Oxymoron
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I thought I knew what a pullback map was until I read my notes again, and now I'm not so sure. So I have a few questions to ask.
Firstly, if I have two manifolds M and N with different coordinate systems and possibly different dimensions, then I can construct a map
\phi\,:\,M\rightarrow N[/itex]<br /> <br /> and a function<br /> <br /> f\,:\,N\rightarrow\mathbb{R}<br /> <br /> We can easily compose \phi with f to construct a new map which appears to pull the function back through N to be a function from M to N. The new map<br /> <br /> \phi_*\,:\,M \rightarrow\mathbb{R}<br /> <br /> is called the pullback of f by \phi.<br /> <br /> Now suppose that we have another function g\,:\,M\rightarrow\mathbb{R}. Can we create a function on N that consists of g and \phi? The answer is no, and we need some help. <br /> <br /> My first question is: Is the pushforward map, \phi^*, a map between the <b>tangent spaces</b> of M and N? Whereas the pullback map is a map between the manifolds themselves. If the pushforward map is between the tangent spaces then we must only be able to "pushforward" a tangent vector at a point p.<br /> <br /> So we can't say what \phi^*(f) is, instead we must say what (\phi^*(V))(f) is? Is this correct?<br /> <br /> So unlike pulling back functions we push forward vector fields and say that the action of pushing forward a vector field on a function is the action of the vector field on pulling back the function. This is kind of confusing <img src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f615.png" class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" width="64" height="64" alt=":confused:" title="Confused :confused:" data-smilie="5"data-shortname=":confused:" /><br /> <br /> And for my second question: Can you pullback a vector? Can you pullback a dual-vector (one form)? Ooh, that is interesting... What about a mixed tensor?
Firstly, if I have two manifolds M and N with different coordinate systems and possibly different dimensions, then I can construct a map
\phi\,:\,M\rightarrow N[/itex]<br /> <br /> and a function<br /> <br /> f\,:\,N\rightarrow\mathbb{R}<br /> <br /> We can easily compose \phi with f to construct a new map which appears to pull the function back through N to be a function from M to N. The new map<br /> <br /> \phi_*\,:\,M \rightarrow\mathbb{R}<br /> <br /> is called the pullback of f by \phi.<br /> <br /> Now suppose that we have another function g\,:\,M\rightarrow\mathbb{R}. Can we create a function on N that consists of g and \phi? The answer is no, and we need some help. <br /> <br /> My first question is: Is the pushforward map, \phi^*, a map between the <b>tangent spaces</b> of M and N? Whereas the pullback map is a map between the manifolds themselves. If the pushforward map is between the tangent spaces then we must only be able to "pushforward" a tangent vector at a point p.<br /> <br /> So we can't say what \phi^*(f) is, instead we must say what (\phi^*(V))(f) is? Is this correct?<br /> <br /> So unlike pulling back functions we push forward vector fields and say that the action of pushing forward a vector field on a function is the action of the vector field on pulling back the function. This is kind of confusing <img src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f615.png" class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" width="64" height="64" alt=":confused:" title="Confused :confused:" data-smilie="5"data-shortname=":confused:" /><br /> <br /> And for my second question: Can you pullback a vector? Can you pullback a dual-vector (one form)? Ooh, that is interesting... What about a mixed tensor?