About the basics of Poisson bracket

sarason
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Dear all,
Please help me to solve the following problems
about Poisson brackets.
Let M be a 2n-manifold and w is a closed non-degenerate di®eren-
tial 2-form. (Locally we write w = w_ij dx^i ^ dx^j with [w_ij ] being a
non-degenerate anti-symmetric real matrix-valued local function on M)
Let f, g be two smooth functions on M. Define the Poisson bracket
{f, g} as follows: locally,
{f, g} = w^ij \partial_i f \partial_j g
where [w^ij ] is the inverse of [w_ij ].
SHOW that
1) The Poisson bracket is well-defined, i.e., on the intersection of two
coordinate patches, the two definitions, one written in each local co-
ordinate system, actually always agree.
2) {f, g} = -{g, f} and
{f, gh} = {f, g}h + g{f, h}
for any three smooth functions f, g, h.
3) {f, {g, h}} + {g, {h, f}} + {h, {f, g}} = 0
for any three smooth functions f, g, h.

Thank you very much for taking time to consider these problems.

Sarason
 
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Erm, the answer is to "just do it".

calculate {f,g} on the overlap of two elements in the atlas and use the transformation rules for f and g (it's a smooth function) to show they are equal.

2 and 3, it now suffices to work locally, so do so.

it's not pleasant but that's the way it works I'm afraid.
 
Thanks for your reply. Would you please cite some
references so that I may consult the transformation rules
or the information related to my questions.

Sarason
 
Eh? any book on differential geometry or differential manifolds, or even differentiable manifolds will tell you what it means for a function to be smooth on the manifold. If you've not seen this then trying to do poisson brackets is a little adventurous.
 
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