Zakai equation: Difference between revisions

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In a field of [[mathematics]] known as [[differential geometry]], a '''Courant algebroid''' is a structure which, in a certain sense, blends the concepts of [[Lie algebroid]] and of [[quadratic Lie algebra]]. This notion, which plays a fundamental role in the study of Hitchin's [[generalized complex geometry|generalized complex structures]], was originally introduced by Zhang-Ju Liu, [[Alan Weinstein]] and Ping Xu in their investigation of doubles of [[Lie bialgebroid]]s in 1997.<ref>Z-J. Liu, A. Weinstein, and P. Xu: [http://arxiv.org/abs/dg-ga/9508013  Manin triples for Lie Bialgebroids], Journ. of Diff.geom. 45 pp.647–574 (1997).</ref> Liu, Weinstein and Xu named it after [[Theodore James Courant|Courant]], who had implicitly devised earlier in 1990<ref>T.J. Courant: ''Dirac Manifolds'', Transactions of the AMS, vol. 319, pp.631–661 (1990).</ref> the standard prototype of Courant algebroid through his discovery of a skew symmetric bracket on <math>TM\oplus T^*M</math>, called Courant bracket today, which fails to satisfy the Jacobi identity. Both this standard example and the double of a Lie bialgebra are special instances of Courant algebroids.
 
==Definition==
A Courant algebroid consists of the data a vector bundle <math>E\to M</math> with a bracket <math>[.,.]:\Gamma E \times \Gamma E \to \Gamma E</math>, a non degenerate fiber-wise inner product <math>\langle.,.\rangle: E\times E\to M\times\R</math>, and a bundle map <math>\rho:E\to TM </math> subject to the following axioms,
 
:<math>[\phi, [\chi, \psi]] = [[\phi, \chi], \psi] + [\chi, [\phi, \psi]]</math>
 
:<math>[\phi, f\psi] = \rho(\phi)f\psi +f[\phi, \psi]</math>
 
:<math>[\phi,\phi]= \tfrac12 D\langle \phi,\phi\rangle</math>
 
:<math>\rho(\phi)\langle \psi,\psi\rangle= 2\langle [\phi,\psi],\psi\rangle </math>
 
where ''φ,ψ,χ'' are sections of ''E'' and ''f'' is a smooth function on the base manifold ''M''. ''D'' is the combination <math>\kappa^{-1}\rho^T d</math> with ''d'' the de Rham differential, <math>\rho^T</math> the dual map of <math>\rho</math>, and ''κ'' the map from ''E'' to <math>E^*</math> induced by the inner product.
 
==Properties==
The bracket is not skew-symmetric as one can see from the third axiom.  Instead it fulfills a certain Jacobi-identity (first axiom) and a Leibniz rule (second axiom).  From these two axioms one can derive that the anchor map ''ρ'' is a morphism of brackets:
::<math> \rho[\phi,\psi] = [\rho(\phi),\rho(\psi)] .</math>
 
The fourth rule is an invariance of the inner product under the bracket.  Polarization leads to
::<math> \rho(\phi)\langle \chi,\psi\rangle= \langle [\phi,\chi],\psi\rangle +\langle \chi,[\phi,\psi]\rangle .</math>
 
==Examples==
An example of the Courant algebroid is the [[Dorfman bracket]]<ref>I.Y. Dorfman: ''Dirac structures of integrable evolution equations'', Phyics Letters A, vol.125, pp.240–246 (1987).</ref> on the direct sum <math>TM\oplus T^*M</math> with a twist introduced by Ševera,<ref>P. Ševera: [http://sophia.dtp.fmph.uniba.sk/~severa/letters/no1.ps Letters to A. Weinstein], unpublished.</ref> (1998) defined as:
::<math> [X+\xi, Y+\eta] = [X,Y]+(\mathcal{L}_X\,\eta -i(Y) d\xi +i(X)i(Y)H)</math>
where ''X,Y'' are vector fields, '' ξ,η'' are 1-forms and ''H'' is a closed 3-form twisting the bracket.  This bracket is used to describe the integrability of [[generalized complex geometry|generalized complex structures]].
 
A more general example arises from a Lie algebroid ''A'' whose induced differential on <math>A^*</math> will be written as ''d'' again.  Then use the same formula as for the Dorfman bracket with ''H'' an ''A''-3-form closed under ''d''.
 
Another example of a Courant algebroid is a quadratic Lie algebra, i.e. a Lie algebra with an invariant scalar product. Here the base manifold is just a point and thus the anchor map (and ''D'') are trivial.
 
