Another possible invariant (which has been employed for example in writing the gravitational term of the Lagrangian for some
higher-order gravity theories) is :C_{abcd} \, C^{abcd} where C_{abcd} is the
Weyl tensor, the conformal curvature tensor which is also the completely traceless part of the Riemann tensor. In d dimensions this is related to the Kretschmann invariant by :R_{abcd} \, R^{abcd} = C_{abcd} \, C^{abcd} +\frac{4}{d-2} R_{ab}\, R^{ab} - \frac{2}{(d-1)(d-2)}R^2 where R^{ab} is the
Ricci curvature tensor and R is the Ricci
scalar curvature (obtained by taking successive traces of the Riemann tensor). The Ricci tensor vanishes in vacuum spacetimes (such as the Schwarzschild solution mentioned above), and hence there the Riemann tensor and the Weyl tensor coincide, as do their invariants.
Gauge theory invariants The Kretschmann scalar and the
Chern-Pontryagin scalar :R_{abcd} \, {{}^\star \! R}^{abcd} where {{}^\star R}^{abcd} is the
left dual of the Riemann tensor, are mathematically analogous (to some extent, physically analogous) to the familiar invariants of the
electromagnetic field tensor :F_{ab} \, F^{ab}, \; \; F_{ab} \, {{}^\star \! F}^{ab}. Generalising from the U(1) gauge theory of electromagnetism to general non-abelian gauge theory, the first of these invariants is :\text{Tr}(F_{ab} F^{ab}), an expression proportional to the
Yang–Mills Lagrangian. Here F_{ab} is the curvature of a
covariant derivative, and \text{Tr} is a
trace form. The Kretschmann scalar arises from taking the connection to be on the
frame bundle. ==See also==