In
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 ...
, particularly
differential topology
In mathematics, differential topology is the field dealing with the topological properties and smooth properties of smooth manifolds. In this sense differential topology is distinct from the closely related field of differential geometry, which ...
, the double tangent bundle or the second tangent bundle refers to the
tangent bundle
A tangent bundle is the collection of all of the tangent spaces for all points on a manifold, structured in a way that it forms a new manifold itself. Formally, in differential geometry, the tangent bundle of a differentiable manifold M is ...
of the total space ''TM'' of the
tangent bundle
A tangent bundle is the collection of all of the tangent spaces for all points on a manifold, structured in a way that it forms a new manifold itself. Formally, in differential geometry, the tangent bundle of a differentiable manifold M is ...
of a
smooth manifold
In mathematics, a differentiable manifold (also differential manifold) is a type of manifold that is locally similar enough to a vector space to allow one to apply calculus. Any manifold can be described by a collection of charts (atlas). One may ...
''M''
. A note on notation: in this article, we denote projection maps by their domains, e.g., ''π''
''TTM'' : ''TTM'' → ''TM''. Some authors index these maps by their ranges instead, so for them, that map would be written ''π''
''TM''.
The second tangent bundle arises in the study of
connections and second order ordinary differential equations, i.e.,
(semi)spray structures on smooth manifolds, and it is not to be confused with the
second order jet bundle.
Secondary vector bundle structure and canonical flip
Since is a vector bundle in its own right, its tangent bundle has the
secondary vector bundle structure where is the push-forward of the canonical projection
In the following we denote
:
and apply the associated coordinate system
:
on ''TM''. Then the fibre of the secondary vector bundle structure at ''X''∈''T''
''x''''M'' takes the form
:
The double tangent bundle is a
double vector bundle.
The canonical flip is a smooth involution ''j'':''TTM''→''TTM'' that exchanges these vector space structures
in the sense that it is a vector bundle isomorphism between and In the associated coordinates on ''TM'' it reads as
:
The canonical flip has the property that for any ''f'': R
2 → ''M'',
:
where ''s'' and ''t'' are coordinates of the standard basis of R
2. Note that both partial derivatives are functions from R
2 to ''TTM''.
This property can, in fact, be used to give an intrinsic definition of the canonical flip. Indeed, there is a submersion
''p'': J
20 (R
2,M) → ''TTM'' given by
:
where ''p'' can be defined in the space of two-jets at zero because only depends on ''f'' up to order two at zero. We consider the application:
:
where α(''s'',''t'')= (''t'',''s''). Then ''J'' is compatible with the projection ''p'' and induces the canonical flip on the quotient ''TTM''.
Canonical tensor fields on the tangent bundle
As for any
vector bundle
In mathematics, a vector bundle is a topological construction that makes precise the idea of a family of vector spaces parameterized by another space X (for example X could be a topological space, a manifold, or an algebraic variety): to eve ...
, the tangent spaces of the fibres ''T''
''x''''M'' of the tangent bundle can be identified with the fibres ''T''
x''M'' themselves. Formally this is achieved through the vertical lift, which is a natural vector space isomorphism
defined as
:
The vertical lift can also be seen as a natural vector bundle isomorphism
from the pullback bundle of over onto the vertical tangent bundle
:
The vertical lift lets us define the canonical vector field
:
which is smooth in the slit tangent bundle ''TM''\0. The canonical vector field can be also defined as the infinitesimal generator of the Lie-group action
:
Unlike the canonical vector field, which can be defined for any vector bundle, the canonical endomorphism
:
is special to the tangent bundle. The canonical endomorphism ''J'' satisfies
:
and it is also known as the tangent structure for the following reason. If (''E'',''p'',''M'') is any vector bundle
with the canonical vector field ''V'' and a (1,1)-tensor field ''J'' that satisfies the properties listed above, with ''VE'' in place of ''VTM'', then the vector bundle (''E'',''p'',''M'') is isomorphic to the tangent bundle of the base manifold, and ''J'' corresponds to the tangent structure of ''TM'' in this isomorphism.
There is also a stronger result of this kind which states that if ''N'' is a 2''n''-dimensional manifold and if there exists a (1,1)-tensor field ''J'' on ''N'' that satisfies
:
then ''N'' is diffeomorphic to an open set of the total space of a tangent bundle of some ''n''-dimensional manifold ''M'', and ''J'' corresponds to the tangent structure of ''TM'' in this diffeomorphism.
In any associated coordinate system on ''TM'' the canonical vector field and the canonical endomorphism have the coordinate representations
:
(Semi)spray structures
A
Semispray structure on a smooth manifold ''M'' is by definition a smooth vector field ''H'' on ''TM'' \0 such that ''JH''=''V''. An equivalent definition is that ''j''(''H'')=''H'', where ''j'':''TTM''→''TTM'' is the canonical flip. A semispray ''H'' is a
spray, if in addition,
'V'',''H''''H''.
Spray and semispray structures are invariant versions of second order ordinary differential equations on ''M''. The difference between spray and semispray structures is that the solution curves of sprays are invariant in positive
reparametrizations{{jargon-inline, reason=What makes a reparametrization positive?, date=September 2015 as point sets on ''M'', whereas solution curves of semisprays typically are not.
Nonlinear covariant derivatives on smooth manifolds
The canonical flip makes it possible to define nonlinear covariant derivatives on smooth manifolds as follows. Let
:
be an
Ehresmann connection on the slit tangent bundle ''TM''\0 and consider the mapping
:
where ''Y''
*:''TM''→''TTM'' is the push-forward, ''j'':''TTM''→''TTM'' is the canonical flip and κ:''T''(''TM''/0)→''TM''/0 is the connector map. The mapping ''D''
''X'' is a derivation in the module Γ (''TM'') of smooth vector fields on ''M'' in the sense that
*
.
*
.
Any mapping ''D''
''X'' with these properties is called a (nonlinear) covariant derivative
[I.Bucataru, R.Miron, ''Finsler-Lagrange Geometry'', Editura Academiei Române, 2007.] on ''M''.
The term ''nonlinear'' refers to the fact that this kind of covariant derivative ''D''
''X'' on is not necessarily linear with respect to the direction ''X''∈''TM''/0 of the differentiation.
Looking at the local representations one can confirm that the Ehresmann connections on (''TM''/0,π
''TM''/0,''M'') and nonlinear covariant derivatives on ''M'' are in one-to-one correspondence. Furthermore, if ''D''
''X'' is linear in ''X'', then the Ehresmann connection is linear in the
secondary vector bundle structure, and ''D''
''X'' coincides with its linear covariant derivative.
See also
*
Spray (mathematics)
*
Secondary vector bundle structure
*
Finsler manifold
References
Differential geometry
Topology