In textbooks I've seen differential geometry is done with finite-dimensional manifolds. Is it possible to generalise to banach manifolds so as to formulate the calculus of variations within it, or does this naive approach hit problems? And if so where?
2026-04-02 15:49:19.1775144959
Is it possible to formulate variational calculus geometrically?
1.3k Views Asked by Bumbble Comm https://math.techqa.club/user/bumbble-comm/detail At
1
There are 1 best solutions below
Related Questions in CALCULUS
- Equality of Mixed Partial Derivatives - Simple proof is Confusing
- How can I prove that $\int_0^{\frac{\pi}{2}}\frac{\ln(1+\cos(\alpha)\cos(x))}{\cos(x)}dx=\frac{1}{2}\left(\frac{\pi^2}{4}-\alpha^2\right)$?
- Proving the differentiability of the following function of two variables
- If $f ◦f$ is differentiable, then $f ◦f ◦f$ is differentiable
- Calculating the radius of convergence for $\sum _{n=1}^{\infty}\frac{\left(\sqrt{ n^2+n}-\sqrt{n^2+1}\right)^n}{n^2}z^n$
- Number of roots of the e
- What are the functions satisfying $f\left(2\sum_{i=0}^{\infty}\frac{a_i}{3^i}\right)=\sum_{i=0}^{\infty}\frac{a_i}{2^i}$
- Why the derivative of $T(\gamma(s))$ is $T$ if this composition is not a linear transformation?
- How to prove $\frac 10 \notin \mathbb R $
- Proving that: $||x|^{s/2}-|y|^{s/2}|\le 2|x-y|^{s/2}$
Related Questions in DIFFERENTIAL-GEOMETRY
- Smooth Principal Bundle from continuous transition functions?
- Compute Thom and Euler class
- Holonomy bundle is a covering space
- Alternative definition for characteristic foliation of a surface
- Studying regular space curves when restricted to two differentiable functions
- What kind of curvature does a cylinder have?
- A new type of curvature multivector for surfaces?
- Regular surfaces with boundary and $C^1$ domains
- Show that two isometries induce the same linear mapping
- geodesic of infinite length without self-intersections
Related Questions in CLASSICAL-MECHANICS
- An underdetermined system derived for rotated coordinate system
- Bouncing ball optimization
- Circular Motion Question - fully algebraic
- How can I solve this pair of differential equations?
- How to solve $-\frac{1}{2}gt^2\sin \theta=x$ when $x$ equals $0$
- Find the acceleration and tension in pulley setup
- Derive first-order time derivatives in a second-order dynamic system
- Phase curves of a spherical pendulum
- Velocity dependent force with arbitrary power
- An explanation for mathematicians of the three-body problem using a simple example, and the moons of Saturn
Trending Questions
- Induction on the number of equations
- How to convince a math teacher of this simple and obvious fact?
- Find $E[XY|Y+Z=1 ]$
- Refuting the Anti-Cantor Cranks
- What are imaginary numbers?
- Determine the adjoint of $\tilde Q(x)$ for $\tilde Q(x)u:=(Qu)(x)$ where $Q:U→L^2(Ω,ℝ^d$ is a Hilbert-Schmidt operator and $U$ is a Hilbert space
- Why does this innovative method of subtraction from a third grader always work?
- How do we know that the number $1$ is not equal to the number $-1$?
- What are the Implications of having VΩ as a model for a theory?
- Defining a Galois Field based on primitive element versus polynomial?
- Can't find the relationship between two columns of numbers. Please Help
- Is computer science a branch of mathematics?
- Is there a bijection of $\mathbb{R}^n$ with itself such that the forward map is connected but the inverse is not?
