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de Rham cohomology is a formal set-up for the analytic problem: If you have a Differential
k-Form on a Manifold
, is it the Exterior Derivative of another Differential k-Form
? Formally, if
then
. This is more commonly stated
as
, meaning that if
is to be the Exterior Derivative of a Differential k-Form, a Necessary condition that
must satisfy is that its Exterior
Derivative is zero.
de Rham cohomology gives a formalism that aims to answer the question, ``Are all differential -forms on a Manifold
with zero Exterior Derivative the Exterior Derivatives of
-forms?'' In
particular, the
th de Rham cohomology vector space is defined to be the space of all
-forms with Exterior
Derivative 0, modulo the space of all boundaries of
-forms. This is the trivial Vector Space Iff the
answer to our question is yes.
The fundamental result about de Rham cohomology is that it is a topological invariant of the Manifold, namely: the
th de Rham cohomology Vector Space of a Manifold
is canonically isomorphic to the
Alexander-Spanier Cohomology Vector Space
(also called cohomology with compact support). In
the case that
is compact, Alexander-Spanier Cohomology is exactly singular cohomology.
See also Alexander-Spanier Cohomology, Change of Variables Theorem, Differential k-Form, Exterior Derivative, Vector Space