Let $M$ be a manifold and $\alpha \in \Omega^1(M)$ is a nowhere-vanishing one-form. I have to show that $\ker \alpha$ is involutive if and only if $\alpha \wedge d\alpha = 0$ but I'm having some trouble to prove this. I found this question - Why is $\ker\omega$ integrable iff $\omega\wedge d\omega=0$? - but I'm having a hard time proving this in the case when $M$ is a manifold of an arbitrary dimension.
2026-03-26 14:34:33.1774535673
$\ker \alpha$ is involutive if and only if $\alpha \wedge d\alpha = 0$
912 Views Asked by Bumbble Comm https://math.techqa.club/user/bumbble-comm/detail At
1
There are 1 best solutions below
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 EXTERIOR-ALGEBRA
- Does curl vector influence the final destination of a particle?
- How to get the missing brick of the proof $A \circ P_\sigma = P_\sigma \circ A$ using permutations?
- Is the exterior/wedge product of differential forms injective?
- trace of exterior product of a skew matrix $M$, $\bigwedge^kM$
- Question about notation in differential forms.
- A confusing formula in Clifford algebra
- Is there a non-degenerate solution for this PDE on $\mathbb{R}^3$?
- Using the 'wedge product'
- Does every connection admit a parallel volume form?
- Derivation of Green's theorem - I have wrong negative sign
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?
Let's think for a moment about what it means to say $\omega\wedge d\omega = 0$ when $\omega\in\Omega^1(M)$. If you consider extending $\omega$ to a basis $\{\omega=\omega_1,\omega_2,\dots,\omega_n\}$ for the $1$-forms locally, you can easily convince yourself that $d\omega = \omega\wedge\eta$ for some $1$-form $\eta$, again locally. Then (locally) it is clear that $d\omega(X,Y) = 0$ whenever $\omega(X)=\omega(Y)=0$. Thus, $\omega\wedge d\omega = 0$ implies involutivity.
On the other hand, if the distribution is involutive, then you already know that $d\omega(X,Y) = 0$ whenever $\omega(X)=\omega(Y)=0$. But then this tells us that $d\omega = \omega\wedge\eta$ for some $1$-form $\eta$; for, if not, we would have $$d\omega=\sum\limits_{i=2\\i<j}^n f_{ij}\omega_i\wedge\omega_j$$ for some functions $f_{ij}$, with some coefficient $f_{i'j'}$ nonzero (at a particular point). Choosing $X,Y$ so that $\omega_{i'}(X)=1$ and $\omega_k(X)=0$ for all $k\ne i'$ (including $k=1$) and $\omega_{j'}(Y)=1$ and $\omega_k(Y)=0$ for all $k\ne j'$ (likewise) shows that $d\omega(X,Y)\ne 0$.