Paneitz Operator
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In the mathematical field of
differential geometry Differential geometry is a mathematical discipline that studies the geometry of smooth shapes and smooth spaces, otherwise known as smooth manifolds. It uses the techniques of differential calculus, integral calculus, linear algebra and multili ...
, the Paneitz operator is a fourth-order
differential operator In mathematics, a differential operator is an operator defined as a function of the differentiation operator. It is helpful, as a matter of notation first, to consider differentiation as an abstract operation that accepts a function and return ...
defined on a
Riemannian manifold In differential geometry, a Riemannian manifold or Riemannian space , so called after the German mathematician Bernhard Riemann, is a real manifold, real, smooth manifold ''M'' equipped with a positive-definite Inner product space, inner product ...
of dimension ''n''. It is named after Stephen Paneitz, who discovered it in 1983, and whose preprint was later published posthumously in . In fact, the same operator was found earlier in the context of conformal supergravity by E. Fradkin and A. Tseytlin in 1982 (Phys Lett B 110 (1982) 117 and Nucl Phys B 1982 (1982) 157 ). It is given by the formula :P = \Delta^2 - \delta \left\d + (n-4)Q where Δ is the Laplace–Beltrami operator, ''d'' is the
exterior derivative On a differentiable manifold, the exterior derivative extends the concept of the differential of a function to differential forms of higher degree. The exterior derivative was first described in its current form by Élie Cartan in 1899. The res ...
, δ is its formal adjoint, ''V'' is the
Schouten tensor In Riemannian geometry the Schouten tensor is a second-order tensor introduced by Jan Arnoldus Schouten defined for by: :P=\frac \left(\mathrm -\frac g\right)\, \Leftrightarrow \mathrm=(n-2) P + J g \, , where Ric is the Ricci tensor (defined by ...
, ''J'' is the trace of the Schouten tensor, and the dot denotes tensor contraction on either index. Here ''Q'' is the scalar invariant :(-4, V, ^2+nJ^2+2\Delta J)/4, where Δ is the positive Laplacian. In four dimensions this yields the Q-curvature. The operator is especially important in conformal geometry, because in a suitable sense it depends only on the
conformal structure In mathematics, conformal geometry is the study of the set of angle-preserving ( conformal) transformations on a space. In a real two dimensional space, conformal geometry is precisely the geometry of Riemann surfaces. In space higher than two d ...
. Another operator of this kind is the conformal Laplacian. But, whereas the conformal Laplacian is second-order, with leading symbol a multiple of the Laplace–Beltrami operator, the Paneitz operator is fourth-order, with leading symbol the ''square'' of the Laplace–Beltrami operator. The Paneitz operator is conformally invariant in the sense that it sends conformal densities of weight to conformal densities of weight . Concretely, using the canonical trivialization of the density bundles in the presence of a metric, the Paneitz operator ''P'' can be represented in terms of a representative the Riemannian metric ''g'' as an ordinary operator on functions that transforms according under a conformal change according to the rule :\Omega^P(g)\phi = P(\Omega^2g)\Omega^\phi.\, The operator was originally derived by working out specifically the lower-order correction terms in order to ensure conformal invariance. Subsequent investigations have situated the Paneitz operator into a hierarchy of analogous conformally invariant operators on densities: the
GJMS operator In the mathematical field of differential geometry, the GJMS operators are a family of differential operators, that are defined on a Riemannian manifold. In an appropriate sense, they depend only on the conformal structure of the manifold. The G ...
s. The Paneitz operator has been most thoroughly studied in dimension four where it appears naturally in connection with extremal problems for the
functional determinant In functional analysis, a branch of mathematics, it is sometimes possible to generalize the notion of the determinant of a square matrix of finite order (representing a linear transformation from a finite-dimensional vector space to itself) to the i ...
of the Laplacian (via the
Polyakov formula In differential geometry and mathematical physics (especially string theory), the Polyakov formula expresses the conformal variation of the zeta functional determinant of a Riemannian manifold. Proposed by Alexander Markovich Polyakov this formu ...
; see ). In dimension four only, the Paneitz operator is the "critical" GJMS operator, meaning that there is a residual scalar piece (the Q curvature) that can only be recovered by asymptotic analysis. The Paneitz operator appears in extremal problems for the Moser–Trudinger inequality in dimension four as well


