lichen1983312
- 85
- 2
I am trying to follow Nakahara's book about Holonomy.
if parallel transporting a vector around a loop induces a linear map (an element of holonomy group)
{P_c}:{T_p}M \to {T_p}M
the holonomy group should be a subgroup of
GL(m,R)
then the book said for a metric connection, the property
{g_p}({P_c}(X),{P_c}(Y)) = {g_p}(X,Y)
makes the holonomy group a subgroup of O(m) if the manifold is Riemannian; and a subgroup of O(m-1) if the manifold is Lorentzian.
The author must think this is very straightforward and didn't explain why. Can anybody help?
if parallel transporting a vector around a loop induces a linear map (an element of holonomy group)
{P_c}:{T_p}M \to {T_p}M
the holonomy group should be a subgroup of
GL(m,R)
then the book said for a metric connection, the property
{g_p}({P_c}(X),{P_c}(Y)) = {g_p}(X,Y)
makes the holonomy group a subgroup of O(m) if the manifold is Riemannian; and a subgroup of O(m-1) if the manifold is Lorentzian.
The author must think this is very straightforward and didn't explain why. Can anybody help?