There seems to be a lot of confusion regarding the [,] operation. Well, the way I have learned it goes like this. Indeed, the two notations agree since the graded commutator [,] is defined as
[α,β]=α∧β−(−1)pqβ∧α
with [α,β]=(−1)pq+1[β,α] for α∈Ωp(M,g) and β∈Ωq(M,g), where g is the Lie algebra of a Lie group G. Then, in your case
DA=dA+12[A,A]=dA+12(A∧A−(−1)1×1A∧A)=dA+A∧A
Indeed, the use of F=DA tends to be misleading sometimes due to the presence of 1/2. To that I agree, because in general one has in mind that DB=dB+[A,B]. Moreover, the Bianchi is quite short with this notation since
DF=dF+[A,F]=12d[A,A]+[A,dA]+12[A,[A,A]]
Well, d[A,A] follows the usual derivation rule, i.e. [dA,A]−[A,dA]=−2[A,dA] because dA∈Ω2(M,g). Then, you can easily prove that [A,[A,A]]=0 (hint: the graded commutator satisfies a graded Jacobi identity). Taking the aforementioned properties into account, one directly sees that DF=0.
In an attempt to give some motivation for the introduction of the graded bracket, I think this has to do with a simple fact. Say that α,β are just vector valued forms in ωp(M,V) and Ωq(M,W) respectively. Then, α∧β=αa∧βbea⊗˜eb
where ea is a basis element of V and ˜ea a basis element of W. You see that the result lies in Ωp+q(M,V⊗W). Since the operation between Lie algebra elements is the Lie bracket, we can extend this to
[α,β]=αa∧βb[ea,eb]
where for simplicity consider ea,eb to be the generators of the algebra g with α,β as in the beginning (valued in this algebra). Since [,]:g×g→g, the result lies in Ωp+q(M,g). The swapping rule is fairly straightforward since
[α,β]=αa∧βb[ea,eb]=(−1)pqβb∧αa[ea,eb]=−(−1)pqβb∧αa[eb,ea]=(−1)pq+1[β,α]
Hope I helped a bit.
P.S: A∧B is not the usual wedge product. If I remember correctly the clear notation is A∧ρB where (ρ,V) is a representation. Hence, say A,B are g-valued. Then, we consider the adjoint representation, and we can write
A∧adB=Aa∧Bbad(ea)eb=Aa∧Bb[ea,eb]
This is why it makes sense to also have such operations between g-valued and p-valued forms if ad(g)p=[g,p]⊂g for example.
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2020-11-24 18:33 (UTC), posted by SE-user kospall