Set of all derivations at a point

From Maths
Jump to: navigation, search

NOTE: NOT to be confused with Set of all derivations of a germ


This page might be total crap

I was confused about the concept at the time! DO NOT USE THIS PAGE

Notational clash

Some authors use Tp(Rn)

to denote this set (the set of derivations of the form ω:CR
)[1] however other authors use Tp(Rn)
[2] to denote the Tangent space - while isomorphic these are distinct.

I use the custom notation Dp(Rn)

to resolve this, care must be taken as D
and D
look similar!

Definition

We denote the set of all derivations (at a point) of smooth or C functions from A at a point p (assume A=Rn if no A is mentioned) by:

Dp(A), and assume Dp=Dp(Rn)

In Rn

Dp(Rn)

can be defined as follows, where ω is a derivation, of signature: ω:C(Rn)R

Dp(Rn)={ω|ω is a derivation at a point}

Recall C=C(Rn)

and denotes the set of all smooth functions on Rn

See also

References

  1. Jump up John M. Lee - Introduction to smooth manifolds - Second edition
  2. Jump up Loring W. Tu - An introduction to manifolds - second edition