The example described in the paper by Weinstein et al. comes from a Lie bialgebroid, i.e. ''A'' a Lie algebroid (with anchor <math>\rho_A</math> and bracket <math>[.,.]_A</math>), also its dual <math>A^*</math> a Lie algebroid (inducing the differential <math>d_{A^*}</math> on <math>\wedge^* A</math>) and <math>d_{A^*}[X,Y]_A=[d_{A^*}X,Y]_A+[X,d_{A^*}Y]_A</math> (where on the RHS you extend the ''A''-bracket to <math>\wedge^*A</math> using graded Leibniz rule).  This notion is symmetric in ''A'' and <math>A^*</math> (see Roytenberg).  Here <math>E=A\oplus A^*</math> with anchor <math>\rho(X+\alpha)=\rho_A(X)+\rho_{A^*}(\alpha)</math> and the bracket is the skew-symmetrization of the above in ''X'' and ''α'' (equivalently in ''Y'' and ''β''):
 
:<math>[X+\alpha,Y+\beta]= ([X,Y]_A +\mathcal{L}^{A^*}_{\alpha}Y-i_\beta d_{A^*}X) +([\alpha,\beta]_{A^*} +\mathcal{L}^A_X\beta-i_Yd_{A}\alpha)</math>
 
==Skew-symmetric bracket==
Instead of the definition above one can introduce a [[Bilinear form#Symmetric, skew-symmetric and alternating forms|skew-symmetric]] bracket as
 
: <math>[[\phi,\psi]]= \tfrac12\big([\phi,\psi]-[\psi,\phi]\big.)</math>
 
This fulfills a homotopic Jacobi-identity.
 
:<math> [[\phi,[[\psi,\chi]]\,]] +\text{cycl.} = DT(\phi,\psi,\chi)</math>
 
where ''T'' is
 
: <math>T(\phi,\psi,\chi)=\frac13\langle [\phi,\psi],\chi\rangle +\text{cycl.}</math>
 
The Leibniz rule and the invariance of the scalar product become modified by the relation <math> [[\phi,\psi]] = [\phi,\psi] -\tfrac12 D\langle \phi,\psi\rangle</math> and the violation of skew-symmetry gets replaced by the axiom
::<math> \rho\circ D = 0 </math>
 
The skew-symmetric bracket together with the derivation ''D'' and the Jacobiator ''T'' form a [[strongly homotopic Lie algebra]].
 
== Dirac structures ==
Given a Courant algebroid with the inner product <math>\langle.,.\rangle</math> of split signature (e.g. the standard one <math>TM\oplus T^*M</math>), then a [[Dirac structure]] is a maximally isotropic integrable vector subbundle ''L → M'', i.e.
:<math> \langle L,L\rangle \equiv 0</math>,
 
:<math> \mathrm{rk}\,L=\tfrac12\mathrm{rk}\,E</math>,
 
:<math> [\Gamma L,\Gamma L]\subset \Gamma L</math>.
 
=== Examples ===
As discovered by Courant and parallel by Dorfman, the graph of a 2-form ''ω'' ∈ ''Ω''<sup>2</sup>(''M'') is maximally isotropic and moreover integrable iff d''ω'' = 0, i.e. the 2-form is closed under the de Rham differential, i.e. a presymplectic structure.
 
A second class of examples arises from bivectors <math>\Pi\in\Gamma(\wedge^2 TM)</math> whose graph is maximally isotropic and integrable iff [Π,Π] = 0, i.e. Π is a [[Poisson manifold|Poisson bivector]] on ''M''.
 
== Generalized complex structures ==
(see also the main article [[generalized complex geometry]])
 
Given a Courant algebroid with inner product of split signature.  A generalized complex structure ''L → M'' is a Dirac structure in the [[complexification|complexified]] Courant algebroid with the additional property
:<math> L \cap \bar{L} = 0</math>
 
where <math>\bar{\ }</math> means complex conjugation with respect to the standard complex structure on the complexification.
 
As studied in detail by Gualtieri<ref>M. Gualtieri: ''Generalized complex geometry'', Ph.D. thesis, Oxford university, (2004)</ref>  the generalized complex structures permit the study of geometry analogous to [[complex manifold|complex geometry]].
 
=== Examples ===
Examples are beside presymplectic and Poisson structures also the graph of a [[Complex Manifold#Almost complex structures|complex structure]] ''J'': ''TM'' → ''TM''.
 
==References==
<references/>
* Dmitry Roytenberg: [http://arxiv.org/abs/math.DG/9910078  Courant algebroids, derived brackets, and even symplectic supermanifolds], PhD thesis Univ. of California Berkeley (1999)
 
[[Category:Differential geometry]]

Revision as of 13:54, 29 October 2013

In a field of mathematics known as differential geometry, a Courant algebroid is a structure which, in a certain sense, blends the concepts of Lie algebroid and of quadratic Lie algebra. This notion, which plays a fundamental role in the study of Hitchin's generalized complex structures, was originally introduced by Zhang-Ju Liu, Alan Weinstein and Ping Xu in their investigation of doubles of Lie bialgebroids in 1997.[1] Liu, Weinstein and Xu named it after Courant, who had implicitly devised earlier in 1990[2] the standard prototype of Courant algebroid through his discovery of a skew symmetric bracket on TMT*M, called Courant bracket today, which fails to satisfy the Jacobi identity. Both this standard example and the double of a Lie bialgebra are special instances of Courant algebroids.

