In mathematics, de Rham cohomology is a tool belonging both to algebraic topology and to differential topology, capable of expressing basic topological information about smooth manifolds in a form particularly adapted to computation and the concrete representation of cohomology classes. It is a cohomology theory based on the existence of differential forms with prescribed properties. It is in different, definite senses dual both to singular homology, and to Alexander-Spanier cohomology.
The differential k-forms on any smooth manifold M form an abelian group (in fact a real vector space) called
- Ωk(M)
under addition.
The exterior derivative d gives mappings
- d:Ωk(M) → Ωk+1(M).
There is a fundamental relationship
- d 2 = 0;
this follows essentially from symmetry of second derivatives. Therefore vector spaces of k-forms along with the exterior derivative are a cochain complex, the de Rham complex:
In differential geometry terminology, forms which are exterior derivatives are called exact and forms
whose exterior derivatives are 0 are called closed (see closed and exact differential forms); the relationship d 2 = 0 then says that
- exact forms are closed.
The cohomology groups of the de Rham complex, which are the vector spaces of closed forms modulo exact forms, are called the de Rham cohomology groups
- HkDR(M).
The wedge product endows the direct sum of these groups with a ring structure.
De Rham's theorem, proved by Georges de Rham in 1931, states that for a compact oriented smooth manifold M, these groups are isomorphic as real vector spaces with the singular cohomology groups
- Hp(M;R).
Further, the two cohomology rings are isomorphic (as graded rings).
The general Stokes' theorem is an expression of duality between de Rham cohomology and the homology of chains.
Harmonic forms
For a differential manifold M, we can equip it with some auxiliary Riemannian metric. Then the Laplacian Δ, defined by
- *d*d + d*d*
using the exterior derivative and Hodge dual defines a homogeneous (in grading) linear differential operator acting upon the exterior algebra of differential forms: we can look at its action on each component of degree p separately.
If M is compact and oriented, the dimension of its kernel acting upon the space of p-forms is then equal (by Hodge theory) to that of the de Rham cohomology group in degree p: the Laplacian picks out a unique harmonic form in each cohomology class of closed forms, in particular the space of
all harmonic p-forms on M is isomorphic to Hp(M;R).