Mike2
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Can a vector be described in the most general terms by two points on a manifold, as a line with a starting and ending point in some manifold?
Originally posted by Mike2
Can a vector be described in the most general terms by two points on a manifold, as a line with a starting and ending point in some manifold?
Originally posted by Mike2
Can a vector be described in the most general terms by two points on a manifold, as a line with a starting and ending point in some manifold?
Originally posted by pmb_phy
If the space is flat then yes. If the space is curved then no. For a curved manifold you can't arbitrarily take any two points and obtain a unique vector.
Hallsofivy wrote "a vector is a derivative"!. If by this you mean that a vector v = (v1, ... , vn) defines a directional derivative operator at a point P in the manifold and vice versa then I agree.
This is Cartan's notion of a vector if I recall correctly?
It is based on the notion that displacement vectors are in a one-to-one correspondence with directional derivative operators.
However a vector can also be defined in otherways too. E.g. a vector can be defined as any quantity v whosse components = (v1, ... , vn) transform as the coordinate displacements dxa which is almost the same thing. Or one can define a vector as a linear map of 1-forms to scalars which obeys the Leibnitz rule.
Originally posted by HallsofIvy
Yes, that was exactly what I meant. I would also note that in order to "transform as coordinate displacements dxa" you need to use the chain rule so that you do need derivatives. I would just drop the word almost from "which is almost the same thing"! The crucial point, since the original question was about vectors in terms of "two points on a manifold" is that vectors exist in the tangent space at each point on a manifold, not on the manifold itself.