In differential geometry, a Weyl connection (also called a Weyl structure) is a generalization of the Levi-Civita connection that makes sense on a conformal manifold. They were introduced by Hermann Weyl in an attempt to unify general relativity and electromagnetism. His approach, although it did not lead to a successful theory, lead to further developments of the theory in conformal geometry, including a detailed study by Élie Cartan . They were also discussed in .
Specifically, let
M
[g]
M
h,g\in[g]
h=e2\gammag
\gamma
M
g\in[g]
\alphag
g
If
\nabla
h=e2\gammag
An example of a Weyl connection is the Levi-Civita connection for any metric in the conformal class
[g]
\alphag=0
\alphah
h
d\alphag
g
\alphag
Weyl's original hope was that the form
\alphag
d\alphag
U(1)
R
showed that an affine connection is a Weyl connection if and only if its holonomy group is a subgroup of the conformal group. The possible holonomy algebras in Lorentzian signature were analyzed in .
A Weyl manifold is a manifold admitting a global Weyl connection. The global analysis of Weyl manifolds is actively being studied. For example, considered complete Weyl manifolds such that the Einstein vacuum equations hold, an Einstein–Weyl geometry, obtaining a complete characterization in three dimensions.
Weyl connections also have current applications in string theory and holography.
Weyl connections have been generalized to the setting of parabolic geometries, of which conformal geometry is a special case, in .