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Recurrent tensor

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In mathematics and physics, a recurrent tensor, with respect to a connection on a manifold M, is a tensor T for which there is a one-form ω on M such that

Examples

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Parallel Tensors

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An example for recurrent tensors are parallel tensors which are defined by

with respect to some connection .

If we take a pseudo-Riemannian manifold then the metric g is a parallel and therefore recurrent tensor with respect to its Levi-Civita connection, which is defined via

and its property to be torsion-free.

Parallel vector fields () are examples of recurrent tensors that find importance in mathematical research. For example, if is a recurrent non-null vector field on a pseudo-Riemannian manifold satisfying

for some closed one-form , then X can be rescaled to a parallel vector field.[1] In particular, non-parallel recurrent vector fields are null vector fields.

Metric space

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Another example appears in connection with Weyl structures. Historically, Weyl structures emerged from the considerations of Hermann Weyl with regards to properties of parallel transport of vectors and their length.[2] By demanding that a manifold have an affine parallel transport in such a way that the manifold is locally an affine space, it was shown that the induced connection had a vanishing torsion tensor

.

Additionally, he claimed that the manifold must have a particular parallel transport in which the ratio of two transported vectors is fixed. The corresponding connection which induces such a parallel transport satisfies

for some one-form . Such a metric is a recurrent tensor with respect to . As a result, Weyl called the resulting manifold with affine connection and recurrent metric a metric space. In this sense, Weyl was not just referring to one metric but to the conformal structure defined by .

Under the conformal transformation , the form transforms as . This induces a canonical map on defined by

,

where is the conformal structure. is called a Weyl structure,[3] which more generally is defined as a map with property

.

Recurrent spacetime

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One more example of a recurrent tensor is the curvature tensor on a recurrent spacetime,[4] for which

.

References

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  1. ^ Alekseevsky, Baum (2008)
  2. ^ Weyl (1918)
  3. ^ Folland (1970)
  4. ^ Walker (1948)

Literature

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  • Weyl, H. (1918). "Gravitation und Elektrizität". Sitzungsberichte der Preuss. Akad. D. Wiss.: 465–478. Reprinted in Das Relativitätsprinzip: Eine Sammlung von Originalarbeiten zur Relativitätstheorie Einsteins (1923), Wiesbaden: Vieweg+Teubner Verlag, pp. 147–159, doi:10.1007/978-3-663-19510-8_11.
  • Walker, A. G. (1949). "On parallel fields of partially null vector spaces". The Quarterly Journal of Mathematics. Oxford Series. 20: 135–145. doi:10.1093/qmath/os-20.1.135. MR 0033588.
  • Patterson, E. M. (1951). "On symmetric recurrent tensors of the second order". The Quarterly Journal of Mathematics. Second Series. 2: 151–158. doi:10.1093/qmath/2.1.151. MR 0042771.
  • Wong, Yung-chow (1961). "Recurrent tensors on a linearly connected differentiable manifold". Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. 99: 325–341. doi:10.1090/S0002-9947-1961-0121751-2. JSTOR 1993404. MR 0121751.
  • Folland, Gerald B. (1970). "Weyl manifolds". Journal of Differential Geometry. 4: 145–153. doi:10.4310/jdg/1214429379. MR 0264542.
  • D.V. Alekseevky; H. Baum (2008). Recent developments in pseudo-Riemannian geometry. European Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-3-03719-051-7.