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Contents
1 Basic notions
2 Differential geometry
3 Algebraic geometry
4 Other meanings
5 References
6 External links
Basic notions
In calculus, the differential represents a change in the linearization of a function.
o The total differential is its generalization for functions of multiple
variables.
In traditional approaches to calculus, the differentials (e.g. dx, dy, dt, etc.) are
interpreted as infinitesimals. There are several methods of defining
infinitesimals rigorously, but it is sufficient to say that an infinitesimal number is
smaller in absolute value than any positive real number, just as an infinitely
large number is larger than any real number.
The differential is another name for the Jacobian matrix of partial derivatives of
a function from Rn to Rm (especially when this matrix is viewed as a linear
map).
More generally, the differential or pushforward refers to the derivative of a map
between smooth manifolds and the pushforward operations it defines. The
differential is also used to define the dual concept of pullback.
Stochastic calculus provides a notion of stochastic differential and an associated
calculus for stochastic processes.
The integrator in a Stieltjes integral is represented as the differential of a
function. Formally, the differential appearing under the integral behaves exactly
as a differential: thus, the integration by substitution and integration by parts
formulae for Stieltjes integral correspond, respectively, to the chain rule and
product rule for the differential.
Differential geometry
The notion of a differential motivates several concepts in differential geometry (and
differential topology).
Algebraic geometry
Differentials are also important in algebraic geometry, and there are several important
notions.
Other meanings
The term differential has also been adopted in homological algebra and algebraic
topology, because of the role the exterior derivative plays in de Rham cohomology: in a
cochain complex , the maps (or coboundary operators) di are often called
differentials. Dually, the boundary operators in a chain complex are sometimes called
codifferentials.
The properties of the differential also motivate the algebraic notions of a derivation and
a differential algebra.