🔵Symplectic Geometry Unit 12 – Algebraic Geometry & Representation Links
Symplectic geometry bridges classical mechanics and modern mathematics, exploring manifolds with a special 2-form. It connects to Hamiltonian mechanics, Poisson structures, and Lie group actions. This field has deep ties to representation theory and algebraic geometry.
Key concepts include symplectic manifolds, Hamiltonian vector fields, and moment maps. These tools reveal links between geometry and algebra, shedding light on symmetries in physical systems and abstract mathematical structures.
Symplectic manifold (M,ω) consists of a smooth manifold M and a closed, non-degenerate 2-form ω called the symplectic form
Hamiltonian vector field XH associated with a smooth function H:M→R satisfies dH=ω(XH,⋅)
Flow of XH preserves the symplectic form and is called a Hamiltonian flow
Poisson bracket {f,g} of smooth functions f,g:M→R measures the failure of f and g to Poisson commute
Defined by {f,g}=ω(Xf,Xg)
Lagrangian submanifold L⊂M is a submanifold on which the symplectic form vanishes (ω∣L=0) and has half the dimension of M
Symplectomorphism ϕ:(M1,ω1)→(M2,ω2) is a diffeomorphism that preserves the symplectic form (ϕ∗ω2=ω1)
Moment map μ:M→g∗ associated with a Hamiltonian G-action on (M,ω) satisfies dμX=ιX#ω for all X∈g
Historical Context and Development
Symplectic geometry has its roots in classical mechanics and the study of phase spaces (cotangent bundles) of mechanical systems
Lagrange and Poisson's work on celestial mechanics in the late 18th and early 19th centuries laid the foundation for the Poisson bracket and Hamilton's equations
Sophus Lie's work on transformation groups in the late 19th century introduced the concept of a Lie group action, which plays a crucial role in equivariant symplectic geometry
The modern formulation of symplectic geometry using differential forms was developed by Élie Cartan, Jean Leray, and André Weil in the first half of the 20th century
This formulation allowed for the application of powerful tools from differential geometry and topology to the study of symplectic manifolds
The introduction of moment maps by Kostant, Souriau, and Marsden-Weinstein in the 1960s and 1970s provided a key link between symplectic geometry and representation theory
Gromov's non-squeezing theorem (1985) and the development of symplectic capacities demonstrated the rigidity of symplectic embeddings and the existence of global invariants
The study of symplectic quotients and reduction (Marsden-Weinstein reduction) has been a major theme in symplectic geometry since the 1970s
Algebraic Structures in Symplectic Geometry
The Poisson algebra C∞(M) of smooth functions on a symplectic manifold (M,ω) with the Poisson bracket {⋅,⋅} forms a Lie algebra
The Poisson bracket satisfies antisymmetry, the Jacobi identity, and the Leibniz rule
Hamiltonian vector fields XH form a Lie subalgebra of the Lie algebra of vector fields X(M) under the Lie bracket of vector fields
The map H↦XH is a Lie algebra homomorphism from C∞(M) to X(M)
The group of symplectomorphisms Symp(M,ω) is an infinite-dimensional Lie group with Lie algebra given by the space of Hamiltonian vector fields
A Hamiltonian G-action on (M,ω) is a smooth action of a Lie group G that preserves the symplectic form and admits a moment map μ:M→g∗
The moment map is equivariant with respect to the G-action on M and the coadjoint action on g∗
The Marsden-Weinstein quotient (symplectic reduction) M//G:=μ−1(0)/G of a Hamiltonian G-space (M,ω,μ) is a symplectic manifold when 0 is a regular value of μ and the action of G on μ−1(0) is free and proper
Representation Theory Basics
A representation of a Lie group G on a vector space V is a smooth homomorphism ρ:G→GL(V)
The representation is called faithful if ρ is injective
The dual representation ρ∗ of G on the dual space V∗ is defined by (ρ∗(g)ϕ)(v)=ϕ(ρ(g−1)v) for g∈G, ϕ∈V∗, and v∈V
A subrepresentation of ρ is a G-invariant subspace W⊂V, i.e., ρ(g)W⊂W for all g∈G
An irreducible representation has no proper subrepresentations
The adjoint representation Ad:G→GL(g) is defined by Ad(g)=d(cg)e, where cg:G→G is conjugation by g
The coadjoint representation Ad∗:G→GL(g∗) is the dual of the adjoint representation
The orbit method relates irreducible unitary representations of G to coadjoint orbits in g∗, which carry a natural symplectic structure
Connections Between Algebra and Geometry
The moment map μ:M→g∗ associated with a Hamiltonian G-action on (M,ω) intertwines the G-action on M and the coadjoint representation on g∗
Coadjoint orbits in g∗ are symplectic manifolds, and the moment map pulls back the symplectic form on the orbit to ω