Definition

A Courant algebroid consists of the data a vector bundle EM with a bracket [.,.]:ΓE×ΓEΓE, a non degenerate fiber-wise inner product .,.:E×EM×, and a bundle map ρ:ETM subject to the following axioms,

[ϕ,[χ,ψ]]=[[ϕ,χ],ψ]+[χ,[ϕ,ψ]]
[ϕ,fψ]=ρ(ϕ)fψ+f[ϕ,ψ]
[ϕ,ϕ]=12Dϕ,ϕ
ρ(ϕ)ψ,ψ=2[ϕ,ψ],ψ

where φ,ψ,χ are sections of E and f is a smooth function on the base manifold M. D is the combination κ1ρTd with d the de Rham differential, ρT the dual map of ρ, and κ the map from E to E* induced by the inner product.

Properties

The bracket is not skew-symmetric as one can see from the third axiom. Instead it fulfills a certain Jacobi-identity (first axiom) and a Leibniz rule (second axiom). From these two axioms one can derive that the anchor map ρ is a morphism of brackets:

ρ[ϕ,ψ]=[ρ(ϕ),ρ(ψ)].

The fourth rule is an invariance of the inner product under the bracket. Polarization leads to

ρ(ϕ)χ,ψ=[ϕ,χ],ψ+χ,[ϕ,ψ].

Examples

An example of the Courant algebroid is the Dorfman bracket[3] on the direct sum TMT*M with a twist introduced by Ševera,[4] (1998) defined as:

[X+ξ,Y+η]=[X,Y]+(Xηi(Y)dξ+i(X)i(Y)H)

where X,Y are vector fields, ξ,η are 1-forms and H is a closed 3-form twisting the bracket. This bracket is used to describe the integrability of generalized complex structures.

A more general example arises from a Lie algebroid A whose induced differential on A* will be written as d again. Then use the same formula as for the Dorfman bracket with H an A-3-form closed under d.

Another example of a Courant algebroid is a quadratic Lie algebra, i.e. a Lie algebra with an invariant scalar product. Here the base manifold is just a point and thus the anchor map (and D) are trivial.

The example described in the paper by Weinstein et al. comes from a Lie bialgebroid, i.e. A a Lie algebroid (with anchor ρA and bracket [.,.]A), also its dual A* a Lie algebroid (inducing the differential dA* on *A) and dA*[X,Y]A=[dA*X,Y]A+[X,dA*Y]A (where on the RHS you extend the A-bracket to *A using graded Leibniz rule). This notion is symmetric in A and A* (see Roytenberg). Here E=AA* with anchor ρ(X+α)=ρA(X)+ρA*(α) and the bracket is the skew-symmetrization of the above in X and α (equivalently in Y and β):

[X+α,Y+β]=([X,Y]A+αA*YiβdA*X)+([α,β]A*+XAβiYdAα)

Skew-symmetric bracket

Instead of the definition above one can introduce a skew-symmetric bracket as

[[ϕ,ψ]]=12([ϕ,ψ][ψ,ϕ])

This fulfills a homotopic Jacobi-identity.

[[ϕ,[[ψ,χ]]]]+cycl.=DT(ϕ,ψ,χ)

where T is

T(ϕ,ψ,χ)=13[ϕ,ψ],χ+cycl.

The Leibniz rule and the invariance of the scalar product become modified by the relation [[ϕ,ψ]]=[ϕ,ψ]12Dϕ,ψ and the violation of skew-symmetry gets replaced by the axiom

ρD=0

The skew-symmetric bracket together with the derivation D and the Jacobiator T form a strongly homotopic Lie algebra.

Dirac structures

Given a Courant algebroid with the inner product .,. of split signature (e.g. the standard one TMT*M), then a Dirac structure is a maximally isotropic integrable vector subbundle L → M, i.e.

L,L0,
rkL=12rkE,
[ΓL,ΓL]ΓL.

Examples

As discovered by Courant and parallel by Dorfman, the graph of a 2-form ωΩ2(M) is maximally isotropic and moreover integrable iff dω = 0, i.e. the 2-form is closed under the de Rham differential, i.e. a presymplectic structure.

A second class of examples arises from bivectors ΠΓ(2TM) whose graph is maximally isotropic and integrable iff [Π,Π] = 0, i.e. Π is a Poisson bivector on M.

Generalized complex structures

(see also the main article generalized complex geometry)

Given a Courant algebroid with inner product of split signature. A generalized complex structure L → M is a Dirac structure in the complexified Courant algebroid with the additional property

LL¯=0

where ¯ means complex conjugation with respect to the standard complex structure on the complexification.

As studied in detail by Gualtieri[5] the generalized complex structures permit the study of geometry analogous to complex geometry.

Examples

Examples are beside presymplectic and Poisson structures also the graph of a complex structure J: TMTM.

References

  1. Z-J. Liu, A. Weinstein, and P. Xu: Manin triples for Lie Bialgebroids, Journ. of Diff.geom. 45 pp.647–574 (1997).
  2. T.J. Courant: Dirac Manifolds, Transactions of the AMS, vol. 319, pp.631–661 (1990).
  3. I.Y. Dorfman: Dirac structures of integrable evolution equations, Phyics Letters A, vol.125, pp.240–246 (1987).
  4. P. Ševera: Letters to A. Weinstein, unpublished.
  5. M. Gualtieri: Generalized complex geometry, Ph.D. thesis, Oxford university, (2004)