means it can play a role in differential geometry when applied to the cotangent bundle of a pseudo-Riemannian manifold, and hence to differential -forms. This allows the definition of the codifferential as the Hodge adjoint of the exterior derivative, leading to the Laplace–de Rham operator. This generalizes the case of 3-dimensional Euclidean space, in which
divergence In vector calculus, divergence is a vector operator that operates on a vector field, producing a scalar field giving the rate that the vector field alters the volume in an infinitesimal neighborhood of each point. (In 2D this "volume" refers to ...
of a vector field may be realized as the codifferential opposite to the gradient operator, and the
Laplace operator In mathematics, the Laplace operator or Laplacian is a differential operator given by the divergence of the gradient of a Scalar field, scalar function on Euclidean space. It is usually denoted by the symbols \nabla\cdot\nabla, \nabla^2 (where \ ...
on a function is the divergence of its gradient. An important application is the Hodge decomposition of differential forms on a closed Riemannian manifold.


Formal definition for ''k''-vectors

Let be an -dimensional oriented
vector space In mathematics and physics, a vector space (also called a linear space) is a set (mathematics), set whose elements, often called vector (mathematics and physics), ''vectors'', can be added together and multiplied ("scaled") by numbers called sc ...
with a nondegenerate symmetric bilinear form \langle \cdot,\cdot \rangle, referred to here as a scalar product. (In more general contexts such as pseudo-Riemannian manifolds and Minkowski space, the bilinear form may not be positive-definite.) This induces a scalar product on -vectors for 0 \le k \le n, by defining it on simple -vectors \alpha = \alpha_1 \wedge \cdots \wedge \alpha_k and \beta = \beta_1 \wedge \cdots \wedge \beta_k to equal the Gram determinant Harley Flanders (1963) ''Differential Forms with Applications to the Physical Sciences'', Academic Press : \langle \alpha, \beta \rangle = \det \left( \left\langle \alpha_i, \beta_j \right\rangle _^k\right) extended to \bigwedge^V through linearity. The unit -vector \omega\in^V is defined in terms of an oriented
orthonormal basis In mathematics, particularly linear algebra, an orthonormal basis for an inner product space V with finite Dimension (linear algebra), dimension is a Basis (linear algebra), basis for V whose vectors are orthonormal, that is, they are all unit vec ...
\ of as: : \omega := e_1\wedge\cdots\wedge e_n. (Note: In the general pseudo-Riemannian case, orthonormality means \langle e_i,e_j\rangle \in\ for all pairs of basis vectors.) The Hodge star operator is a linear operator on the exterior algebra of , mapping -vectors to ()-vectors, for 0 \le k \le n. It has the following property, which defines it completely: : \alpha \wedge ( \beta) = \langle \alpha,\beta \rangle \,\omega for all -vectors \alpha,\beta\in ^V . Dually, in the space ^V^* of -forms (alternating -multilinear functions on V^n), the dual to \omega is the volume form \det, the function whose value on v_1\wedge\cdots\wedge v_n is the
determinant In mathematics, the determinant is a Scalar (mathematics), scalar-valued function (mathematics), function of the entries of a square matrix. The determinant of a matrix is commonly denoted , , or . Its value characterizes some properties of the ...
of the n\times n matrix assembled from the column vectors of v_j in e_i-coordinates. Applying \det to the above equation, we obtain the dual definition: : \det(\alpha \wedge \beta) = \langle \alpha,\beta \rangle for all -vectors \alpha,\beta\in ^V . Equivalently, taking \alpha = \alpha_1 \wedge \cdots \wedge \alpha_k, \beta = \beta_1 \wedge \cdots \wedge \beta_k, and \beta = \beta_1^\star \wedge \cdots \wedge \beta_^\star: : \det\left(\alpha_1\wedge \cdots \wedge\alpha_k\wedge\beta_1^\star\wedge \cdots \wedge\beta_^\star\right) \ = \ \det\left(\langle\alpha_i, \beta_j\rangle\right). This means that, writing an orthonormal basis of -vectors as e_I \ = \ e_\wedge\cdots\wedge e_ over all subsets I = \ of \, the Hodge dual is the ()-vector corresponding to the complementary set \bar = \smallsetminus I = \left\: : e_I = s\cdot t\cdot e_\bar , where s\in\ is the sign of the permutation i_1 \cdots i_k \bar i_1 \cdots \bar i_ and t\in\ is the product \langle e_,e_\rangle\cdots \langle e_,e_\rangle. In the Riemannian case, t=1. Since Hodge star takes an orthonormal basis to an orthonormal basis, it is an isometry on the exterior algebra \bigwedge V.


