Symplectic Quotient
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In mathematics, specifically in symplectic geometry, the momentum map (or, by false etymology, moment map) is a tool associated with a
Hamiltonian Hamiltonian may refer to: * Hamiltonian mechanics, a function that represents the total energy of a system * Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics), an operator corresponding to the total energy of that system ** Dyall Hamiltonian, a modified Hamiltonian ...
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of a Lie group on a symplectic manifold, used to construct conserved quantities for the action. The momentum map generalizes the classical notions of linear and angular momentum. It is an essential ingredient in various constructions of symplectic manifolds, including symplectic (Marsden–Weinstein) quotients, discussed below, and symplectic cuts and sums.


Formal definition

Let ''M'' be a manifold with
symplectic form In mathematics, a symplectic vector space is a vector space ''V'' over a field ''F'' (for example the real numbers R) equipped with a symplectic bilinear form. A symplectic bilinear form is a mapping that is ; Bilinear: Linear in each argument ...
ω. Suppose that a Lie group ''G'' acts on ''M'' via
symplectomorphism In mathematics, a symplectomorphism or symplectic map is an isomorphism in the category of symplectic manifolds. In classical mechanics, a symplectomorphism represents a transformation of phase space that is volume-preserving and preserves the sy ...
s (that is, the action of each ''g'' in ''G'' preserves ω). Let \mathfrak be the Lie algebra of ''G'', \mathfrak^* its dual, and :\langle, \rangle : \mathfrak^* \times \mathfrak \to \mathbf the pairing between the two. Any ξ in \mathfrak induces a vector field ρ(ξ) on ''M'' describing the infinitesimal action of ξ. To be precise, at a point ''x'' in ''M'' the vector \rho(\xi)_x is :\left.\frac\_ \exp(t \xi) \cdot x, where \exp : \mathfrak \to G is the exponential map and \cdot denotes the ''G''-action on ''M''.The vector field ρ(ξ) is called sometimes the Killing vector field relative to the action of the one-parameter subgroup generated by ξ. See, for instance, Let \iota_ \omega \, denote the contraction of this vector field with ω. Because ''G'' acts by symplectomorphisms, it follows that \iota_ \omega \, is closed (for all ξ in \mathfrak). Suppose that \iota_ \omega \, is not just closed but also exact, so that \iota_ \omega = d H_\xi for some function H_\xi. Suppose also that the map \mathfrak \to C^\infty(M) sending \xi \mapsto H_\xi is a Lie algebra homomorphism. Then a momentum map for the ''G''-action on (''M'', ω) is a map \mu : M \to \mathfrak^* such that :d(\langle \mu, \xi \rangle) = \iota_ \omega for all ξ in \mathfrak. Here \langle \mu, \xi \rangle is the function from ''M'' to R defined by \langle \mu, \xi \rangle(x) = \langle \mu(x), \xi \rangle. The momentum map is uniquely defined up to an additive constant of integration. A momentum map is often also required to be ''G''-equivariant, where ''G'' acts on \mathfrak^* via the coadjoint action. If the group is compact or semisimple, then the constant of integration can always be chosen to make the momentum map coadjoint equivariant. However, in general the coadjoint action must be modified to make the map equivariant (this is the case for example for the Euclidean group). The modification is by a 1- cocycle on the group with values in \mathfrak^*, as first described by Souriau (1970).


Hamiltonian group actions

The definition of the momentum map requires \iota_ \omega to be closed. In practice it is useful to make an even stronger assumption. The ''G''-action is said to be Hamiltonian if and only if the following conditions hold. First, for every ξ in \mathfrak the one-form \iota_ \omega is exact, meaning that it equals dH_\xi for some smooth function :H_\xi : M \to \mathbf. If this holds, then one may choose the H_\xi to make the map \xi \mapsto H_\xi linear. The second requirement for the ''G''-action to be Hamiltonian is that the map \xi \mapsto H_\xi be a Lie algebra homomorphism from \mathfrak to the algebra of smooth functions on ''M'' under the Poisson bracket. If the action of ''G'' on (''M'', ω) is Hamiltonian in this sense, then a momentum map is a map \mu : M\to \mathfrak^* such that writing H_\xi = \langle \mu, \xi \rangle defines a Lie algebra homomorphism \xi \mapsto H_\xi satisfying \rho(\xi) = X_. Here X_ is the vector field of the Hamiltonian H_\xi, defined by :\iota_ \omega = d H_\xi.


