Symplectic Cut
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In
mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, specifically in
symplectic geometry Symplectic geometry is a branch of differential geometry and differential topology that studies symplectic manifolds; that is, differentiable manifolds equipped with a closed differential form, closed, nondegenerate form, nondegenerate different ...
, the symplectic cut is a geometric modification on
symplectic manifold In differential geometry, a subject of mathematics, a symplectic manifold is a smooth manifold, M , equipped with a closed nondegenerate differential 2-form \omega , called the symplectic form. The study of symplectic manifolds is called sympl ...
s. Its effect is to decompose a given manifold into two pieces. There is an inverse operation, the symplectic sum, that glues two manifolds together into one. The symplectic cut can also be viewed as a generalization of symplectic blow up. The cut was introduced in 1995 by Eugene Lerman, who used it to study the
symplectic quotient In mathematics, specifically in symplectic geometry, the momentum map (or, by false etymology, moment map) is a tool associated with a Hamiltonian action of a Lie group on a symplectic manifold, used to construct conserved quantities for the ac ...
and other operations on manifolds.


Topological description

Let (X, \omega) be any symplectic manifold and :\mu : X \to \mathbb a Hamiltonian on X. Let \epsilon be any regular value of \mu, so that the level set \mu^(\epsilon) is a smooth manifold. Assume furthermore that \mu^(\epsilon) is fibered in circles, each of which is an integral curve of the induced Hamiltonian vector field. Under these assumptions, \mu^([\epsilon, \infty)) is a manifold with boundary \mu^(\epsilon), and one can form a manifold :\overline_ by collapsing each circle fiber to a point. In other words, \overline_ is X with the subset \mu^((-\infty, \epsilon)) removed and the boundary collapsed along each circle fiber. The quotient of the boundary is a submanifold of \overline_ of codimension two, denoted V. Similarly, one may form from \mu^((-\infty, \epsilon]) a manifold \overline_, which also contains a copy of V. The symplectic cut is the pair of manifolds \overline_ and \overline_. Sometimes it is useful to view the two halves of the symplectic cut as being joined along their shared submanifold V to produce a singular space :\overline_ \cup_V \overline_. For example, this singular space is the central fiber in the symplectic sum regarded as a deformation.


Symplectic description

The preceding description is rather crude; more care is required to keep track of the symplectic structure on the symplectic cut. For this, let (X, \omega) be any symplectic manifold. Assume that the
circle group In mathematics, the circle group, denoted by \mathbb T or \mathbb S^1, is the multiplicative group of all complex numbers with absolute value 1, that is, the unit circle in the complex plane or simply the unit complex numbers. \mathbb T = \ ...
U(1)
acts The Acts of the Apostles ( grc-koi, Πράξεις Ἀποστόλων, ''Práxeis Apostólōn''; la, Actūs Apostolōrum) is the fifth book of the New Testament; it tells of the founding of the Christian Church and the spread of its message ...
on X in a Hamiltonian way with
moment map In mathematics, specifically in symplectic geometry, the momentum map (or, by false etymology, moment map) is a tool associated with a Hamiltonian action of a Lie group on a symplectic manifold, used to construct conserved quantities for the ac ...
:\mu : X \to \mathbb. This moment map can be viewed as a Hamiltonian function that generates the circle action. The product space X \times \mathbb, with coordinate z on \mathbb, comes with an induced symplectic form :\omega \oplus (-i dz \wedge d\bar). The group U(1) acts on the product in a Hamiltonian way by :e^ \cdot (x, z) = (e^ \cdot x, e^ z) with moment map :\nu(x, z) = \mu(x) - , z, ^2. Let \epsilon be any real number such that the circle action is free on \mu^(\epsilon). Then \epsilon is a regular value of \nu, and \nu^(\epsilon) is a manifold. This manifold \nu^(\epsilon) contains as a submanifold the set of points (x, z) with \mu(x) = \epsilon and , z, ^2 = 0; this submanifold is naturally identified with \mu^(\epsilon). The complement of the submanifold, which consists of points (x, z) with \mu(x) > \epsilon, is naturally identified with the product of :X_ := \mu^((\epsilon, \infty)) and the circle. The manifold \nu^(\epsilon) inherits the Hamiltonian circle action, as do its two submanifolds just described. So one may form the symplectic quotient :\overline_ := \nu^(\epsilon) / U(1). By construction, it contains X_ as a dense open submanifold; essentially, it compactifies this open manifold with the symplectic quotient :V := \mu^(\epsilon) / U(1), which is a symplectic submanifold of \overline_ of codimension two. If X is Kähler, then so is the cut space \overline_; however, the embedding of X_ is not an isometry. One constructs \overline_, the other half of the symplectic cut, in a symmetric manner. The
normal bundle In differential geometry, a field of mathematics, a normal bundle is a particular kind of vector bundle, complementary to the tangent bundle, and coming from an embedding (or immersion). Definition Riemannian manifold Let (M,g) be a Riemannian m ...
s of V in the two halves of the cut are opposite each other (meaning symplectically anti-isomorphic). The symplectic sum of \overline_ and \overline_ along V recovers X. The existence of a global Hamiltonian circle action on X appears to be a restrictive assumption. However, it is not actually necessary; the cut can be performed under more general hypotheses, such as a local Hamiltonian circle action near \mu^(\epsilon) (since the cut is a local operation).


Blow up as cut

When a
complex manifold In differential geometry and complex geometry, a complex manifold is a manifold with an atlas of charts to the open unit disc in \mathbb^n, such that the transition maps are holomorphic. The term complex manifold is variously used to mean a com ...
X is blown up along a submanifold Z, the blow up locus Z is replaced by an
exceptional divisor In mathematics, specifically algebraic geometry, an exceptional divisor for a regular map :f: X \rightarrow Y of varieties is a kind of 'large' subvariety of X which is 'crushed' by f, in a certain definite sense. More strictly, ''f'' has an asso ...
E and the rest of the manifold is left undisturbed. Topologically, this operation may also be viewed as the removal of an \epsilon-neighborhood of the blow up locus, followed by the collapse of the boundary by the Hopf map. Blowing up a symplectic manifold is more subtle, since the symplectic form must be adjusted in a neighborhood of the blow up locus in order to continue smoothly across the exceptional divisor in the blow up. The symplectic cut is an elegant means of making the neighborhood-deletion/boundary-collapse process symplectically rigorous. As before, let (X, \omega) be a symplectic manifold with a Hamiltonian U(1)-action with moment map \mu. Assume that the moment map is proper and that it achieves its maximum m exactly along a symplectic submanifold Z of X. Assume furthermore that the weights of the isotropy representation of U(1) on the normal bundle N_X Z are all 1. Then for small \epsilon the only critical points in X_ are those on Z. The symplectic cut \overline_, which is formed by deleting a symplectic \epsilon-neighborhood of Z and collapsing the boundary, is then the symplectic blow up of X along Z.


References

* Eugene Lerman: Symplectic cuts, ''Mathematical Research Letters'' 2 (1995), 247–258 * Dusa McDuff and D. Salamon: ''Introduction to Symplectic Topology'' (1998) Oxford Mathematical Monographs, {{ISBN, 0-19-850451-9. Symplectic topology