Christoffel symbols


In mathematics and physics, the Christoffel symbols are an array of numbers describing a metric connection. The metric connection is a specialization of the affine connection to surfaces or other manifolds endowed with a metric, allowing distances to be measured on that surface. In differential geometry, an affine connection can be defined without reference to a metric, and many additional concepts follow: parallel transport, covariant derivatives, geodesics, etc. also do not require the concept of a metric. However, when a metric is available, these concepts can be directly tied to the "shape" of the manifold itself; that shape is determined by how the tangent space is attached to the cotangent space by the metric tensor. Abstractly, one would say that the manifold has an associated frame bundle, with each "frame" being a possible choice of a coordinate frame. An invariant metric implies that the structure group of the frame bundle is the orthogonal group. As a result, such a manifold is necessarily a Riemannian manifold. The Christoffel symbols provide a concrete representation of the connection of Riemannian geometry in terms of coordinates on the manifold. Additional concepts, such as parallel transport, geodesics, etc. can then be expressed in terms of Christoffel symbols.
In general, there are an infinite number of metric connections for a given metric tensor; however, there is a unique connection that is free of torsion, the Levi-Civita connection. It is common in physics and general relativity to work almost exclusively with the Levi-Civita connection, by working in coordinate frames where the torsion vanishes. For example, in Euclidean spaces, the Christoffel symbols describe how the local coordinate bases change from point to point.
At each point of the underlying -dimensional manifold, for any local coordinate system around that point, the Christoffel symbols are denoted for. Each entry of this array is a real number. Under linear coordinate transformations on the manifold, the Christoffel symbols transform like the components of a tensor, but under general coordinate transformations they do not. Most of the algebraic properties of the Christoffel symbols follow from their relationship to the affine connection; only a few follow from the fact that the structure group is the orthogonal group .
Christoffel symbols are used for performing practical calculations. For example, the Riemann curvature tensor can be expressed entirely in terms of the Christoffel symbols and their first partial derivatives. In general relativity, the connection plays the role of the gravitational force field with the corresponding gravitational potential being the metric tensor. When the coordinate system and the metric tensor share some symmetry, many of the are zero.
The Christoffel symbols are named for Elwin Bruno Christoffel.

Note

The definitions given below are valid for both Riemannian manifolds and pseudo-Riemannian manifolds, such as those of general relativity, with careful distinction being made between upper and lower indices. The formulas hold for either sign convention, unless otherwise noted.
Einstein summation convention is used in this article, with vectors indicated by bold font. The connection coefficients of the Levi-Civita connection expressed in a coordinate basis are called Christoffel symbols.

Preliminary definitions

Given a coordinate system for on an -manifold, the tangent vectors
define what is referred to as the local basis of the tangent space to at each point of its domain. These can be used to define the metric tensor:
and its inverse:
which can in turn be used to define the dual basis:
Some texts write for, so that the metric tensor takes the particularly beguiling form. This convention also leaves use of the symbol unambiguously for the vierbein.

Definition in Euclidean space

In Euclidean space, the general definition given below for the Christoffel symbols of the second kind can be proven to be equivalent to:
Christoffel symbols of the first kind can then be found via index lowering:
Rearranging, we see that:
In words, the arrays represented by the Christoffel symbols track how the basis changes from point to point. Symbols of the second kind decompose the change with respect to the basis, while symbols of the first kind decompose it with respect to the dual basis. These expressions fail as definitions when such decompositions are not possible – in particular, when the direction of change does not lie in the tangent space, which can occur on a curved surface. In this form, it easy to see the symmetry of the lower or last two indices:
from the definition of and the fact that partial derivatives commute.
The same numerical values for Christoffel symbols of the second kind also relate to derivatives of the dual basis, as seen in the expression:
which we can rearrange as:

General definition

Christoffel symbols of the first kind

The Christoffel symbols of the first kind can be derived either from the Christoffel symbols of the second kind and the metric,
or from the metric alone,
As an alternative notation one also finds
It is worth noting that.

Christoffel symbols of the second kind (symmetric definition)

The Christoffel symbols of the second kind are the connection coefficients—in a coordinate basis—of the Levi-Civita connection.
In other words, the Christoffel symbols of the second kind are defined as the unique coefficients such that
where is the Levi-Civita connection on taken in the coordinate direction and where is a local coordinate basis. Since this connection has zero torsion, and holonomic vector fields commute we have
Hence in this basis the connection coefficients are symmetric:
For this reason, a torsion-free connection is often called symmetric.
The Christoffel symbols can be derived from the vanishing of the covariant derivative of the metric tensor :
As a shorthand notation, the nabla symbol and the partial derivative symbols are frequently dropped, and instead a semicolon and a comma are used to set off the index that is being used for the derivative. Thus, the above is sometimes written as
Using that the symbols are symmetric in the lower two indices, one can solve explicitly for the Christoffel symbols as a function of the metric tensor by permuting the indices and resumming:
where is the inverse of the matrix, defined as . Although the Christoffel symbols are written in the same notation as tensors with index notation, they do not transform like tensors under [|a change of coordinates].

