I Differential Forms.... Another question.... Browder, Sec 13.1

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I am reading Andrew Browder's book: "Mathematical Analysis: An Introduction" ... ...

I am reading Chapter 13: Differential Forms ... ... and am currently focused on Section 13.1 Tensor Fields ...

I need some help in order to fully understand some statements by Browder in Section 13.1 ... ...


Section 13.1 reads as follows:
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In the above text we read the following:

" ... ... We observe also that ##\text{dx}_P^j (h^1, \cdot \cdot \cdot , h^n) = h^j## ... ... "My question is what is the nature of the ##h^i## ... given that ##\text{dx}_P^j## is a constant mapping from an open subset ##U## of ##\mathbb{R}^n## it seems that the ##h^i## are real numbers ...

... BUT ... then it seems strange that ##\text{dx}_p^j (h^1, \cdot \cdot \cdot , h^n) = h^j## ... that is ... how can the function evaluate to a real number when it is a constant mapping into ##\mathbb{R}^{ n \ast }## ... it should evaluate to a linear functional, surely ...

... indeed ... should Browder have written ...

##\text{dx}_P^j (h^1, \cdot \cdot \cdot , h^n) = \tilde{e}^j##
Can someone please clarify the above ...

Peter
 

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I think it really helps to distinguish between the manifold, often denoted by M, and the tangent bundle, usually denoted by TM, which is the union of all tangent spaces to points on the manifold. TM consists of vectors, whereas M consists of points that may or may not be vectors. Unfortunately, that distinction is obscured here by the author specifying that U, which is a part of the manifold, is a subset of ##\mathbb R^n##, which is a vector space as well as a manifold. Is it an old text? Newer texts tend to avoid assuming the manifold is embedded in ##\mathbb R^n##, partly to give greater generality, but also to avoid this sort of confusion.
Math Amateur said:
My question is what is the nature of the ##h^i## ... given that ##\text{dx}_P^j## is a constant mapping from an open subset ##U## of ##\mathbb{R}^n## it seems that the ##h^i## are real numbers ...
Not quite. If you look carefully, you will see that it is ##dx^j## that is a map whose domain is ##U##. That domain is part of the manifold. The function ##dx^i_{\mathbf p}## has a domain that is the tangent space ##T_{\mathbf p}M##, which is a vector space. That domain has no intersection with ##U##. That's why the argument to the function ##x^j## is given as a ##n##-tuple of numbers with lower subscripts ##(a_1,...,a_n)##, being coordinates of a manifold point, and the same applies to the argument to the function ##dx^j##. But the argument to the function ##dx^j_{\mathbf p}## has components with superscripts - ##(h^1,...,h^n)## - because they are components of a vector in the tangent space at ##\mathbf p##.
it seems strange that ##\text{dx}_p^j (h^1, \cdot \cdot \cdot , h^n) = h^j## ... that is ... how can the function evaluate to a real number when it is a constant mapping into ##\mathbb{R}^{ n \ast }## ... it should evaluate to a linear functional, surely ...

... indeed ... should Browder have written ...

##\text{dx}_P^j (h^1, \cdot \cdot \cdot , h^n) = \tilde{e}^j##
The correct expression is

##\text{dx}_P^j= \tilde{e}^j##, which is a linear functional, aka a 'one-form'.

Then when we apply it to the vector ##\vec h##, which the author writes in component form as ##(h^1,...,h^n)##, we get a real number.
 
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Thanks Andrew ...

Really appreciate your help ...

Still reflecting on what you have written ...

Your distinction between M and TM was most illuminating...

Thanks again...

Peter

NOTE: Browder's text was published in 1996
 
A sphere as topological manifold can be defined by gluing together the boundary of two disk. Basically one starts assigning each disk the subspace topology from ##\mathbb R^2## and then taking the quotient topology obtained by gluing their boundaries. Starting from the above definition of 2-sphere as topological manifold, shows that it is homeomorphic to the "embedded" sphere understood as subset of ##\mathbb R^3## in the subspace topology.
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