Geometric explanation

The Hodge star is motivated by the correspondence between a subspace of and its orthogonal subspace (with respect to the scalar product), where each space is endowed with an orientation and a numerical scaling factor. Specifically, a non-zero decomposable -vector w_1\wedge\cdots\wedge w_k\in \textstyle\bigwedge^ V corresponds by the Plücker embedding to the subspace W with oriented basis w_1,\ldots,w_k, endowed with a scaling factor equal to the -dimensional volume of the parallelepiped spanned by this basis (equal to the Gramian, the determinant of the matrix of scalar products \langle w_i, w_j \rangle). The Hodge star acting on a decomposable vector can be written as a decomposable ()-vector: : (w_1\wedge\cdots\wedge w_k) \,=\, u_1\wedge\cdots\wedge u_, where u_1,\ldots,u_ form an oriented basis of the orthogonal space U = W^\perp\!. Furthermore, the ()-volume of the u_i-parallelepiped must equal the -volume of the w_i-parallelepiped, and w_1,\ldots,w_k,u_1,\ldots,u_ must form an oriented basis of V. A general -vector is a linear combination of decomposable -vectors, and the definition of Hodge star is extended to general -vectors by defining it as being linear.


Examples


Two dimensions

In two dimensions with the normalized Euclidean metric and orientation given by the ordering , the Hodge star on -forms is given by \begin \, 1 &= dx \wedge dy \\ \, dx &= dy \\ \, dy &= -dx \\ ( dx \wedge dy ) &= 1 . \end


