In mathematics, a time dependent vector field is a construction in vector calculus which generalizes the concept of vector fields. It can be thought of as a vector field which moves as time passes. For every instant of time, it associates a vector to every point in a Euclidean space or in a manifold.
Definition
A time dependent vector field on a manifold M is a map from an open subset
on

such that for every
,
is an element of
.
For every
such that the set

is nonempty,
is a vector field in the usual sense defined on the open set
.
Associated differential equation
Given a time dependent vector field X on a manifold M, we can associate to it the following differential equation:

which is called nonautonomous by definition.
Integral curve
An integral curve of the equation above (also called an integral curve of X) is a map

such that
,
is an element of the domain of definition of X and
.
Equivalence with time-independent vector fields
A time dependent vector field
on
can be thought of as a vector field
on
where
does not depend on
Conversely, associated with a time-dependent vector field
on
is a time-independent one

on
In coordinates,

The system of autonomous differential equations for
is equivalent to that of non-autonomous ones for
and
is a bijection between the sets of integral curves of
and
respectively.
Flow
The flow of a time dependent vector field X, is the unique differentiable map

such that for every
,

is the integral curve
of X that satisfies
.
Properties
We define
as
- If
and
then 
,
is a diffeomorphism with inverse
.
Applications
Let X and Y be smooth time dependent vector fields and
the flow of X. The following identity can be proved:
![{\displaystyle {\frac {d}{dt}}\left.{\!\!{\frac {}{}}}\right|_{t=t_{1}}(F_{t,t_{0}}^{*}Y_{t})_{p}=\left(F_{t_{1},t_{0}}^{*}\left([X_{t_{1}},Y_{t_{1}}]+{\frac {d}{dt}}\left.{\!\!{\frac {}{}}}\right|_{t=t_{1}}Y_{t}\right)\right)_{p}}](./fc669b795d3f438a4bb215cb104f523dbc0191de.svg)
Also, we can define time dependent tensor fields in an analogous way, and prove this similar identity, assuming that
is a smooth time dependent tensor field:

This last identity is useful to prove the Darboux theorem.
References
- Lee, John M., Introduction to Smooth Manifolds, Springer-Verlag, New York (2003) ISBN 0-387-95495-3. Graduate-level textbook on smooth manifolds.