The Marsden-Weinstein quotient M//G can be identified with the symplectic reduction of M by the coadjoint orbit Oμ:=G⋅μ through μ
The Guillemin-Sternberg conjecture (now a theorem) states that the geometric quantization of M//G is isomorphic to the G-invariant part of the geometric quantization of M
This relates the representation theory of G to the geometry of the symplectic quotient
The Atiyah-Guillemin-Sternberg convexity theorem states that the image of the moment map for a compact, connected Lie group action on a compact, connected symplectic manifold is a convex polytope
The vertices of the polytope correspond to fixed points of the action, and the edges correspond to one-dimensional orbits
The Duistermaat-Heckman theorem expresses the pushforward of the Liouville measure on M under the moment map in terms of the volumes of the reduced spaces Mt:=μ−1(t)/Gt
Applications in Symplectic Geometry
Hamiltonian mechanics classical mechanical systems are described by symplectic manifolds (phase spaces) and Hamiltonian flows
Symmetries of the system correspond to conserved quantities via Noether's theorem and the moment map
Geometric quantization aims to construct a quantum-mechanical Hilbert space from a classical symplectic manifold
The Guillemin-Sternberg conjecture relates the quantization of a symplectic quotient to the representation theory of the symmetry group
Symplectic topology studies global properties of symplectic manifolds using techniques from topology and analysis
Symplectic capacities (Gromov width, Hofer-Zehnder capacity) are invariants that measure the size of symplectic embeddings
Mirror symmetry relates the symplectic geometry of a Calabi-Yau manifold to the complex geometry of its mirror manifold
This has led to powerful new insights in both symplectic geometry and algebraic geometry
Floer theory is an infinite-dimensional analogue of Morse theory that studies the topology of the space of Lagrangian submanifolds in a symplectic manifold
Floer homology groups are symplectic invariants that have important applications in low-dimensional topology and Hamiltonian dynamics
Problem-Solving Techniques
Identify the symplectic manifold (M,ω) and any relevant Lie group actions or symmetries
Compute the moment map μ:M→g∗ associated with a Hamiltonian G-action using the defining property dμX=ιX#ω
Check equivariance of the moment map with respect to the G-action and the coadjoint action
Analyze the level sets μ−1(t) and the reduced spaces Mt:=μ−1(t)/Gt using the Marsden-Weinstein reduction theorem
Apply the Atiyah-Guillemin-Sternberg convexity theorem to understand the image of the moment map for compact group actions
Use the Duistermaat-Heckman theorem to compute integrals over reduced spaces in terms of the moment polytope
Employ symplectic capacities and Gromov's non-squeezing theorem to study symplectic embeddings and rigidity phenomena
Apply the Guillemin-Sternberg conjecture and geometric quantization to relate the representation theory of G to the symplectic geometry of M//G
Advanced Topics and Current Research
Symplectic field theory (SFT) is a generalization of Floer theory that studies the geometry of contact manifolds and their symplectizations
SFT has applications in the study of Reeb dynamics, symplectic fillings, and the topology of Legendrian knots
Fukaya categories are A∞-categories that encode the symplectic topology of a manifold through the intersection theory of Lagrangian submanifolds
They play a central role in homological mirror symmetry and the study of D-branes in string theory
Symplectic cohomology is an invariant of symplectic manifolds with contact-type boundary that captures information about periodic orbits and fillability
It is related to Hamiltonian dynamics, Reeb flows, and the topology of symplectic fillings
Rabinowitz Floer homology is a variant of Floer homology that studies the existence and multiplicity of periodic orbits in Hamiltonian systems
It has applications in the study of magnetic flows, contact-type hypersurfaces, and the Weinstein conjecture
Symplectic Khovanov homology is a categorification of the Khovanov homology of links that incorporates symplectic geometry and Floer theory
It has connections to low-dimensional topology, knot theory, and the representation theory of braid groups
The symplectic geometry of moduli spaces (gauge theory, Higgs bundles, representation varieties) is an active area of research with connections to mathematical physics and geometric representation theory
These moduli spaces often admit natural symplectic structures and Hamiltonian group actions, which can be studied using the techniques of symplectic geometry and equivariant topology