the.bone
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OK, this is more of a spot for an elaboration on a question I just posted in another thread. Not quite duplicating threads, I hope, I just wanted to have this not buried in another spot...
So, the question is this:
Let's say that we have a smooth manifold \mathcal{M}that may be viewed as a surface in \mathbb{R}^3 given by an embedding x. Denote by n the outward-pointing unit normal to \mathcal{M} (yes, we are assuming that \mathcal{M} is orientable), and by g and h the metric and second fundamental form, resp., defined by
g_{ij}=\left<\dfrac{\partial x}{\partial u^i},\dfrac{\partial x}{\partial u^j}\right>
h_{ij}=-\left<\dfrac{\partial^2x}{\partial u^i\partial u^j},n\right>
with respect to some local coordinates \left\lbrace u^1,u^2\right\rbrace for some (open) region of \mathcal{M}.
What I need to understand, basically, is how this notation works. I can easily see how one would obtain
g_{ij}=\dfrac{\partial y^k}{\partial u^i}\dfrac{\partial y^k}{\partial u^j};\hspace{0.75cm}k\text{ summed}
from the definiton that g=g_{ij}du^i\otimes du^j, y^k=y^k\left(u^1,u^2\right), but I don't see how to go from here to the pairing above, and am even more confused about the pairing used to define h_{ij} above.
Any thoughts?
So, the question is this:
Let's say that we have a smooth manifold \mathcal{M}that may be viewed as a surface in \mathbb{R}^3 given by an embedding x. Denote by n the outward-pointing unit normal to \mathcal{M} (yes, we are assuming that \mathcal{M} is orientable), and by g and h the metric and second fundamental form, resp., defined by
g_{ij}=\left<\dfrac{\partial x}{\partial u^i},\dfrac{\partial x}{\partial u^j}\right>
h_{ij}=-\left<\dfrac{\partial^2x}{\partial u^i\partial u^j},n\right>
with respect to some local coordinates \left\lbrace u^1,u^2\right\rbrace for some (open) region of \mathcal{M}.
What I need to understand, basically, is how this notation works. I can easily see how one would obtain
g_{ij}=\dfrac{\partial y^k}{\partial u^i}\dfrac{\partial y^k}{\partial u^j};\hspace{0.75cm}k\text{ summed}
from the definiton that g=g_{ij}du^i\otimes du^j, y^k=y^k\left(u^1,u^2\right), but I don't see how to go from here to the pairing above, and am even more confused about the pairing used to define h_{ij} above.
Any thoughts?
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