The de Rham cohomology has inspired many mathematical ideas, including
Dolbeault cohomology,
Hodge theory, and the
Atiyah–Singer index theorem. However, even in more classical contexts, the theorem has inspired a number of developments. Firstly, the
Hodge theory proves that there is an isomorphism between the cohomology consisting of harmonic forms and the de Rham cohomology consisting of closed forms modulo exact forms. This relies on an appropriate definition of harmonic forms and of the Hodge theorem. For further details see
Hodge theory.
Harmonic forms If is a
compact Riemannian manifold, then each equivalence class in H^k_{\mathrm{dR}}(M) contains exactly one
harmonic form. That is, every member \omega of a given equivalence class of closed forms can be written as :\omega = \alpha + \gamma where \alpha is exact and \gamma is harmonic: \Delta\gamma = 0. Any
harmonic function on a compact connected Riemannian manifold is a constant. Thus, this particular representative element can be understood to be an extremum (a minimum) of all cohomologously equivalent forms on the manifold. For example, on a -
torus, one may envision a constant -form as one where all of the "hair" is combed neatly in the same direction (and all of the "hair" having the same length). In this case, there are two cohomologically distinct combings; all of the others are linear combinations. In particular, this implies that the 1st
Betti number of a -torus is two. More generally, on an n-dimensional torus T^n, one can consider the various combings of k-forms on the torus. There are n choose k such combings that can be used to form the basis vectors for H^k_{\text{dR}}(T^n); the k-th Betti number for the de Rham cohomology group for the n-torus is thus n choose k. More precisely, for a
differential manifold , one may equip it with some auxiliary
Riemannian metric. Then the
Laplacian \Delta is defined by :\Delta=d\delta+\delta d with d the
exterior derivative and \delta the
codifferential. The Laplacian is 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 k separately. If M is
compact and
oriented, the
dimension of the
kernel of the Laplacian acting upon the space of
-forms is then equal (by
Hodge theory) to that of the de Rham cohomology group in degree k: the Laplacian picks out a unique
harmonic form in each cohomology class of
closed forms. In particular, the space of all harmonic k-forms on M is isomorphic to H^k(M;\R). The dimension of each such space is finite, and is given by the k-th
Betti number.
Hodge decomposition Let M be a
compact oriented Riemannian manifold. The
Hodge decomposition states that any k-form on M uniquely splits into the sum of three components: :\omega = \alpha + \beta + \gamma , where \alpha is exact, \beta is co-exact, and \gamma is harmonic. One says that a form \beta is co-closed if \delta \beta = 0 and co-exact if \beta = \delta \eta for some form \eta, and that \gamma is harmonic if the Laplacian is zero, \Delta\gamma = 0. This follows by noting that exact and co-exact forms are orthogonal; the orthogonal complement then consists of forms that are both closed and co-closed: that is, of harmonic forms. Here, orthogonality is defined with respect to the inner product on \Omega^k(M): :(\alpha,\beta)=\int_M \alpha \wedge {\star\beta}. By use of
Sobolev spaces or
distributions, the decomposition can be extended for example to a complete (oriented or not) Riemannian manifold. ==See also==