Examples of momentum maps

In the case of a Hamiltonian action of the circle G = \mathcal(1), the Lie algebra dual \mathfrak^* is naturally identified with \mathbb, and the momentum map is simply the Hamiltonian function that generates the circle action. Another classical case occurs when M is the cotangent bundle of \mathbb^3 and G is the Euclidean group generated by rotations and translations. That is, G is a six-dimensional group, the semidirect product of SO(3) and \mathbb^3. The six components of the momentum map are then the three angular momenta and the three linear momenta. Let N be a smooth manifold and let T^*N be its cotangent bundle, with projection map \pi : T^*N \rightarrow N. Let \tau denote the tautological 1-form on T^*N. Suppose G acts on N. The induced action of G on the symplectic manifold (T^*N, \mathrm\tau), given by g \cdot \eta := (T_g^)^* \eta for g \in G, \eta \in T^*N is Hamiltonian with momentum map -\iota_ \tau for all \xi \in \mathfrak. Here \iota_\tau denotes the contraction of the vector field \rho(\xi), the infinitesimal action of \xi, with the
1-form In differential geometry, a one-form on a differentiable manifold is a smooth section of the cotangent bundle. Equivalently, a one-form on a manifold M is a smooth mapping of the total space of the tangent bundle of M to \R whose restriction to ...
\tau. The facts mentioned below may be used to generate more examples of momentum maps.


Some facts about momentum maps

Let G, H be Lie groups with Lie algebras \mathfrak, \mathfrak, respectively. # Let \mathcal(F), F \in \mathfrak^* be a coadjoint orbit. Then there exists a unique symplectic structure on \mathcal(F) such that inclusion map \mathcal(F) \hookrightarrow \mathfrak^* is a momentum map. # Let G act on a symplectic manifold (M, \omega) with \Phi_G : M \rightarrow \mathfrak^* a momentum map for the action, and \psi : H \rightarrow G be a Lie group homomorphism, inducing an action of H on M. Then the action of H on M is also Hamiltonian, with momentum map given by (\mathrm\psi)_^* \circ \Phi_G, where (\mathrm\psi)_^* : \mathfrak^* \rightarrow \mathfrak^* is the dual map to (\mathrm\psi)_ : \mathfrak \rightarrow \mathfrak (e denotes the identity element of H). A case of special interest is when H is a Lie subgroup of G and \psi is the inclusion map. # Let (M_1, \omega_1) be a Hamiltonian G-manifold and (M_2, \omega_2) a Hamiltonian H-manifold. Then the natural action of G \times H on (M_1 \times M_2, \omega_1 \times \omega_2) is Hamiltonian, with momentum map the direct sum of the two momentum maps \Phi_G and \Phi_H. Here \omega_1 \times \omega_2 := \pi_1^*\omega_1 + \pi_2^*\omega_2, where \pi_i : M_1 \times M_2 \rightarrow M_i denotes the projection map. # Let M be a Hamiltonian G-manifold, and N a submanifold of M invariant under G such that the restriction of the symplectic form on M to N is non-degenerate. This imparts a symplectic structure to N in a natural way. Then the action of G on N is also Hamiltonian, with momentum map the composition of the inclusion map with M's momentum map.


