rbayadi
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Hi,
The 2-sphere is given as example of symplectic manifolds, with a symplectic form \Omega = \sin{\varphi} d \varphi \wedge d \theta. Here the parametrization is given by (x,y,z) = (\cos{\theta}\sin{\varphi}, \sin{\theta}\sin{\varphi}, \cos{\varphi}) with \varphi \in [0,\pi],\ \theta \in [0, 2\pi).
Now my question is, at the points \varphi = 0, \pi, which are the north and the south pole, is the one-form d \theta well-defined? If yes, how? If not then how does one make \Omega globally well defined?
Thanks in advance :)
Ram.
The 2-sphere is given as example of symplectic manifolds, with a symplectic form \Omega = \sin{\varphi} d \varphi \wedge d \theta. Here the parametrization is given by (x,y,z) = (\cos{\theta}\sin{\varphi}, \sin{\theta}\sin{\varphi}, \cos{\varphi}) with \varphi \in [0,\pi],\ \theta \in [0, 2\pi).
Now my question is, at the points \varphi = 0, \pi, which are the north and the south pole, is the one-form d \theta well-defined? If yes, how? If not then how does one make \Omega globally well defined?
Thanks in advance :)
Ram.