Three dimensions

A common example of the Hodge star operator is the case , when it can be taken as the correspondence between vectors and bivectors. Specifically, for Euclidean R3 with the basis dx, dy, dz of one-forms often used in vector calculus, one finds that \begin \,dx &= dy \wedge dz \\ \,dy &= dz \wedge dx \\ \,dz &= dx \wedge dy. \end The Hodge star relates the exterior and cross product in three dimensions: (\mathbf \wedge \mathbf) = \mathbf \times \mathbf \qquad (\mathbf \times \mathbf ) = \mathbf \wedge \mathbf . Applied to three dimensions, the Hodge star provides an
isomorphism In mathematics, an isomorphism is a structure-preserving mapping or morphism between two structures of the same type that can be reversed by an inverse mapping. Two mathematical structures are isomorphic if an isomorphism exists between the ...
between axial vectors and bivectors, so each axial vector is associated with a bivector and vice versa, that is: \mathbf = \mathbf, \ \ \mathbf = \mathbf. The Hodge star can also be interpreted as a form of the geometric correspondence between an axis of rotation and an
infinitesimal rotation An infinitesimal rotation matrix or differential rotation matrix is a matrix (mathematics), matrix representing an infinitesimal, infinitely small rotation. While a rotation matrix is an orthogonal matrix R^\mathsf = R^ representing an element of S ...
(see also: 3D rotation group#Lie algebra) around the axis, with speed equal to the length of the axis of rotation. A scalar product on a vector space V gives an
isomorphism In mathematics, an isomorphism is a structure-preserving mapping or morphism between two structures of the same type that can be reversed by an inverse mapping. Two mathematical structures are isomorphic if an isomorphism exists between the ...
V\cong V^*\! identifying V with its dual space, and the vector space L(V,V) is naturally isomorphic to the
tensor product In mathematics, the tensor product V \otimes W of two vector spaces V and W (over the same field) is a vector space to which is associated a bilinear map V\times W \rightarrow V\otimes W that maps a pair (v,w),\ v\in V, w\in W to an element of ...
V^*\!\!\otimes V\cong V\otimes V. Thus for V = \mathbb^3, the star mapping \textstyle : V\to\bigwedge^\! V \subset V\otimes V takes each vector \mathbf to a bivector \mathbf \in V\otimes V, which corresponds to a linear operator L_ : V\to V. Specifically, L_ is a skew-symmetric operator, which corresponds to an infinitesimal rotation: that is, the macroscopic rotations around the axis \mathbb are given by the
matrix exponential In mathematics, the matrix exponential is a matrix function on square matrix, square matrices analogous to the ordinary exponential function. It is used to solve systems of linear differential equations. In the theory of Lie groups, the matrix exp ...
\exp(t L_). With respect to the basis dx, dy, dz of \R^3, the tensor dx\otimes dy corresponds to a coordinate matrix with 1 in the dx row and dy column, etc., and the wedge dx\wedge dy \,=\, dx\otimes dy - dy\otimes dx is the skew-symmetric matrix \scriptscriptstyle\left begin \,0\!\! & \!\!1 & \!\!\!\!0\!\!\!\!\!\! \\[-.5em\,\!-1\!\!&\!\!0\!\!&\!\!\!\!0\!\!\!\!\!\! \\[-.5em">.5em.html" ;"title="begin \,0\!\! & \!\!1 & \!\!\!\!0\!\!\!\!\!\! \\[-.5em">begin \,0\!\! & \!\!1 & \!\!\!\!0\!\!\!\!\!\! \\[-.5em\,\!-1\!\!&\!\!0\!\!&\!\!\!\!0\!\!\!\!\!\! \\[-.5em\,0\!\! & \!\!0\!\! & \!\!\!\!0\!\!\!\!\!\! \end\!\!\!\right], etc. That is, we may interpret the star operator as: \mathbf = a\,dx + b\,dy + c\,dz \quad\longrightarrow \quad \ \cong\ L_ \ = \left[\begin 0 & c & -b \\ -c & 0 & a \\ b & -a & 0 \end\right]. Under this correspondence, cross product of vectors corresponds to the commutator Lie algebra, Lie bracket of linear operators: L_ = L_ L_ - L_ L_=-\left _, L_\right/math>.


Four dimensions

In case n=4, the Hodge star acts as an endomorphism of the second exterior power (i.e. it maps 2-forms to 2-forms, since ). If the signature of the metric tensor is all positive, i.e. on a
Riemannian manifold In differential geometry, a Riemannian manifold is a geometric space on which many geometric notions such as distance, angles, length, volume, and curvature are defined. Euclidean space, the N-sphere, n-sphere, hyperbolic space, and smooth surf ...
, then the Hodge star is an involution. If the signature is mixed, i.e., pseudo-Riemannian, then applying the operator twice will return the argument up to a sign – see ' below. This particular endomorphism property of 2-forms in four dimensions makes self-dual and anti-self-dual two-forms natural geometric objects to study. That is, one can describe the space of 2-forms in four dimensions with a basis that "diagonalizes" the Hodge star operator with eigenvalues \pm 1 (or \pm i, depending on the signature). For concreteness, we discuss the Hodge star operator in Minkowski spacetime where n=4 with metric signature and coordinates (t,x,y,z). The volume form is oriented as \varepsilon_ = 1. For one-forms, \begin dt &= -dx \wedge dy \wedge dz \,, \\ dx &= -dt \wedge dy \wedge dz \,, \\ dy &= -dt \wedge dz \wedge dx \,, \\ dz &= -dt \wedge dx \wedge dy \,, \end while for 2-forms, \begin (dt \wedge dx) &= - dy \wedge dz \,, \\ (dt \wedge dy) &= - dz \wedge dx \,, \\ (dt \wedge dz) &= - dx \wedge dy \,, \\ (dx \wedge dy) &= dt \wedge dz \,, \\ (dz \wedge dx) &= dt \wedge dy \,, \\ (dy \wedge dz) &= dt \wedge dx \,. \end These are summarized in the index notation as \begin (dx^\mu) &= \eta^ \varepsilon_ \frac dx^\nu \wedge dx^\rho \wedge dx^\sigma \,,\\ (dx^\mu \wedge dx^\nu) &= \eta^ \eta^ \varepsilon_ \frac dx^\rho \wedge dx^\sigma \,. \end Hodge dual of three- and four-forms can be easily deduced from the fact that, in the Lorentzian signature, ^2=1 for odd-rank forms and ^2=-1 for even-rank forms. An easy rule to remember for these Hodge operations is that given a form \alpha, its Hodge dual \alpha may be obtained by writing the components not involved in \alpha in an order such that \alpha \wedge ( \alpha) = dt \wedge dx \wedge dy \wedge dz . An extra minus sign will enter only if \alpha contains dt. (For , one puts in a minus sign only if \alpha involves an odd number of the space-associated forms dx, dy and dz.) Note that the combinations (dx^\mu \wedge dx^\nu)^ := \frac \big( dx^\mu \wedge dx^\nu \mp i (dx^\mu \wedge dx^\nu) \big) take \pm i as the eigenvalue for Hodge star operator, i.e., (dx^\mu \wedge dx^\nu)^ = \pm i (dx^\mu \wedge dx^\nu)^ , and hence deserve the name self-dual and anti-self-dual two-forms. Understanding the geometry, or kinematics, of Minkowski spacetime in self-dual and anti-self-dual sectors turns out to be insightful in both
mathematical Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
and physical perspectives, making contacts to the use of the two-spinor language in modern physics such as spinor-helicity formalism or twistor theory.


