Trivial bundle and sections Over an open ball U \subset \mathbb{R}^n, or \mathbb{R}^n, with induced coordinates x_1,\ldots,x_n, any principal G-bundle is isomorphic to a trivial bundle\pi:U\times G \to Uand a smooth section s \in \Gamma(\pi) is equivalently given by a (smooth) function \hat{s}: U \to G sinces(u) = (u,\hat{s}(u)) \in U\times G for some smooth function. For example, if G=U(2), the Lie group of 2\times 2
unitary matrices, then a section can be constructed by considering four real-valued functions\phi(x),\psi(x),\Delta(x),\theta(x) : U \to \mathbb{R}and applying them to the parameterization \hat{s}(x) = e^{i\phi(x)}\begin{bmatrix} e^{i\psi(x)} & 0 \\ 0 & e^{-i\psi(x)} \end{bmatrix} \begin{bmatrix} \cos \theta(x) & \sin \theta(x) \\ -\sin \theta(x) & \cos \theta(x) \\ \end{bmatrix} \begin{bmatrix} e^{i\Delta(x)} & 0 \\ 0 & e^{-i\Delta(x)} \end{bmatrix}. This same procedure valids by taking a parameterization of a collection of matrices defining a Lie group G and by considering the set of functions from a patch of the base space U\subset X to \mathbb{R} and inserting them into the parameterization.
Other examples • The prototypical example of a smooth principal bundle is the
frame bundle of a smooth manifold M, often denoted FM or GL(M). Here the fiber over a point x \in M is the set of all frames (i.e. ordered bases) for the
tangent space T_xM. The
general linear group GL(n,\mathbb{R}) acts freely and transitively on these frames. These fibers can be glued together in a natural way so as to obtain a principal GL(n,\mathbb{R})-bundle over M. • Variations on the above example include the
orthonormal frame bundle of a
Riemannian manifold. Here the frames are required to be
orthonormal with respect to the
metric. The structure group is the
orthogonal group O(n). The example also works for bundles other than the tangent bundle; if E is any vector bundle of rank k over M, then the bundle of frames of E is a principal GL(k,\mathbb{R})-bundle, sometimes denoted F(E). • A normal (regular)
covering space p:C \to X is a principal bundle where the structure group : G = \pi_1(X)/p_{*}(\pi_1(C)) : acts on the fibres of p via the
monodromy action. In particular, the
universal cover of X is a principal bundle over X with structure group \pi_1(X) (since the universal cover is simply connected and thus \pi_1(C) is trivial). • Let G be a Lie group and let H be a closed subgroup (not necessarily
normal). Then G is a principal H-bundle over the (left)
coset space G/H. Here the action of H on G is just right multiplication. The fibers are the left cosets of H (in this case there is a distinguished fiber, the one containing the identity, which is naturally isomorphic to H). • Consider the projection \pi:S^1 \to S^1 given by z \mapsto z^2. This principal \mathbb{Z}_2-bundle is the
associated bundle of the
Möbius strip. Besides the trivial bundle, this is the only principal \mathbb{Z}_2-bundle over S^1. •
Projective spaces provide some more interesting examples of principal bundles. Recall that the n-
sphere S^n is a two-fold covering space of
real projective space \mathbb{R}\mathbb{P}^n. The natural action of O(1) on S^n gives it the structure of a principal O(1)-bundle over \mathbb{R}\mathbb{P}^n. Likewise, S^{2n+1} is a principal U(1)-bundle over
complex projective space \mathbb{C}\mathbb{P}^n and S^{4n+3} is a principal Sp(1)-bundle over
quaternionic projective space \mathbb{H}\mathbb{P}^n. We then have a series of principal bundles for each positive n: : \mbox{O}(1) \to S(\mathbb{R}^{n+1}) \to \mathbb{RP}^n : \mbox{U}(1) \to S(\mathbb{C}^{n+1}) \to \mathbb{CP}^n : \mbox{Sp}(1) \to S(\mathbb{H}^{n+1}) \to \mathbb{HP}^n. : Here S(V) denotes the unit sphere in V (equipped with the Euclidean metric). For all of these examples the n = 1 cases give the so-called
Hopf bundles. ==Basic properties==