In mathematics, the vector flow refers to a set of closely related concepts of the flow determined by a vector field. These appear in a number of different contexts, including differential topology, Riemannian geometry and Lie group theory. These related concepts are explored in a spectrum of articles:
- exponential map (Riemannian geometry)
- infinitesimal generator (→ Lie group)
- integral curve (→ vector field)
- one-parameter subgroup
- flow (geometry)
- injectivity radius (→ glossary)
Vector flow in differential topology
editRelevant concepts: (flow, infinitesimal generator, integral curve, complete vector field)
Let V be a smooth vector field on a smooth manifold M. There is a unique maximal flow D → M whose infinitesimal generator is V. Here D ⊆ R × M is the flow domain. For each p ∈ M the map Dp → M is the unique maximal integral curve of V starting at p.
A global flow is one whose flow domain is all of R × M. Global flows define smooth actions of R on M. A vector field is complete if it generates a global flow. Every smooth vector field on a compact manifold without boundary is complete.
Vector flow in Riemannian geometry
editRelevant concepts: (geodesic, exponential map, injectivity radius)
A vector flow can be thought of as a solution to the system of differential equations induced by a vector field. That is, if a (conservative) vector field is a map to the tangent space, it represents the tangent vectors to some function at each point. Splitting the tangent vectors into directional derivatives, one can solve the resulting system of differential equations to find the function. In this sense, the function is the flow and both induces and is induced by the vector field.
From a point, the rate of change of the i-th component with respect to the parametrization of the flow (“how much the flow has acted”) is described by the i-th component of the field. That is, if one parametrizes with L ‘length along the path of the flow,’ as one proceeds along the flow by dL the first position component changes as described by the first component of the vector field at the point one starts from, and likewise for all other components.
The exponential map
- exp : TpM → M
is defined as exp(X) = γ(1) where γ : I → M is the unique geodesic passing through p at 0 and whose tangent vector at 0 is X. Here I is the maximal open interval of R for which the geodesic is defined.
Let M be a pseudo-Riemannian manifold (or any manifold with an affine connection) and let p be a point in M. Then for every V in TpM there exists a unique geodesic γ : I → M for which γ(0) = p and Let Dp be the subset of TpM for which 1 lies in I.
Vector flow in Lie group theory
editRelevant concepts: (exponential map, infinitesimal generator, one-parameter group)
Every left-invariant vector field on a Lie group is complete. The integral curve starting at the identity is a one-parameter subgroup of G. There are one-to-one correspondences
- {one-parameter subgroups of G} ⇔ {left-invariant vector fields on G} ⇔ g = TeG.
Let G be a Lie group and g its Lie algebra. The exponential map is a map exp : g → G given by exp(X) = γ(1) where γ is the integral curve starting at the identity in G generated by X.
- The exponential map is smooth.
- For a fixed X, the map t ↦ exp(tX) is the one-parameter subgroup of G generated by X.
- The exponential map restricts to a diffeomorphism from some neighborhood of 0 in g to a neighborhood of e in G.
- The image of the exponential map always lies in the connected component of the identity in G.
See also
edit- Gradient vector flow – Computer vision framework