Conformal invariance

The Hodge star is conformally invariant on -forms on a -dimensional vector space V , i.e. if g is a metric on V and \lambda > 0 , then the induced Hodge stars _g, _ : \Lambda^n V \to \Lambda^n V are the same.


Example: Derivatives in three dimensions

The combination of the operator and the exterior derivative generates the classical operators , , and on vector fields in three-dimensional Euclidean space. This works out as follows: takes a 0-form (a function) to a 1-form, a 1-form to a 2-form, and a 2-form to a 3-form (and takes a 3-form to zero). For a 0-form f = f(x,y,z), the first case written out in components gives: df = \frac \, dx + \frac \, dy + \frac \, dz. The scalar product identifies 1-forms with vector fields as dx \mapsto (1,0,0), etc., so that df becomes \operatorname f = \left(\frac, \frac, \frac\right). In the second case, a vector field \mathbf F = (A,B,C) corresponds to the 1-form \varphi = A\,dx + B\,dy + C\,dz, which has exterior derivative: d\varphi = \left(\frac - \frac\right) dy\wedge dz + \left(\frac - \frac\right) dx\wedge dz + \left( - \frac\right) dx\wedge dy. Applying the Hodge star gives the 1-form: d\varphi = \left( - \right) \, dx - \left( - \right) \, dy + \left( - \right) \, dz, which becomes the vector field \operatorname\mathbf = \left( \frac - \frac,\, -\frac + \frac,\, \frac - \frac \right). In the third case, \mathbf F = (A,B,C) again corresponds to \varphi = A\,dx + B\,dy + C\,dz. Applying Hodge star, exterior derivative, and Hodge star again: \begin \varphi &= A\,dy\wedge dz-B\,dx\wedge dz+C\,dx\wedge dy, \\ d &= \left(\frac+\frac+\frac\right)dx\wedge dy\wedge dz, \\ d\varphi &= \frac+\frac+\frac = \operatorname\mathbf. \end One advantage of this expression is that the identity , which is true in all cases, has as special cases two other identities: (1) , and (2) . In particular,
Maxwell's equations Maxwell's equations, or Maxwell–Heaviside equations, are a set of coupled partial differential equations that, together with the Lorentz force law, form the foundation of classical electromagnetism, classical optics, Electrical network, electr ...
take on a particularly simple and elegant form, when expressed in terms of the exterior derivative and the Hodge star. The expression d (multiplied by an appropriate power of −1) is called the ''codifferential''; it is defined in full generality, for any dimension, further in the article below. One can also obtain the
Laplacian In mathematics, the Laplace operator or Laplacian is a differential operator given by the divergence of the gradient of a scalar function on Euclidean space. It is usually denoted by the symbols \nabla\cdot\nabla, \nabla^2 (where \nabla is th ...
in terms of the above operations: \Delta f = dd f = \frac + \frac + \frac. The Laplacian can also be seen as a special case of the more general Laplace–deRham operator \Delta = d\delta + \delta d where in three dimensions, \delta = (-1)^k d is the codifferential for k-forms. Any function f is a 0-form, and \delta f = 0 and so this reduces to the ordinary Laplacian. For the 1-form \varphi above, the codifferential is \delta = - d and after some straightforward calculations one obtains the Laplacian acting on \varphi.


