enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Riemannian manifold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riemannian_manifold

    A Riemannian manifold is a smooth manifold together with a Riemannian metric. The techniques of differential and integral calculus are used to pull geometric data out of the Riemannian metric. For example, integration leads to the Riemannian distance function, whereas differentiation is used to define curvature and parallel transport.

  3. Maps of manifolds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maps_of_manifolds

    Just as there are various types of manifolds, there are various types of maps of manifolds. PDIFF serves to relate DIFF and PL, and it is equivalent to PL.. In geometric topology, the basic types of maps correspond to various categories of manifolds: DIFF for smooth functions between differentiable manifolds, PL for piecewise linear functions between piecewise linear manifolds, and TOP for ...

  4. Differentiable manifold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differentiable_manifold

    The notion of a differentiable manifold refines that of a manifold by requiring the functions that transform between charts to be differentiable. In mathematics, a differentiable manifold (also differential manifold) is a type of manifold that is locally similar enough to a vector space to allow one to apply calculus.

  5. Immersion (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immersion_(mathematics)

    A regular homotopy between two immersions f and g from a manifold M to a manifold N is defined to be a differentiable function H : M × [0,1] → N such that for all t in [0, 1] the function H t : M → N defined by H t (x) = H(x, t) for all x ∈ M is an immersion, with H 0 = f, H 1 = g. A regular homotopy is thus a homotopy through immersions.

  6. Stochastic analysis on manifolds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stochastic_analysis_on...

    Using this, we can consider an SDE on the orthonormal frame bundle of a Riemannian manifold, whose solution is Brownian motion, and projects down to the (base) manifold via stochastic development. A visual representation of this construction corresponds to the construction of a spherical Brownian motion by rolling without slipping the manifold ...

  7. Density on a manifold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Density_on_a_manifold

    On an oriented manifold, 1-densities can be canonically identified with the n-forms on M. On non-orientable manifolds this identification cannot be made, since the density bundle is the tensor product of the orientation bundle of M and the n-th exterior product bundle of T ∗ M (see pseudotensor).

  8. Sage Manifolds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sage_Manifolds

    The class ManifoldOpenSubset has been suppressed: open subsets of manifolds are now instances of TopologicalManifold or DifferentiableManifold (since an open subset of a top/diff manifold is a top/diff manifold by itself) Functions defined on a coordinate patch are no longer necessarily symbolic functions of the coordinates: they now pertain to ...

  9. Minakshisundaram–Pleijel zeta function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minakshisundaram–Pleijel...

    The Minakshisundaram–Pleijel zeta function is a zeta function encoding the eigenvalues of the Laplacian of a compact Riemannian manifold. It was introduced by Subbaramiah Minakshisundaram and Åke Pleijel . The case of a compact region of the plane was treated earlier by Torsten Carleman .