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  2. C-sharp major - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C-sharp_major

    In Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6, Franz Liszt takes the unusual step of changing the key from D-flat major to C-sharp major near the start of the piece, and then back again to B-flat minor. Maurice Ravel selected C-sharp major as the tonic key of "Ondine" from his piano suite Gaspard de la nuit.

  3. Musical isomorphism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musical_isomorphism

    Flat and sharp are mutually inverse isomorphisms of smooth vector bundles, hence, for each p in M, there are mutually inverse vector space isomorphisms between T p M and T ∗ p M. The flat and sharp maps can be applied to vector fields and covector fields by applying them to each point. Hence, if X is a vector field and ω is a covector field,

  4. List of differential geometry topics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_differential...

    Vector field; Tensor field; Differential form; Exterior derivative; Lie derivative; pullback (differential geometry) pushforward (differential) jet (mathematics) Contact (mathematics) jet bundle; Frobenius theorem (differential topology) Integral curve

  5. Differential geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differential_geometry

    The field of differential geometry became an area of study considered in its own right, distinct from the more broad idea of analytic geometry, in the 1800s, primarily through the foundational work of Carl Friedrich Gauss and Bernhard Riemann, and also in the important contributions of Nikolai Lobachevsky on hyperbolic geometry and non ...

  6. Theorema Egregium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theorema_egregium

    Gauss's Theorema Egregium (Latin for "Remarkable Theorem") is a major result of differential geometry, proved by Carl Friedrich Gauss in 1827, that concerns the curvature of surfaces.

  7. Differential geometry of surfaces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differential_geometry_of...

    A major theorem, often called the fundamental theorem of the differential geometry of surfaces, asserts that whenever two objects satisfy the Gauss-Codazzi constraints, they will arise as the first and second fundamental forms of a regular surface. Using the first fundamental form, it is possible to define new objects on a regular surface.

  8. C-sharp minor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C-sharp_minor

    Its parallel major, C-sharp major, is usually written instead as the enharmonic key of D-flat major, since C-sharp major’s key signature with seven sharps is not normally used. Its enharmonic equivalent, D-flat minor , having eight flats including the B , has a similar problem.

  9. Characteristic class - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Characteristic_class

    In other words, a characteristic class associates to each principal G-bundle in () an element c(P) in H*(X) such that, if f : Y → X is a continuous map, then c(f*P) = f*c(P). On the left is the class of the pullback of P to Y ; on the right is the image of the class of P under the induced map in cohomology.