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In conformal geometry, a conformal Killing vector field on a
manifold In mathematics, a manifold is a topological space that locally resembles Euclidean space near each point. More precisely, an n-dimensional manifold, or ''n-manifold'' for short, is a topological space with the property that each point has a n ...
of dimension ''n'' with (pseudo) Riemannian metric g (also called a conformal Killing vector, CKV, or conformal colineation), is a vector field X whose (locally defined)
flow Flow may refer to: Science and technology * Fluid flow, the motion of a gas or liquid * Flow (geomorphology), a type of mass wasting or slope movement in geomorphology * Flow (mathematics), a group action of the real numbers on a set * Flow (psych ...
defines conformal transformations, that is, preserve g up to scale and preserve the conformal structure. Several equivalent formulations, called the conformal Killing equation, exist in terms of the Lie derivative of the flow e.g. \mathcal_g = \lambda g for some function \lambda on the manifold. For n \ne 2 there are a finite number of solutions, specifying the conformal symmetry of that space, but in two dimensions, there is an infinity of solutions. The name Killing refers to Wilhelm Killing, who first investigated
Killing vector field In mathematics, a Killing vector field (often called a Killing field), named after Wilhelm Killing, is a vector field on a Riemannian manifold (or pseudo-Riemannian manifold) that preserves the metric. Killing fields are the infinitesimal gene ...
s.


Densitized metric tensor and Conformal Killing vectors

A vector field X is a
Killing vector field In mathematics, a Killing vector field (often called a Killing field), named after Wilhelm Killing, is a vector field on a Riemannian manifold (or pseudo-Riemannian manifold) that preserves the metric. Killing fields are the infinitesimal gene ...
if and only if its flow preserves the metric tensor g (strictly speaking for each compact subsets of the manifold, the flow need only be defined for finite time). Formulated mathematically, X is Killing if and only if it satisfies :\mathcal_X g = 0. where \mathcal_X is the Lie derivative. More generally, define a ''w''-Killing vector field X as a vector field whose (local) flow preserves the densitized metric g\mu_g^w, where \mu_g is the volume density defined by g (i.e. locally \mu_g = \sqrt \, dx^1\cdots dx^n ) and w \in \mathbf is its weight. Note that a Killing vector field preserves \mu_g and so automatically also satisfies this more general equation. Also note that w = -2/n is the unique weight that makes the combination g \mu_g^w invariant under scaling of the metric. Therefore, in this case, the condition depends only on the conformal structure. Now X is a ''w''-Killing vector field if and only if :\mathcal_X \left(g\mu_g^\right) = (\mathcal_X g) \mu_g^ + w g \mu_g^ \mathcal_X \mu_g = 0. Since \mathcal_X \mu_g = \operatorname(X) \mu_g this is equivalent to : \mathcal_X g = - w\operatorname(X) g. Taking traces of both sides, we conclude 2\mathop(X) = -w n \operatorname(X). Hence for w \ne -2/n, necessarily \operatorname(X) = 0 and a ''w''-Killing vector field is just a normal Killing vector field whose flow preserves the metric. However, for w = -2/n, the flow of X has to only preserve the conformal structure and is, by definition, a ''conformal Killing vector field''.


Equivalent formulations

The following are equivalent # X is a conformal Killing vector field, # The (locally defined) flow of X preserves the conformal structure, # \mathcal_X (g\mu_g^) = 0, # \mathcal_X g = \frac \operatorname(X) g, # \mathcal_X g = \lambda g for some function \lambda. The discussion above proves the equivalence of all but the seemingly more general last form. However, the last two forms are also equivalent: taking traces shows that necessarily \lambda = (2/n) \operatorname(X). The last form makes it clear that any Killing vector is also a conformal Killing vector, with \lambda \cong 0.


