In mathematics and mathematical physics, a coordinate basis or holonomic basis for a differentiable manifold M is a set of basis vector fields {e1, ..., en} defined at every point P of a region of the manifold as

where δs is the displacement vector between the point P and a nearby point Q whose coordinate separation from P is δxα along the coordinate curve xα (i.e. the curve on the manifold through P for which the local coordinate xα varies and all other coordinates are constant).[1]

It is possible to make an association between such a basis and directional derivative operators. Given a parameterized curve C on the manifold defined by xα(λ) with the tangent vector u = uαeα, where uα = dxα/, and a function f(xα) defined in a neighbourhood of C, the variation of f along C can be written as

Since we have that u = uαeα, the identification is often made between a coordinate basis vector eα and the partial derivative operator /xα, under the interpretation of vectors as operators acting on functions.[2]

A local condition for a basis {e1, ..., en} to be holonomic is that all mutual Lie derivatives vanish:[3]

A basis that is not holonomic is called an anholonomic,[4] non-holonomic or non-coordinate basis.

Given a metric tensor g on a manifold M, it is in general not possible to find a coordinate basis that is orthonormal in any open region U of M.[5] An obvious exception is when M is the real coordinate space Rn considered as a manifold with g being the Euclidean metric δijeiej at every point.

References

See also

Wikiwand in your browser!

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.

Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.