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In mathematics, both in vector calculus and in differential topology, the concepts of closed form and exact form are defined for differential forms, by the equations
for a given form α to be a closed form, and
for an exact form, with α given and β unknown. Since d 2 = 0, to be exact is a sufficient condition to be closed. In abstract terms, the main interest of this pair of definitions is that asking whether this is also a necessary condition is a way of detecting topological information, by differential conditions. It makes no real sense to ask whether a 0-form is exact, since d increases degree by 1. The cases of differential forms in R2 and R3 were already well-known in the mathematical physics of the nineteenth century. In the plane, 0-forms are just functions, and 2-forms are functions times the basic area element dx∧dy, so that it is the 1-forms
that are of real interest. The formula for the exterior derivative d here is
where the subscripts denote partial derivatives. Therefore the condition for α to be closed is
In this case if h(x,y) is a function then
The implication from 'exact' to 'closed' is then a consequence of the symmetry of second derivatives, with respect to x and y. The fundamental topological result here is the Poincaré lemma. It states that for a contractible open subset X of Rn, any smooth p-form α defined on X that is closed, is also exact, for any integer p > 0 (this has content only when p is at most n). This is not true for an open annulus in the plane, for some 1-forms α that fail to extend smoothly to the whole disk; so that some topological condition is necessary. In terms of De Rham cohomology, the lemma says that contractible sets have the cohomology groups of a point (considering that the constant 0-forms are closed but vacuously aren't exact). |
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