Symplectic quotients

Suppose that the action of a Lie group ''G'' on the symplectic manifold (''M'', ω) is Hamiltonian, as defined above, with momentum map \mu : M\to \mathfrak^*. From the Hamiltonian condition, it follows that \mu^(0) is invariant under ''G''. Assume now that ''G'' acts freely and properly on \mu^(0). It follows that 0 is a regular value of \mu, so \mu^(0) and its
quotient In arithmetic, a quotient (from lat, quotiens 'how many times', pronounced ) is a quantity produced by the division of two numbers. The quotient has widespread use throughout mathematics, and is commonly referred to as the integer part of a ...
\mu^(0) / G are both smooth manifolds. The quotient inherits a symplectic form from ''M''; that is, there is a unique symplectic form on the quotient whose
pullback In mathematics, a pullback is either of two different, but related processes: precomposition and fiber-product. Its dual is a pushforward. Precomposition Precomposition with a function probably provides the most elementary notion of pullback: i ...
to \mu^(0) equals the restriction of ω to \mu^(0). Thus, the quotient is a symplectic manifold, called the Marsden–Weinstein quotient, after , symplectic quotient, or symplectic reduction of ''M'' by ''G'' and is denoted M/\!\!/G. Its dimension equals the dimension of ''M'' minus twice the dimension of ''G''. More generally, if ''G'' does not act freely (but still properly), then showed that M/\!\!/G = \mu^(0)/G is a stratified symplectic space, i.e. a
stratified space In mathematics, especially in topology, a stratified space is a topological space that admits or is equipped with a stratification, a decomposition into subspaces, which are nice in some sense (e.g., smooth or flat). A basic example is a subset o ...
with compatible symplectic structures on the strata.


Flat connections on a surface

The space \Omega^1(\Sigma, \mathfrak) of connections on the trivial bundle \Sigma \times G on a surface carries an infinite dimensional symplectic form :\langle\alpha, \beta \rangle := \int_ \text(\alpha \wedge \beta). The gauge group \mathcal = \text(\Sigma, G) acts on connections by conjugation g \cdot A := g^(dg) + g^ A g . Identify \text(\mathcal) = \Omega^0(\Sigma, \mathfrak) = \Omega^2(\Sigma, \mathfrak)^* via the integration pairing. Then the map :\mu: \Omega^1(\Sigma, \mathfrak) \rightarrow \Omega^2(\Sigma, \mathfrak), \qquad A \; \mapsto \; F := dA + \frac \wedge A/math> that sends a connection to its curvature is a moment map for the action of the gauge group on connections. In particular the moduli space of flat connections modulo gauge equivalence \mu^(0)/\mathcal = \Omega^1(\Sigma, \mathfrak) /\!\!/ \mathcal is given by symplectic reduction.


See also

*
GIT quotient In algebraic geometry, an affine GIT quotient, or affine geometric invariant theory quotient, of an affine scheme X = \operatorname A with an action by a group scheme ''G'' is the affine scheme \operatorname(A^G), the prime spectrum of the ring of ...
* Quantization commutes with reduction. *
Poisson–Lie group In mathematics, a Poisson–Lie group is a Poisson manifold that is also a Lie group, with the group multiplication being compatible with the Poisson algebra structure on the manifold. The infinitesimal counterpart of a Poisson–Lie group is a L ...
* Toric manifold *
Geometric Mechanics Geometric mechanics is a branch of mathematics applying particular geometric methods to many areas of mechanics, from mechanics of particles and rigid bodies to fluid mechanics to control theory. Geometric mechanics applies principally to systems f ...
* Kirwan map * Kostant's convexity theorem


Notes


References

* J.-M. Souriau, ''Structure des systèmes dynamiques'', Maîtrises de mathématiques, Dunod, Paris, 1970. . * S. K. Donaldson and P. B. Kronheimer, ''The Geometry of Four-Manifolds'', Oxford Science Publications, 1990. . *
Dusa McDuff Dusa McDuff Fellow of the Royal Society, FRS Royal Society of Edinburgh, CorrFRSE (born 18 October 1945) is an English mathematician who works on symplectic geometry. She was the first recipient of the Ruth Lyttle Satter Prize in Mathematics, w ...
and Dietmar Salamon, ''Introduction to Symplectic Topology'', Oxford Science Publications, 1998. . * * * * * * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Moment Map Symplectic geometry Hamiltonian mechanics Group actions (mathematics)