Homological integration

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In the mathematical fields of differential geometry and geometric measure theory, homological integration or geometric integration is a method for extending the notion of the integral to manifolds. Rather than functions or differential forms, the integral is defined over currents on a manifold.

The theory is "homological" because currents themselves are defined by duality with differential forms. To wit, the space Dk of k-currents on a manifold M is defined as the dual space, in the sense of distributions, of the space of k-forms Ωk on M. Thus there is a pairing between k-currents T and k-forms α, denoted here by

\langle T, \alpha\rangle.

Under this duality pairing, the exterior derivative

d : \Omega^{k-1} \to \Omega^k

goes over to a boundary operator

\partial : D^k \to D^{k-1}

defined by

\langle\partial T,\alpha\rangle = \langle T, d\alpha\rangle

for all α ∈ Ωk. This is a homological rather than cohomological construction.

References

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