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Question : Let be a principal bundle. How does connection on defines a functor (here is the Lie groupoid whose morphism set is whose object set is ).
I have seen in some places that, giving a connection on is giving a map .
Here are special collection of special types of paths. This is the morphism set of what is called the path groupoid of , usually denoted by whose objects are elements of .
Once this is done, seeing the Lie group as a Lie groupoid (I know this is a bad notation but let me use this for this time) whose set of objects is singleton and set of morphisms is . This would then give a functor . They say giving a connection means giving a functor with some good conditions.
Then, to make sense of -connections, they just have to consider .
This is the set up.
I do not understand (I could not search it better) how giving a connection on gives a map . For each path in they are associating an element of and calling it to be the holonomy of that path . They say it is given by integrating forms on paths.
All I know is, a connection on is a valued -form on with some extra conditions.
Suppose I have a path on , how do I associate an element of ? Is it ? How to make sense of this? It is not clear how I should see this as is a form on and is a path on .
To make sense of this, there are two possible ways I can think of.
Given a path with , fix a point . Then, connection gives a unique path in whose starting point is such that projection of along is . The problem here is that we have to fix a point . Only then we can get a curve. It can happen that for any two points on may give same result but I am not sure if that is true. I mean, let be lifts of fixing and respectively. Does it then happen that ?
Even if this is the case, what does it mean to say integrating a valued -form on a path? How is it defined? I guess it should give an element of (just like integrating a valued -form along a path gives an element of ). Do we then see image of under to get an element of ? We can declare this to be .
Is this how we associate an element of to a path in ??
Otherwise, given on , using trivialization, we can get an open cover of and get forms valued -forms on with some compatibility on intersections.
We can consider . These are paths on and are -forms on . So, makes sense. This gives a collection of elements of and may be all these comes from a single element and seeing its image under gives an element in . We can then declare it to be .
Is this how we associate an element of to a path in ??
Any comments are welcome.
I could not find a place where this is discussed in detail. So, asking here.
The short answer is: Assign to a path the parallel transport operation of the given connection along that path.
For details you could try arXiv:0705.0452.
@Urs
Hi,
Does it have nothing to do with integrating the 1-form on the path ?
Thanks for that arxiv notes. I can see that you have discussed in first three pages. I will try to understand and write down here if I have any question.
You will have already seen the answer to #4 now, but just briefly, for the record:
Yes, the parallel transport of a connection along a path may be expressed as a path-ordered integral of differential 1-form representatives of the connection along the path, possibly with insertion of transition functions where the path crosses local patches of a local trivialization.
I should say that these are classical constructions. But arXiv:0705.0452 should give a fully detailed account.
(This article was originally just meant to be a review preface to the higher-dimensional generalization, which itself was then broken up further into arXiv:0802.0663 and arXiv:0808.1923.)
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