Duality

Applying the Hodge star twice leaves a -vector unchanged up to a sign: for \eta\in ^k V in an -dimensional space , one has : \eta = (-1)^ s\, \eta , where is the parity of the
signature A signature (; from , "to sign") is a depiction of someone's name, nickname, or even a simple "X" or other mark that a person writes on documents as a proof of identity and intent. Signatures are often, but not always, Handwriting, handwritt ...
of the scalar product on , that is, the sign of the
determinant In mathematics, the determinant is a Scalar (mathematics), scalar-valued function (mathematics), function of the entries of a square matrix. The determinant of a matrix is commonly denoted , , or . Its value characterizes some properties of the ...
of the matrix of the scalar product with respect to any basis. For example, if and the signature of the scalar product is either or then . For Riemannian manifolds (including Euclidean spaces), we always have . The above identity implies that the inverse of can be given as : \begin ^: ~ ^ V &\to ^ V \\ \eta &\mapsto (-1)^ \!s\, \eta \end If is odd then is even for any , whereas if is even then has the parity of . Therefore: : ^ = \begin s\, & n \text \\ (-1)^k s\, & n \text \end where is the degree of the element operated on.


On manifolds

For an ''n''-dimensional oriented pseudo-Riemannian manifold ''M'', we apply the construction above to each cotangent space \text^*_p M and its exterior powers \bigwedge^k\text^*_p M, and hence to the differential ''k'' -forms \zeta\in\Omega^k(M) = \Gamma\left(\bigwedge^k\text^*\!M\right), the global sections of the bundle \bigwedge^k \mathrm^*\! M\to M. The Riemannian metric induces a scalar product on \bigwedge^k \text^*_p M at each point p\in M. We define the Hodge dual of a ''k'' -form \zeta , defining \zeta as the unique (''n'' – ''k'')-form satisfying \eta\wedge \zeta \ =\ \langle \eta, \zeta \rangle \, \omega for every ''k''-form \eta , where \langle\eta,\zeta\rangle is a real-valued function on M, and the volume form \omega is induced by the pseudo-Riemannian metric. Integrating this equation over M, the right side becomes the L^2 ( square-integrable) scalar product on ''k''-forms, and we obtain: \int_M \eta\wedge \zeta \ =\ \int_M \langle\eta,\zeta\rangle\ \omega. More generally, if M is non-orientable, one can define the Hodge star of a ''k''-form as a (''n'' – ''k'')- pseudo differential form; that is, a differential form with values in the canonical line bundle.