The conformal Killing equation

Using that \mathcal_X g = 2 \left(\nabla X^\flat \right)^ where \nabla is the Levi Civita derivative of g (aka covariant derivative), and X^=g(X,\cdot) is the dual 1 form of X (aka associated covariant vector aka vector with lowered indices), and ^ is projection on the symmetric part, one can write the conformal Killing equation in abstract index notation as :\nabla_a X_b + \nabla_b X_a = \fracg_\nabla_X^c. Another index notation to write the conformal Killing equations is : X_+X_ = \fracg_ X^c_.


Examples


Flat space

In n-dimensional flat space, that is Euclidean space or pseudo-Euclidean space, there exist globally flat coordinates in which we have a constant metric g_ = \eta_ where in space with signature (p,q), we have components (\eta_) = \text(+1,\cdots,+1,-1,\cdots,-1). In these coordinates, the connection components vanish, so the covariant derivative is the coordinate derivative. The conformal Killing equation in flat space is :\partial_\mu X_\nu + \partial_\nu X_\mu = \frac\eta_ \partial_\rho X^\rho. The solutions to the flat space conformal Killing equation includes the solutions to the flat space Killing equation discussed in the article on Killing vector fields. These generate the Poincaré group of isometries of flat space. Considering the ansatz X^\mu = M^x_\nu,, we remove the antisymmetric part of M^ as this corresponds to known solutions, and we're looking for new solutions. Then M^ is symmetric. It follows that this is a
dilatation Dilation (or dilatation) may refer to: Physiology or medicine * Cervical dilation, the widening of the cervix in childbirth, miscarriage etc. * Coronary dilation, or coronary reflex * Dilation and curettage, the opening of the cervix and surgic ...
, with M^\mu_\nu = \lambda\delta^\mu_\nu for real \lambda, and corresponding Killing vector X^\mu = \lambda x^\mu. From the general solution there are n more generators, known as special conformal transformations, given by :X_\mu = c_x^\nu x^\rho, where the traceless part of c_ over \mu,\nu vanishes, hence can be parametrised by c^\mu_ = b_\nu. We Taylor expand X_\mu in x^\mu to obtain an (infinite) linear combination of terms of the form :X_\mu = a_x^\cdots x^, where the tensor \mathbf is symmetric under exchange of \mu_i,\mu_j but not necessarily \mu with \mu_i. For simplicity, we restrict to n = 2, which will be informative for higher order terms later. The conformal Killing equation gives :a_ + a_ - \frac\eta_a^\sigma_ = 0. We now project a_ into two independent tensors: a traceless and pure trace part over its first two indices. The pure trace automatically satisfies the equation and is the c_ in the answer. The traceless part \tilde a_ satisfies the regular Killing equation, showing \tilde\mathbf is antisymmetric on the first two indices. It is symmetric on the second two indices. This shows that under a cyclic permutation of indices, \tilde\mathbf picks up a minus sign. After three cyclic permutations, we learn \tilde\mathbf = 0. Higher order terms vanish (to be completed) Together, the n translations, n(n-1)/2 Lorentz transformations, 1 dilatation and n special conformal transformations comprise the conformal algebra, which generate the conformal group of pseudo-Euclidean space.


See also

* Affine vector field * Curvature collineation *
Einstein manifold In differential geometry and mathematical physics, an Einstein manifold is a Riemannian or pseudo-Riemannian differentiable manifold whose Ricci tensor is proportional to the metric. They are named after Albert Einstein because this condition is e ...
* Homothetic vector field * Invariant differential operator *
Killing vector field In mathematics, a Killing vector field (often called a Killing field), named after Wilhelm Killing, is a vector field on a Riemannian manifold (or pseudo-Riemannian manifold) that preserves the metric. Killing fields are the infinitesimal gene ...
* Matter collineation *
Spacetime symmetries Spacetime symmetries are features of spacetime that can be described as exhibiting some form of symmetry. The role of symmetry in physics is important in simplifying solutions to many problems. Spacetime symmetries are used in the study of exact s ...


References

* Wald, R. M. (1984). General Relativity. The University of Chicago Press. Differential geometry Mathematical methods in general relativity