• If
V is any Banach space, the
tangent space T
xV to
V at any point
x ∈
V is isomorphic in an obvious way to
V itself. The
tangent bundle T
V of
V is then a Banach bundle with the usual projection ::\pi : \mathrm{T} V \to V; ::(x, v) \mapsto x. : This bundle is "trivial" in the sense that T
V admits a globally defined trivialising map: the
identity function ::\tau = \mathrm{id} : \pi^{-1} (V) = \mathrm{T} V \to V \times V; ::(x, v) \mapsto (x, v). • If
M is any Banach manifold, the tangent bundle T
M of
M forms a Banach bundle with respect to the usual projection, but it may not be trivial. • Similarly, the
cotangent bundle T*
M, whose fibre over a point
x ∈
M is the
topological dual space to the tangent space at
x: ::\pi^{-1} (x) = \mathrm{T}_{x}^{*} M = (\mathrm{T}_{x} M)^{*}; : also forms a Banach bundle with respect to the usual projection onto
M. • There is a connection between
Bochner spaces and Banach bundles. Consider, for example, the Bochner space
X =
L²([0,
T];
H1(Ω)), which might arise as a useful object when studying the
heat equation on a domain Ω. One might seek solutions
σ ∈
X to the heat equation; for each time
t,
σ(
t) is a function in the
Sobolev space H1(Ω). One could also think of
Y = [0,
T] ×
H1(Ω), which as a
Cartesian product also has the structure of a Banach bundle over the manifold [0,
T] with fibre
H1(Ω), in which case elements/solutions
σ ∈
X are
cross sections of the bundle
Y of some specified regularity (
L², in fact). If the differential geometry of the problem in question is particularly relevant, the Banach bundle point of view might be advantageous. ==Morphisms of Banach bundles==