Computation in index notation

We compute in terms of tensor index notation with respect to a (not necessarily orthonormal) basis \left\ in a tangent space V = T_p M and its dual basis \ in V^* = T^*_p M, having the metric matrix (g_) = \left(\left\langle \frac, \frac\right\rangle\right) and its inverse matrix (g^) = (\langle dx^i, dx^j\rangle). The Hodge dual of a decomposable ''k''-form is: \left(dx^ \wedge \dots \wedge dx^\right) \ =\ \frac g^ \cdots g^ \varepsilon_ dx^ \wedge \dots \wedge dx^. Here \varepsilon_ is the Levi-Civita symbol with \varepsilon_ = 1, and we implicitly take the sum over all values of the repeated indices j_1,\ldots,j_n. The factorial (n-k)! accounts for double counting, and is not present if the summation indices are restricted so that j_ < \dots < j_n. The absolute value of the determinant is necessary since it may be negative, as for tangent spaces to Lorentzian manifolds. An arbitrary differential form can be written as follows: \alpha \ =\ \frac\alpha_ dx^\wedge \dots \wedge dx^ \ =\ \sum_ \alpha_ dx^\wedge \dots \wedge dx^. The factorial k! is again included to account for double counting when we allow non-increasing indices. We would like to define the dual of the component \alpha_ so that the Hodge dual of the form is given by \alpha = \frac( \alpha)_ dx^ \wedge \dots \wedge dx^. Using the above expression for the Hodge dual of dx^ \wedge \dots \wedge dx^, we find: ( \alpha)_ = \frac \alpha_\,g^\cdots g^ \,\varepsilon_\, . Although one can apply this expression to any tensor \alpha, the result is antisymmetric, since contraction with the completely anti-symmetric Levi-Civita symbol cancels all but the totally antisymmetric part of the tensor. It is thus equivalent to antisymmetrization followed by applying the Hodge star. The unit volume form \omega = 1\in \bigwedge^n V^* is given by: \omega = \sqrt\;dx^1 \wedge \cdots \wedge dx^n .


Codifferential

The most important application of the Hodge star on manifolds is to define the codifferential \delta on k-forms. Let \delta = (-1)^ s\ d = (-1)^\, ^ d where d is the exterior derivative or differential, and s = 1 for Riemannian manifolds. Then d:\Omega^k(M)\to \Omega^(M) while \delta:\Omega^k(M)\to \Omega^(M). The codifferential is not an antiderivation on the exterior algebra, in contrast to the exterior derivative. The codifferential is the adjoint of the exterior derivative with respect to the square-integrable scalar product: \langle\!\langle\eta,\delta \zeta\rangle\!\rangle \ =\ \langle\!\langle d\eta,\zeta\rangle\!\rangle, where \zeta is a k-form and \eta a (k\!-\!1)-form. This property is useful as it can be used to define the codifferential even when the manifold is non-orientable (and the Hodge star operator not defined). The identity can be proved from Stokes' theorem for smooth forms: 0 \ =\ \int_M d (\eta \wedge \zeta) \ =\ \int_M \left(d \eta \wedge \zeta + (-1)^\eta \wedge \,^ d\, \zeta\right) \ =\ \langle\!\langle d\eta,\zeta\rangle\!\rangle - \langle\!\langle\eta,\delta\zeta\rangle\!\rangle, provided M has empty boundary, or \eta or \zeta has zero boundary values. (The proper definition of the above requires specifying a
topological vector space In mathematics, a topological vector space (also called a linear topological space and commonly abbreviated TVS or t.v.s.) is one of the basic structures investigated in functional analysis. A topological vector space is a vector space that is als ...
that is closed and complete on the space of smooth forms. The Sobolev space is conventionally used; it allows the convergent sequence of forms \zeta_i \to \zeta (as i \to \infty) to be interchanged with the combined differential and integral operations, so that \langle\!\langle\eta,\delta \zeta_i\rangle\!\rangle \to \langle\!\langle\eta,\delta \zeta\rangle\!\rangle and likewise for sequences converging to \eta.) Since the differential satisfies d^2 = 0, the codifferential has the corresponding property \delta^2 = (-1)^n s^2 d d = (-1)^ s^3 d^2 = 0. The Laplace–deRham operator is given by \Delta = (\delta + d)^2 = \delta d + d\delta and lies at the heart of Hodge theory. It is symmetric: \langle\!\langle\Delta \zeta,\eta\rangle\!\rangle = \langle\!\langle\zeta,\Delta \eta\rangle\!\rangle and non-negative: \langle\!\langle\Delta\eta,\eta\rangle\!\rangle \ge 0. The Hodge star sends harmonic forms to harmonic forms. As a consequence of Hodge theory, the de Rham cohomology is naturally isomorphic to the space of harmonic -forms, and so the Hodge star induces an isomorphism of cohomology groups : H^k_\Delta (M) \to H^_\Delta(M), which in turn gives canonical identifications via Poincaré duality of with its dual space. In coordinates, with notation as above, the codifferential of the form \alpha may be written as \delta \alpha=\ -\fracg^\left(\frac \alpha_ - \Gamma^j_ \alpha_ \right) dx^ \wedge \dots \wedge dx^, where here \Gamma^_ denotes the Christoffel symbols of \left\.


