(mathematics) Symbols that represent particular functions of the coefficients and their first-order derivatives of a quadratic form. Also known as three-index symbols.
| Sci-Tech Dictionary: Christoffel symbols |
(mathematics) Symbols that represent particular functions of the coefficients and their first-order derivatives of a quadratic form. Also known as three-index symbols.
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| Wikipedia: Christoffel symbols |
In mathematics and physics, the Christoffel symbols, named for Elwin Bruno Christoffel (1829–1900), are numerical arrays of real numbers that describe, in coordinates, the effects parallel transport in curved surfaces and, more generally, manifolds. As such, they are coordinate-space expressions for the Levi-Civita connection derived from the metric tensor. In a broader sense, the connection coefficients of an arbitrary (not necessarily metric) affine connection in a coordinate basis are also called Christoffel symbols.[1] The Christoffel symbols may be used for performing practical calculations in differential geometry. For example, the Riemann curvature tensor can be expressed entirely in terms of partial derivatives of the Christoffel symbols.
Under linear coordinate transformations on the manifold, it behaves like a tensor, but under general coordinate transformations, it does not. In many practical problems, most components of the Christoffel symbols are equal to zero, provided the coordinate system and the metric tensor possess some common symmetries.
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The definitions given below are valid for both Riemannian manifolds and pseudo-Riemannian manifolds, such as those of general relativity, with careful distinction being made between upper and lower indices (contra-variant and co-variant indices). The formulas hold for either sign convention, unless otherwise noted. Einstein summation convention is used in this article.
If xi, i = 1,2,...,n, is a local coordinate system on a manifold M, then the tangent vectors

defines a basis of the tangent space of M at each point. The Christoffel symbols Γkij are defined as the unique coefficients such that the equation

holds, where
is the Levi-Civita connection on M taken in the coordinate direction ei.
The Christoffel symbols can be derived from the vanishing of the covariant derivative of the metric tensor
:

As a shorthand notation, the nabla symbol and the partial derivative symbols are frequently dropped, and instead a semi-colon and a comma are used to set off the index that is being used for the derivative. Thus, the above is sometimes written as

By permuting the indices, and resumming, one can solve explicitly for the Christoffel symbols as a function of the metric tensor:

where the matrix
is an inverse of the matrix
, defined as (using the Kronecker delta, and Einstein notation for summation)
. Although the Christoffel symbols are written in the same notation as tensors with index notation, they are not tensors.[2] Indeed, they do not transform like tensors under a change of coordinates; see below.
The Christoffel symbols are most typically defined in a coordinate basis, which is the convention followed here. However, the Christoffel symbols can also be defined in an arbitrary basis of tangent vectors ei by

Explicitly, in terms of the metric tensor, this is[3]

where
are the commutation coefficients of the basis; that is,
![[e_k,e_\ell] = c_{k\ell}{}^m e_m\,\](http://wpcontent.answers.com/math/5/7/8/578eecd87223ce50c17c9cec073f2dfa.png)
where ek are the basis vectors and
is the Lie bracket. An example of a basis with non-vanishing commutation coefficients are the unit vectors in spherical and cylindrical coordinates.
The expressions below are valid only in a coordinate basis, unless otherwise noted.
Let X and Y be vector fields with components
and
. Then the kth component of the covariant derivative of Y with respect to X is given by

Some older physics books occasionally write dx in place of X, and place it after the equation, rather than before. Here, the Einstein notation is used, so repeated indices indicate summation over indices and contraction with the metric tensor serves to raise and lower indices:

Keep in mind that
and that
, the Kronecker delta. The convention is that the metric tensor is the one with the lower indices; the correct way to obtain
from
is to solve the linear equations
.
The statement that the connection is torsion-free, namely that
![\nabla_X Y - \nabla_Y X = [X,Y]\](http://wpcontent.answers.com/math/d/6/4/d648cf4c00e22c528c0c716bfc400b2d.png)
is equivalent to the statement that the Christoffel symbol is symmetric in the lower two indices:

The index-less transformation properties of a tensor are given by pullbacks for covariant indices, and pushforwards for contravariant indices. The article on covariant derivatives provides additional discussion of the correspondence between index-free and indexed notation.
The covariant derivative of a vector field
is

The covariant derivative of a scalar field
is just

and the covariant derivative of a covector field
is

The symmetry of the Christoffel symbol now implies

for any scalar field, but in general the covariant derivatives of higher order tensor fields do not commute (see curvature tensor).
The covariant derivative of a type (2,0) tensor field
is

that is,

If the tensor field is mixed then its covariant derivative is

and if the tensor field is of type (0,2) then its covariant derivative is

Under a change of variable from
to
, vectors transform as

and so

where the overline denotes the Christoffel symbols in the y coordinate frame. Note that the Christoffel symbol does not transform as a tensor, but rather as an object in the jet bundle.
In fact, at each point, there exist coordinate systems in which the Christoffel symbols vanish at the point.[4] These are called (geodesic) normal coordinates, and are often used in Riemannian geometry.
The Christoffel symbols find frequent use in Einstein's theory of general relativity, where spacetime is represented by a curved 4-dimensional Lorentz manifold with a Levi-Civita connection. The Einstein field equations - which determine the geometry of spacetime in the presence of matter - contain the Ricci tensor, and so calculating the Christoffel symbols is essential. Once the geometry is determined, the paths of particles and light beams are calculated by solving the geodesic equations in which the Christoffel symbols explicitly appear.
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
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