Loading…

Differential geometry and general relativity with algebraifolds

It is often noted that many of the basic concepts of differential geometry, such as the definition of connection, are purely algebraic in nature. Here, we review and extend existing work on fully algebraic formulations of differential geometry which eliminate the need for an underlying manifold. Whi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of geometry and physics 2024-12, Vol.206, p.105327, Article 105327
Main Author: Fritz, Tobias
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:It is often noted that many of the basic concepts of differential geometry, such as the definition of connection, are purely algebraic in nature. Here, we review and extend existing work on fully algebraic formulations of differential geometry which eliminate the need for an underlying manifold. While the literature contains various independent approaches to this, we focus on one particular approach that we argue to be the most natural one based on the definition of algebraifold, by which we mean a commutative algebra A for which the module of derivations of A is finitely generated projective. Over R as the base ring, this class of algebras includes the algebra C∞(M) of smooth functions on a manifold M, and similarly for analytic functions. An importantly different example is the Colombeau algebra of generalized functions on M, which makes distributional differential geometry an instance of our formalism. Another instance is a fibred version of smooth differential geometry, since any smooth submersion M→N makes C∞(M) into an algebraifold with C∞(N) as the base ring. Over any field k of characteristic zero, examples include the algebra of regular functions on a smooth affine variety as well as any function field. Our development of differential geometry in terms of algebraifolds comprises tensors, connections, curvature, geodesics and we briefly consider general relativity.
ISSN:0393-0440
DOI:10.1016/j.geomphys.2024.105327