In mathematics, a pullback bundle or induced bundle[1][2][3] is the fiber bundle that is induced by a map of its base-space. Given a fiber bundle π : E → B and a continuous mapf : B′ → B one can define a "pullback" of E by f as a bundle f*E over B′. The fiber of f*E over a point b′ in B′ is just the fiber of E over f(b′). Thus f*E is the disjoint union of all these fibers equipped with a suitable topology.
Formal definition
Let π : E → B be a fiber bundle with abstract fiber F and let f : B′ → B be a continuous map. Define the pullback bundle by
and equip it with the subspace topology and the projection mapπ′ : f*E → B′ given by the projection onto the first factor, i.e.,
If (U, φ) is a local trivialization of E then (f−1U, ψ) is a local trivialization of f*E where
It then follows that f*E is a fiber bundle over B′ with fiber F. The bundle f*E is called the pullback of E by f or the bundle induced by f. The map h is then a bundle morphism covering f.
Properties
Any sections of E over B induces a section of f*E, called the pullback sectionf*s, simply by defining
for all .
If the bundle E → B has structure groupG with transition functions tij (with respect to a family of local trivializations {(Ui, φi)}) then the pullback bundle f*E also has structure group G. The transition functions in f*E are given by
If E → B is a vector bundle or principal bundle then so is the pullback f*E. In the case of a principal bundle the right action of G on f*E is given by
It then follows that the map h covering f is equivariant and so defines a morphism of principal bundles.
Bundles may also be described by their sheaves of sections. The pullback of bundles then corresponds to the inverse image of sheaves, which is a contravariant functor. A sheaf, however, is more naturally a covariant object, since it has a pushforward, called the direct image of a sheaf. The tension and interplay between bundles and sheaves, or inverse and direct image, can be advantageous in many areas of geometry. However, the direct image of a sheaf of sections of a bundle is not in general the sheaf of sections of some direct image bundle, so that although the notion of a 'pushforward of a bundle' is defined in some contexts (for example, the pushforward by a diffeomorphism), in general it is better understood in the category of sheaves, because the objects it creates cannot in general be bundles.
Sharpe, R. W. (1997). Differential Geometry: Cartan's Generalization of Klein's Erlangen Program. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 166. New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN0-387-94732-9.