Poincare lemma for codifferential

In analogy to the Poincare lemma for exterior derivative, one can define its version for codifferential, which reads : ''If'' \delta\omega=0 ''for'' \omega \in \Lambda^(U)'', where '' U ''is a star domain on a manifold, then there is'' \alpha \in \Lambda^(U) ''such that'' \omega=\delta\alpha''.'' A practical way of finding \alpha is to use cohomotopy operator h, that is a local inverse of \delta. One has to define a homotopy operator : H\beta = \int_^ \mathcal\lrcorner\beta, _t^dt, where F(t,x)=x_+t(x-x_) is the linear homotopy between its center x_\in U and a point x \in U, and the (Euler) vector \mathcal=\sum_^(x-x_)^\partial_ for n=\dim(U) is inserted into the form \beta \in \Lambda^(U). We can then define cohomotopy operator as : h:\Lambda(U)\rightarrow \Lambda(U), \quad h:=\eta ^H\star, where \eta \beta = (-1)^\beta for \beta \in \Lambda^(U). The cohomotopy operator fulfills (co)homotopy invariance formula : \delta h + h\delta = I - S_ , where S_=^s_^, and s_^ is the pullback along the constant map s_:x \rightarrow x_. Therefore, if we want to solve the equation \delta \omega =0, applying cohomotopy invariance formula we get : \omega= \delta h\omega + S_\omega, where h\omega\in \Lambda^(U) is a differential form we are looking for, and "constant of integration" S_\omega vanishes unless \omega is a top form. Cohomotopy operator fulfills the following properties: h^=0, \quad \delta h \delta =\delta, \quad h\delta h =h. They make it possible to use it to define ''anticoexact'' forms on U by \mathcal(U)=\, which together with exact forms \mathcal(U) =\ make a direct sum decomposition : \Lambda(U)=\mathcal(U)\oplus \mathcal(U). This direct sum is another way of saying that the cohomotopy invariance formula is a decomposition of unity, and the projector operators on the summands fulfills idempotence formulas: (h\delta)^=h\delta, \quad (\delta h)^=\delta h. These results are extension of similar results for exterior derivative.


Citations


References

* David Bleecker (1981) ''Gauge Theory and Variational Principles''. Addison-Wesley Publishing. . Chpt. 0 contains a condensed review of non-Riemannian differential geometry. * * Charles W. Misner, Kip S. Thorne,
John Archibald Wheeler John Archibald Wheeler (July 9, 1911April 13, 2008) was an American theoretical physicist. He was largely responsible for reviving interest in general relativity in the United States after World War II. Wheeler also worked with Niels Bohr to e ...
(1970) ''Gravitation''. W.H. Freeman. . A basic review of
differential geometry Differential geometry is a Mathematics, mathematical discipline that studies the geometry of smooth shapes and smooth spaces, otherwise known as smooth manifolds. It uses the techniques of Calculus, single variable calculus, vector calculus, lin ...
in the special case of four-dimensional
spacetime In physics, spacetime, also called the space-time continuum, is a mathematical model that fuses the three dimensions of space and the one dimension of time into a single four-dimensional continuum. Spacetime diagrams are useful in visualiz ...
. * Steven Rosenberg (1997) ''The Laplacian on a Riemannian manifold''. Cambridge University Press. . An introduction to the heat equation and the Atiyah–Singer theorem.
Tevian Dray (1999) ''The Hodge Dual Operator''
A thorough overview of the definition and properties of the Hodge star operator. {{DEFAULTSORT:Hodge Dual Differential forms Riemannian geometry Duality theories Differential operators