Using index notation to write d^2=0 in terms of a torsion free connection. Let (M,g) be a Riemannian manifold and let omega be a 1-form on M. I want to rewrite d^2 omega=0 in terms of the Levi-Civita connection. I can show the following: d omega(X,Y) = (nabla_X omega)(Y) - (nabla_Y omega)(X), which in index notation reads (d omega)_ab =2 nabla_[a omega_b].. Similiarly for a 2-form, mu, we have: d mu(X,Y,Z) = (nabla_X mu)( Y,Z) - (nabla_Y mu)(X,Z) + (nabla_Z mu)(X,Y) , which in index notation reads d mu_(abc) = 3 nabla[_a phi_bc].

Modelfino0g

Modelfino0g

Answered question

2022-09-04

Using index notation to write d 2 = 0 in terms of a torsion free connection.
Let (M,g) be a Riemannian manifold and let ω be a 1-form on M. I want to rewrite d 2 ω = 0 in terms of the Levi-Civita connection.
I can show the following:
d ω ( X , Y ) = ( X ω ) ( Y ) ( Y ω ) ( X ) ,
which in index notation reads
( d ω ) a b = 2 [ a ω b ] .
Similiarly for a 2-form, μ, we have:
d μ ( X , Y , Z ) = ( X μ ) ( Y , Z ) ( Y μ ) ( X , Z ) + ( Z μ ) ( X , Y ) ,
which in index notation reads
( d μ ) a b c = 3 [ a ϕ b c ] .
Now plugging in d ω for μ we get
0 = d 2 ω = ( d ( d ω ) ) a b c = [ a ( d ω ) b c ] .
I want to plug in the above expression (in index notation) for dω but I'm not really sure how to handle the indices. Do I just get
3 [ a 2 [ b ω c ] ] = 6 [ a b ω c ] ?

Answer & Explanation

wegpluktee3

wegpluktee3

Beginner2022-09-05Added 12 answers

Of course, this can be also verified directly by writing out the expansion:
3 [ a 2 [ b ω c ] ] = a 2 [ b ω c ] + b 2 [ c ω a ] + c 2 [ a ω b ] = a b ω c a c ω b + b c ω a b a ω c + c a ω b c b ω a = 6 [ a b ω c ]
where we have used that for a tensor tabc with a symmetry
t a b c = t a [ b c ] = 1 2 ( t a b c t a c b )
the alternation is expressed by
t [ a b c ] = 1 3 ( t a b c + t b c a + t c a b )
which is again easy to prove:
t [ a b c ] = 1 6 ( t a b c t a c b + t b c a t b a c + t c a b t c b a ) = 1 6 ( 2 t a b c + 2 t b c a + 2 t c a b )
To prove the Poincare lemma d 2 ω = 0 locally one can use the Euclidean connection on a chosen coordinate system, and since the exterior derivative is independent of a choice of torsion-free connection, the lemma follows from the fact that partial derivatives commute.

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