Note. In some texts the notation $J^n(\mathbb{R}^p,\mathbb{R}^q)$ is used to mean what here we dentote by $J^n(\mathbb{R}^p \times\mathbb{R}^q)$ being $\mathbb{R}^p \times\mathbb{R}^q \to \mathbb{R}^p$ the trivial bundle.
Let $\pi: E\mapsto M$ be a smooth vector bundle, with $dim(E_x)=q$. We can interpret it as $M$ being a manifold of independent variables and sections of $\pi$ as functions on $M$. The set of sections forms a $C^{\infty}(M)$-module.
Two sections $s, \tilde{s}$ are said to be $k$-equivalent at a point $x\in M$ if their graphs are tangent to each other with order $k$ at $s(x)=\tilde{s}(x) \in E$. By "their graphs are tangent" we mean that if we express the sections as functions $f$ and $\tilde{f}$ in a local trivialization, the partial derivatives of $f$ and $\tilde{f}$ at $x$ coincide up to order $k$. This fact does not depend on the chosen trivialization.
The equivalence class of $s$, denoted by $[s]^k_x$ is called the $k$-jet of $s$ at $x$, and the collection of all the classes, $J^k (E)_x$, is the jet space at $x$. Finally, we can construct a bundle
$$ J^k(E)=\bigcup_{x\in M} J^k (E)_x. $$In this bundle we have special coordinates called the derivative coordinates. Let $(U,u)$ be adapted coordinates on $E$, with $u=(x^i, u^{\alpha})$. The derivative coordinates induced by $(U,u)$ are $(\tilde{U}, \tilde{u})$ where
* $\tilde{U}=\{[s]_x^k: x\in M, s(x)\in U\}$
* $\tilde{u}=(x^i, u^{\alpha},u_I^{\alpha})$ where
(@saunders1989geometry page 94).
The dimension of $J^k(E)$ is
$$ p+q {p+k \choose k}. $$If $P\in J^k(E)_x$, with $P=[s]_x^k$, we define $\pi_0(P)=s(x) \in E$. See example 2.24 in @olver86.
The sections of $J^k(E)$ of the form
$$ x\mapsto [s]_x^k, $$being $s:M\rightarrow E$ a section, are called holonomic sections or $k$-graphs (see @bryant2013exterior page 23 Theorem 3.2.) and will be denoted by $j^k s$.
The jet space or jet bundle $J^k(E)$ has a natural distribution called the Cartan distribution.
The infinite jet space $J^{\infty}(E)$ is defined as the inverse limit of the inverse system
$$ \cdots \rightarrow J^{k+1}(\pi) \stackrel{\pi_{k+1, k}}{\longrightarrow} J^{k}(\pi) \rightarrow \cdots \rightarrow J^{1}(\pi) \stackrel{\pi_{1,0}}{\longrightarrow} J^{0}(\pi)=E \stackrel{\pi}{\rightarrow} M $$In this case, Cartan distribution is involutive (see wikipedia and its dimension agrees with $\mbox{dim}M$. We get a decomposition of $TJ^{\infty}(E)$ in a vertical bundle (the subspace of $T_p J^{\infty}(E)$ tangent to the fibre) and an horizontal one (the subspace belonging to the Cartan distribution). This decomposition induces a similar decomposition in the cotangent space $T^*J^{\infty}(E)$, and also in the ring of differential forms $\Omega^*(J^*(E))$ giving rise to the variational bicomplex.
Locally, any pair of submanifolds of a manifold $M$ of the same dimensions is given by the graphs of smooth functions $f$ and $\tilde{f}$ (with independent and dependent variables between them of $M$). These functions are said to be $k$-equivalent at $x\in M$ if there is a coordinate chart such that the partial derivatives at $x$ coincide up to order $k$:
$$ \partial_{J} f^{\alpha}\left(x_{0}\right)=\partial_{J} \tilde{f}^{\alpha}\left(x_{0}\right), \quad \alpha=1, \ldots, q, \quad 0 \leqslant \# J \leqslant k $$This idea is independent of the coordinate chart, and therefore we can define an equivalence relation between submanifolds being tangent up to order $k$ at $x$. The equivalence class $[N]_x^k$ is called a jet. The union of all jets at $x$ is the jet space at $x$, $J^k(M)_x$ and the jet bundle is
$$ J^k(M)=\bigcup_{x\in M} J^k(M)_x $$See @olver86 page 218 for more details. There he doesn't treat the case of sections of bundles but the construction let define the extended jet bundle (something like a projective version).
for $j=0\ldots k$. The equivalence class of $f$ is denoted by $[f]^k_x$ and is called the $k$-jet of $f$.
This is like saying that curves $\alpha$ and $\beta$ have $k$-order contact. The equivalence class of $\alpha$ is denoted by $[\alpha]^k_x$ and is called the $k$-jet of $\alpha$. We will denote by
$$ J_{0}^{k}(\mathbb{R}, M)_{x} $$the set of all $k$-jets at $x$. As $x$ varies over $M$ the set $J_{0}^{k}(\mathbb{R}, M)_{x}$ produces a fibre bundle known as the $k$-th order tangent bundle: $T^k M$.________________________________________
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Author of the notes: Antonio J. Pan-Collantes
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