CR Paneitz operator

There is a close connection between 4 dimensional Conformal Geometry and 3 dimensional CR geometry associated with the study of
CR manifold In mathematics, a CR manifold, or Cauchy–Riemann manifold, is a differentiable manifold together with a geometric structure modeled on that of a real hypersurface in a complex vector space, or more generally modeled on an edge of a wedge. Formal ...
s. There is a naturally defined fourth order operator on CR manifolds introduced by
C. Robin Graham Charles Robin Graham is professor emeritus of mathematics at the University of Washington, known for a number of contributions to the field of conformal geometry and CR geometry; his collaboration with Charles Fefferman on the ambient constructi ...
and
John Lee John Lee may refer to: Academia * John Lee (astronomer) (1783–1866), president of the Royal Astronomical Society * John Lee (university principal) (1779–1859), University of Edinburgh principal * John Lee (pathologist) (born 1961), English ...
that has many properties similar to the classical Paneitz operator defined on 4 dimensional Riemannian manifolds. This operator in CR geometry is called the CR Paneitz operator. The operator defined by Graham and Lee though defined on all odd dimensional CR manifolds, is not known to be conformally covariant in real dimension 5 and higher. The conformal covariance of this operator has been established in real dimension 3 by
Kengo Hirachi Kengo Hirachi (平地 健吾 ''Hirachi Kengo'', born 30 November 1964) is a Japanese mathematician, specializing in CR geometry and mathematical analysis. Hirachi received from Osaka University his B.S. in 1987, his M.S. in 1989, and his Dr.Sci., ...
. It is always a non-negative operator in real dimension 5 and higher. Here unlike changing the metric by a conformal factor as in the Riemannian case discussed above, one changes the contact form on the CR 3 manifold by a conformal factor. Non-negativity of the CR Paneitz operator in dimension 3 is a CR invariant condition as proved below. This follows by the conformal covariant properties of the CR Paneitz operator first observed by
Kengo Hirachi Kengo Hirachi (平地 健吾 ''Hirachi Kengo'', born 30 November 1964) is a Japanese mathematician, specializing in CR geometry and mathematical analysis. Hirachi received from Osaka University his B.S. in 1987, his M.S. in 1989, and his Dr.Sci., ...
. Furthermore, the CR Paneitz operator plays an important role in obtaining the sharp eigenvalue lower bound for Kohn's Laplacian. This is a result of Sagun Chanillo, Hung-Lin Chiu and
Paul C. Yang Paul C. Yang () is a Taiwanese-American mathematician specializing in differential geometry, partial differential equations and CR manifolds. He is best known for his work in Conformal geometry for his study of extremal metrics and his research ...
. This sharp eigenvalue lower bound is the exact analog in CR Geometry of the famous André Lichnerowicz lower bound for the
Laplace–Beltrami operator In differential geometry, the Laplace–Beltrami operator is a generalization of the Laplace operator to functions defined on submanifolds in Euclidean space and, even more generally, on Riemannian and pseudo-Riemannian manifolds. It is named af ...
on compact Riemannian manifolds. It allows one to globally embed, compact, strictly pseudoconvex, abstract CR manifolds into C^n. More precisely, the conditions in to embed a CR manifold into C^n are phrased CR invariantly and non-perturbatively. There is also a partial converse of the above result where the authors, J. S. Case, S. Chanillo, P. Yang, obtain conditions that guarantee when embedded, compact CR manifolds have non-negative CR Paneitz operators. The formal definition of the CR Paneitz operator P_4 on CR manifolds of real dimension three is as follows( the subscript 4 is to remind the reader that this is a fourth order operator) :: P_4\phi=\frac((\Box_b\overline+\overline\Box_b)\phi+8Im(A^\phi_1)_1) \Box_b denotes the Kohn Laplacian which plays a fundamental role in CR Geometry and several complex variables and was introduced by
Joseph J. Kohn Joseph John Kohn (born May 18, 1932) is a professor emeritus of mathematics at Princeton University, where he researches partial differential operators and complex analysis. Life and work Kohn's father was Czech-Jewish architect Otto Kohn. Af ...
. One may consult The tangential Cauchy–Riemann complex (Kohn Laplacian, Kohn–Rossi complex) for the definition of the Kohn Laplacian. Further, A^ denotes the Webster-Tanaka Torsion tensor and \phi_1 the covariant derivative of the function \phi with respect to the Webster-Tanaka connection. Accounts of the Webster-Tanaka, connection, Torsion and curvature tensor may be found in articles by John M. Lee and Sidney M. Webster. There is yet another way to view the CR Paneitz operator in dimension 3. John M. Lee constructed a third order operator P_3 which has the property that the kernel of P_3 consists of exactly the CR pluriharmonic functions (real parts of CR holomorphic functions). The Paneitz operator displayed above is exactly the divergence of this third order operator P_3. The third order operator P_3 is defined as follows: : P_3\phi=(_+\sqrtA_\phi^1)\theta^1 Here A_ is the Webster-Tanaka torsion tensor. The derivatives are taken using the Webster-Tanaka connection and \theta^1 is the dual 1-form to the CR-holomorphic tangent vector that defines the CR structure on the