What is Differential form: Definition and 57 Discussions

In the mathematical fields of differential geometry and tensor calculus, differential forms are an approach to multivariable calculus that is independent of coordinates. Differential forms provide a unified approach to define integrands over curves, surfaces, solids, and higher-dimensional manifolds. The modern notion of differential forms was pioneered by Élie Cartan. It has many applications, especially in geometry, topology and physics.
For instance, the expression f(x) dx from one-variable calculus is an example of a 1-form, and can be integrated over an oriented interval [a, b] in the domain of f:







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{\displaystyle \int _{a}^{b}f(x)\,dx.}
Similarly, the expression f(x, y, z) dx ∧ dy + g(x, y, z) dz ∧ dx + h(x, y, z) dy ∧ dz is a 2-form that has a surface integral over an oriented surface S:







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{\displaystyle \int _{S}(f(x,y,z)\,dx\wedge dy+g(x,y,z)\,dz\wedge dx+h(x,y,z)\,dy\wedge dz).}
The symbol ∧ denotes the exterior product, sometimes called the wedge product, of two differential forms. Likewise, a 3-form f(x, y, z) dx ∧ dy ∧ dz represents a volume element that can be integrated over an oriented region of space. In general, a k-form is an object that may be integrated over a k-dimensional oriented manifold, and is homogeneous of degree k in the coordinate differentials.
The algebra of differential forms is organized in a way that naturally reflects the orientation of the domain of integration. There is an operation d on differential forms known as the exterior derivative that, when given a k-form as input, produces a (k + 1)-form as output. This operation extends the differential of a function, and is directly related to the divergence and the curl of a vector field in a manner that makes the fundamental theorem of calculus, the divergence theorem, Green's theorem, and Stokes' theorem special cases of the same general result, known in this context also as the generalized Stokes theorem. In a deeper way, this theorem relates the topology of the domain of integration to the structure of the differential forms themselves; the precise connection is known as de Rham's theorem.
The general setting for the study of differential forms is on a differentiable manifold. Differential 1-forms are naturally dual to vector fields on a manifold, and the pairing between vector fields and 1-forms is extended to arbitrary differential forms by the interior product. The algebra of differential forms along with the exterior derivative defined on it is preserved by the pullback under smooth functions between two manifolds. This feature allows geometrically invariant information to be moved from one space to another via the pullback, provided that the information is expressed in terms of differential forms. As an example, the change of variables formula for integration becomes a simple statement that an integral is preserved under pullback.

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  1. J

    Why Does Gauss' Law Seem Contradictory Outside a Charged Sphere?

    Homework Statement I just have a little question about Gauss' Law (differential form). If divE = p/e0 where p is the charge density and e0 is permittivity of free space. But if we had a sphere with a total net charge of Q, then outside the sphere, the field is E=k/r^2 I think. Then...
  2. F

    Differential Form of Gauss's Law

    Could someone try and explain with the differential form means? I've only taken p to calculus 2 so I'm not really sure what divergence in the sense of this equation means. Also what is the difference in the two. I mean the integral form looks at an electric field and charge over a region, so...
  3. E

    Gauss's Law in differential form

    Homework Statement Gauss's Law is often given as: \nabla \cdot \vec{E} = \rho/ \epsilon_0 However E is, in general a function of position, so the equation is really \nabla \cdot \vec{E}(\vec{r}) = \rho(\vec{r}) /\epsilon_0 correct? Homework Equations The Attempt at a Solution
  4. D

    Differential Forms on Smooth Manifolds

    Let M be a smooth manifold. Locally we can choose 1-forms \omega^{1},\omega^{2},...\omega^{n} whish span M^{*}_{q} for each q. Then are there vector fields X_{1}, X_{2}, ...,X_{n} with \omega^{i}(X_{j})=\delta^{i}_{j}? Here \delta^{i}_{j} is Kronecker delta. By vector fields, I meant vector...
  5. D

    Differential Form Homework on Unit Sphere in R3: Exactness?

    Homework Statement Let w be the form w= xdydz in R^3. Let S^2 be the unit sphere in R^3. If we restrict w on S^2, is w exact? Homework Equations The Attempt at a Solution My guess is w is not exact on S^2. Suppose w is exact on S^2. Then w=da for some 1-form a=fdx+gdy+hdz...
  6. L

    Problem with differential form of Maxwell's third equation?

    Why does it seem as if the standard differential form of Maxwell's third equation (Faraday's Law) for time varying fields not take into account motional EMF. The differential form simply says that the curl of E is equal to minus the time rate of change of B field. However, there could be a...
  7. P

    Exactness of a differential form

    Suppose your manifold is just M = R^2 with the standard differential structure (so the atlas is {(R^2, id, R^2)}). Suppose we have a 1-form \omega on M. Then ofcourse \omega = a_1 dx_1 + a_2 dx_2, where the a_i are just c-infinity functions from R^2 to R. Suppose we have a function f on M...
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