muhammed yasser raso said:
thank you , what does the parallel transport equation give us ?
Parallel transport and the differential equation are aspects of the same concept. Which one should be used, depends on the problem you're facing. Loosely speaking, it is the generalization to curved spacetime of the constant field on a curve from ordinary calculus in ##R^n##.
Consider first calculus in ##R^2##, in Cartesian coordinates. Suppose there is an affinely parametrized open curve ##\gamma(\lambda)## and a point ##P=\gamma(0)## on it. Let ##f(P)## (scalar, vector, tensor) be a function value at ##P##. Since the tangent spaces at each point of ##R^2## are "the same", we can allow ourselves to duplicate ##f(P)## at all points of ##\gamma##, to create a constant function on it. This function will satisfy ##\frac{d f}{d \lambda}=0##. The components of ##f## will be the same at each point.
Consider now polar coordinates on ##R^2##. You can create a constant field on a curve from the value at ##P##, by demanding that they all have the same "length" and "cartesian direction" (just like before). But this time, if ##f(P)## is a tensor, the components will not satisfy ##\frac{d f}{d \lambda}=0## in general. You'll need additional terms to compensate for using polar coordinates (connections).
Generalizing to curved spacetime, the function on ##\gamma## will be considered as "constant" if it satisfies ##\nabla_\vec{u} f=0##, where ##\vec{u}## is the tangent vector to the curve. This means that ##f## is parallel transported from the tangent space of ##\gamma(\lambda)## to the tangent space of an infinitely close ##\gamma(\lambda+\epsilon)## by an expression of the form $$f(\gamma(\lambda+\epsilon))= f(\gamma(\lambda))+\epsilon f(\gamma(\lambda)) \Gamma$$
To convince yourself that this generalization is "good", consider the coordinate transformation to a locally inertial frame at the point ##\gamma(\lambda)##. In this frame ##g_{\mu \nu}=\eta_{\mu \nu}## and all ##\Gamma##s are zero. So the parallel transport amounts to duplicating the components, and the equation reduces to ##\frac{d f}{d \lambda}=0##, Just as in ordinary calculus.