compact manifold. Thus P_3 sends functions to (1,0) forms. The divergence of such an operator thus will take functions to functions. The third order operator constructed by J. Lee only characterizes CR pluriharmonic functions on CR manifolds of real dimension three. Hirachi's covariant transformation formula for P_4 on three dimensional CR manifolds is as follows. Let the CR manifold be (M,\theta,J), where \theta is the contact form and J the CR structure on the kernel of \theta that is on the contact planes. Let us transform the background contact form \theta by a conformal transformation to \tilde=e^\theta. Note this new contact form obtained by a conformal change of the old contact form or background contact form, has not changed the kernel of \theta. That is \tilde and \theta have the same kernel, i.e. the contact planes have remained unchanged. The CR structure J has been kept unchanged. The CR Paneitz operator \tilde_4 for the new contact form \tilde is now seen to be related to the CR Paneitz operator for the contact form \theta by the formula of Hirachi: :\tilde_4=e^P_4 Next note the volume forms on the manifold M satisfy : d\tilde=\tilde\wedge d\tilde= e^\theta\wedge d\theta=e^dV Using the transformation formula of Hirachi, it follows that, : \int_M \tilde_4\phi\phi d\tilde=\int_M P_4\phi\phi dV Thus we easily conclude that: :\int_M P_4\phi\phi dV is a CR invariant. That is the integral displayed above has the same value for different contact forms describing the same CR structure J. The operator P_4 is a real self-adjoint operator. On CR manifolds like S^3 where the Webster-Tanaka torsion tensor is zero, it is seen from the formula displayed above that only the leading terms involving the Kohn Laplacian survives. Next from the tensor commutation formulae given in one can easily check that the operators \Box_b, \overline commute when the Webster-Tanaka torsion tensor A_ vanishes. More precisely one has : Box_b,\overline4\sqrtIm Q where : Q\phi=2\sqrt(A_\phi_1)_1 Thus \Box_b,\overline are simultaneously diagonalizable under the zero torsion assumption. Next note that \Box_b and \overline have the same sequence of eigenvalues that are also perforce real. Thus we conclude from the formula for P_4 that CR structures having zero torsion have CR Paneitz operators that are non-negative. The article among other things shows that real ellipsoids in C^2 carry a CR structure inherited from the complex structure of C^2 whose CR Paneitz operator is non-negative. This CR structure on ellipsoids has non-vanishing Webster-Tanaka torsion. Thus provides the first examples of CR manifolds where the CR Paneitz operator is non-negative and the Torsion tensor too does not vanish. Since we have observed above that the CR Paneitz is the divergence of an operator whose kernel is the pluriharmonic functions, it also follows that the kernel of the CR Paneitz operator contains all CR Pluriharmonic functions. So the kernel of the CR Paneitz operator in sharp contrast to the Riemannian case, has an infinite dimensional kernel. Results on when the kernel is exactly the pluriharmonic functions, the nature and role of the supplementary space in the kernel etc., may be found in the article cited as below. One of the principal applications of the CR Paneitz operator and the results in are to the CR analog of the Positive Mass theorem due to Jih-Hsin Cheng,
Andrea Malchiodi Andrea Malchiodi (born September 30, 1972) is an Italian mathematician who is active in the fields of partial differential equations and calculus of variations, with several contributions to geometric analysis. Scientific activity Malchiodi rec ...
and
Paul C. Yang Paul C. Yang () is a Taiwanese-American mathematician specializing in differential geometry, partial differential equations and CR manifolds. He is best known for his work in Conformal geometry for his study of extremal metrics and his research ...
. This allows one to obtain results on the CR
Yamabe problem The Yamabe problem refers to a conjecture in the mathematical field of differential geometry, which was resolved in the 1980s. It is a statement about the scalar curvature of Riemannian manifolds: By computing a formula for how the scalar curvatur ...
. More facts related to the role of the CR Paneitz operator in CR geometry can be obtained from the article
CR manifold In mathematics, a CR manifold, or Cauchy–Riemann manifold, is a differentiable manifold together with a geometric structure modeled on that of a real hypersurface in a complex vector space, or more generally modeled on an edge of a wedge. Formal ...
.


See also

* Calabi conjecture * Monge-Ampere equations *
Positive mass conjecture The positive energy theorem (also known as the positive mass theorem) refers to a collection of foundational results in general relativity and differential geometry. Its standard form, broadly speaking, asserts that the gravitational energy of an ...
* Yamabe conjecture


References

*. *. * {{Citation , last1=Paneitz , first1=Stephen M. , s2cid=115155901 , title=A quartic conformally covariant differential operator for arbitrary pseudo-Riemannian manifolds (summary) , doi=10.3842/SIGMA.2008.036 , mr=2393291 , year=2008 , journal= Symmetry, Integrability and Geometry: Methods and Applications, issn=1815-0659 , volume=4 , pages=Paper 036, 3, arxiv=0803.4331 , bibcode=2008SIGMA...4..036P . Conformal geometry Differential geometry Differential operators