Contraction of indices

Contracting the upper index and any one of the lower index leads to
where is the determinant of metric tensor. This identity can be used to evaluate divergence of vectors.

Connection coefficients in a nonholonomic basis

The Christoffel symbols are most typically defined in a coordinate basis, which is the convention followed here. In other words, the name Christoffel symbols is reserved only for coordinate frames. However, the connection coefficients can also be defined in an arbitrary basis of tangent vectors by
Explicitly, in terms of the metric tensor, this is
where are the commutation coefficients of the basis; that is,
where are the basis vectors and is the Lie bracket. The standard unit vectors in spherical and cylindrical coordinates furnish an example of a basis with non-vanishing commutation coefficients. The difference between the connection in such a frame, and the Levi-Civita connection is known as the contorsion tensor.

Ricci rotation coefficients (asymmetric definition)

When we choose the basis orthonormal: then. This implies that
and the connection coefficients become antisymmetric in the first two indices:
where
In this case, the connection coefficients are called the Ricci rotation coefficients.
Equivalently, one can define Ricci rotation coefficients as follows:
where is an orthonormal nonholonomic basis and its co-basis.

Transformation law under change of variable

Under a change of variable from to, Christoffel symbols transform as
where the overline denotes the Christoffel symbols in the coordinate system. The Christoffel symbol does not transform as a tensor, but rather as an object in the jet bundle. More precisely, the Christoffel symbols can be considered as functions on the jet bundle of the frame bundle of, independent of any local coordinate system. Choosing a local coordinate system determines a local section of this bundle, which can then be used to pull back the Christoffel symbols to functions on, though of course these functions then depend on the choice of local coordinate system.
For each point, there exist coordinate systems in which the Christoffel symbols vanish at the point. These are called normal coordinates, and are often used in Riemannian geometry.
There are some interesting properties which can be derived directly from the transformation law.
If a vector is transported parallel on a curve parametrized by some parameter on a Riemannian manifold, the rate of change of the components of the vector is given by
Now just by using the condition that the scalar product formed by two arbitrary vectors and is unchanged is enough to derive the Christoffel symbols. The condition is
which by product rule expand to
Applying the parallel transport rule for the two arbitrary vectors and relabelling dummy indices and collecting the coefficients of , we obtain
This is same as the equation obtained by requiring the covariant derivative of the metric tensor to vanish in the General definition section. The derivation from here is simple. By cyclically permuting the indices in above equation, we can obtain two more equations and then linearly combining these three equations, we can express in terms of metric tensor.

Relationship to index-free notation

Let and be vector fields with components and. Then the th component of the covariant derivative of with respect to is given by
Here, the Einstein notation is used, so repeated indices indicate summation over indices and contraction with the metric tensor serves to raise and lower indices:
Keep in mind that and that, the Kronecker delta. The convention is that the metric tensor is the one with the lower indices; the correct way to obtain from is to solve the linear equations.
The statement that the connection is torsion-free, namely that
is equivalent to the statement that—in a coordinate basis—the Christoffel symbol is symmetric in the lower two indices:
The index-less transformation properties of a tensor are given by pullbacks for covariant indices, and pushforwards for contravariant indices. The article on covariant derivatives provides additional discussion of the correspondence between index-free notation and indexed notation.

Covariant derivatives of tensors

The covariant derivative of a vector field is
By corollary, divergence of a vector can be obtained as
The covariant derivative of a scalar field is just
and the covariant derivative of a covector field is
The symmetry of the Christoffel symbol now implies
for any scalar field, but in general the covariant derivatives of higher order tensor fields do not commute.
The covariant derivative of a type tensor field is
that is,
If the tensor field is mixed then its covariant derivative is
and if the tensor field is of type then its covariant derivative is

Contravariant derivatives of tensors

To find the contravariant derivative of a vector field, we must first transform
it into a covariant derivative using the metric tensor

Applications to general relativity

The Christoffel symbols find frequent use in Einstein's theory of general relativity, where spacetime is represented by a curved 4-dimensional Lorentz manifold with a Levi-Civita connection. The Einstein field equations—which determine the geometry of spacetime in the presence of matter—contain the Ricci tensor, and so calculating the Christoffel symbols is essential. Once the geometry is determined, the paths of particles and light beams are calculated by solving the geodesic equations in which the Christoffel symbols explicitly appear.

Applications in classical (non-relativistic) mechanics

Let be the generalized coordinates and be the generalized velocities, then the kinetic energy for a unit mass is given by, where is the metric tensor. If, the potential function, exists then the contravariant components of the generalized force per unit mass are. The metric can be obtained from the line element. Substituting the Lagrangian into the Euler-Lagrange equation, we get
Now multiplying by, we get
When Cartesian coordinates can be adopted, we have an Euclidean metrics, the Christoffel symbol vanishes, and the equation reduces to Newton's second law of motion. In curvilinear coordinates, fictitious forces like the Centrifugal force and Coriolis force originate from the Christoffel symbols, so from the purely spatial curvilinear coordinates.