The notes that I've managed to find all introduce integration on manifolds with a phrase like
"consider an n-form defined on an n-dimensional manifold. The integral of such an n-form is...". They also state things such as
"n-forms are natural objects to integrate on a manifold as they do not require a metric". I was trying to find some motivation for these things and thought that it might have something to do with orientability issues, especially after reading this sentence on the Wiki page:
"There is in general no meaningful way to integrate k-forms over subsets for because there is no consistent way to orient k-dimensional subsets".
The issue arose as myself and a colleague were trying to figure out the following expression: V=\int_{0}^{R}dr\;4\pi r^{2}\sqrt{1-\left(\frac{dt}{dr}\right)^{2}} where t=t(r).
Which is apparently the volume enclosed by a 3-dimensional sphere (of radius R) in Minkowski spacetime?! We wondered why one couldn't just integrate over 3-dimensional space using a 3-D volume element and assumed that one had to integrate the 4-volume form for Minkowski space, i.e. \int dV= \int\sqrt{-g}dt\wedge dx\wedge dy \wedge dz with the standard orientation +(t,x,y,z), and introduce a pull-back map to constrain one of the degrees of freedom to obtain a 3-dimensional volume integral, but weren't sure as to why (or if our intuition was correct)?!