- Identification of a quadrilateral as a trapezoid, rectangle, or square
- Generator of inertia group in function field extension
Popular # Hahtags
second-order-logic
numerical-methods
puzzle
logic
probability
number-theory
winding-number
real-analysis
integration
calculus
complex-analysis
sequences-and-series
proof-writing
set-theory
functions
homotopy-theory
elementary-number-theory
ordinary-differential-equations
circles
derivatives
game-theory
definite-integrals
elementary-set-theory
limits
multivariable-calculus
geometry
algebraic-number-theory
proof-verification
partial-derivative
algebra-precalculus
Popular Questions
- What is the integral of 1/x?
- How many squares actually ARE in this picture? Is this a trick question with no right answer?
- Is a matrix multiplied with its transpose something special?
- What is the difference between independent and mutually exclusive events?
- Visually stunning math concepts which are easy to explain
- taylor series of $\ln(1+x)$?
- How to tell if a set of vectors spans a space?
- Calculus question taking derivative to find horizontal tangent line
- How to determine if a function is one-to-one?
- Determine if vectors are linearly independent
- What does it mean to have a determinant equal to zero?
- Is this Batman equation for real?
- How to find perpendicular vector to another vector?
- How to find mean and median from histogram
- How many sides does a circle have?
The calculus of variations in a non-linear infinite dimensional setting is done by Klingenberg (Riemannian Geometry and Lectures on Closed geodesics) to find closed geodesics on a given (finite-dimensional) Riemannian manifold $M$. For this he constructs a Hilbert manifold $\Lambda M$ of free loops (of class H^1). The critical points of the energy functional corresponds to closed geodesics. These closed geodesics can be shown to be actually smooth.
The energy functional satisfies some very nice properties. If $M$ is compact, it satisfies the Palais-Smale condition. This basically means that if one sees an almost critical point, it actually is one. (A function which does not satisfy the PS condition is for example the arctangent. If one goes to infinity, the derivative goes to zero, but it is not actually a critcal point). Furthermore the energy functional is bounded from below (by zero obviously).
These conditions ensure together that on each connected component of the free loop space the energy functional has a critical point. The components of the free loop spaces are in one to one correspondence with conjugacy classes of the fundamental group. On each of these components one thus finds a closed geodesic. On the component where the contractible loops reside this does not tell you anything new, these critical points are just the constant loops. However on all the other components one can directly find a closed geodesic! Once the machinery of the infinite dimensional manifold and this functional has been set up, you immediately get a very deep result. In each conjugacy class of $\pi_1$ we can find a closed geodesic!
As an aside, one can work a bit harder to also find non-constant closed geodesics in the component of the contractible loops, but this is harder. The statement then becomes that any closed Riemannian manifold contains a closed geodesic.
It is also possible to find periodic solutions of Hamiltonian systems in this manner. Morse theory (in the infinite dimensional setting) helps greatly.
Edit: Some answers to some questions.
The machinery Klingenberg sets up is Lagrangian. The energy functional
$$E(c)=\int |\dot c(s)|^2 ds$$
can be seen as the Kinetic energy term of a Lagrangian (the potential is constant, and gauged to zero) of a classical mechanical system.
The manifold of closed loops (free loop space) $\Lambda M$ is involved to find closed geodesics. The boundary terms are automatically made to be periodic. It is also possible to find geodesics between two fixed points. One constructs a slightly different Hilbert manifold of paths $\Omega_{pq}M$ between the two points $p$ and $q$. The details are again in Klingenberg.
In principle all closed geodesics can be found using this approach. The critical points of the energy functional on the free loop space, and the parameterized closed geodesics are in 1 to 1 correspondence. However it is hard to actually detect them all, because the set of critical points of $E$ can be complicated. Another problem is that the critical points sometimes detect "different" geodesics that are geometrically indistinguishable. Think about transversing the sphere multiple times.
If one wants to look for geometrically different geodesics, one needs to quotient out some naturally occuring group actions (of circle reparameterizations basically). I am not sure if the resulting space is in general a manifold, but there is a section on this in Klingenberg, which I have not read yet.