Kontsevich Quantization Formula
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In mathematics, the Kontsevich quantization formula describes how to construct a generalized ★-product operator algebra from a given arbitrary finite-dimensional
Poisson manifold In differential geometry, a Poisson structure on a smooth manifold M is a Lie bracket \ (called a Poisson bracket in this special case) on the algebra (M) of smooth functions on M , subject to the Leibniz rule : \ = \h + g \ . Equivalen ...
. This operator algebra amounts to the deformation quantization of the corresponding Poisson algebra. It is due to
Maxim Kontsevich Maxim Lvovich Kontsevich (russian: Макси́м Льво́вич Конце́вич, ; born 25 August 1964) is a Russian and French mathematician and mathematical physicist. He is a professor at the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques a ...
.


Deformation quantization of a Poisson algebra

Given a
Poisson algebra In mathematics, a Poisson algebra is an associative algebra together with a Lie bracket that also satisfies Leibniz's law; that is, the bracket is also a derivation. Poisson algebras appear naturally in Hamiltonian mechanics, and are also centr ...
, a
deformation Deformation can refer to: * Deformation (engineering), changes in an object's shape or form due to the application of a force or forces. ** Deformation (physics), such changes considered and analyzed as displacements of continuum bodies. * Defo ...
quantization is an associative unital product \star on the algebra of formal power series in , subject to the following two axioms, :\begin f\star g &=fg+\mathcal(\hbar)\\ ,g&=f\star g-g\star f=i\hbar\+\mathcal(\hbar^2) \end If one were given a Poisson manifold , one could ask, in addition, that :f\star g=fg+\sum_^\infty \hbar^kB_k(f\otimes g), where the are linear bi differential operators of degree at most . Two deformations are said to be equivalent iff they are related by a gauge transformation of the type, :\begin D: A \hbar\to A \hbar \\ \sum_^\infty \hbar^k f_k \mapsto \sum_^\infty \hbar^k f_k +\sum_ D_n(f_k)\hbar^ \end where are differential operators of order at most . The corresponding induced \star-product, \star', is then :f\,'\,g = D \left ( \left (D^f \right )\star \left (D^g \right ) \right ). For the archetypal example, one may well consider Groenewold's original "Moyal–Weyl" \star-product.


Kontsevich graphs

A Kontsevich graph is a simple
directed graph In mathematics, and more specifically in graph theory, a directed graph (or digraph) is a graph that is made up of a set of vertices connected by directed edges, often called arcs. Definition In formal terms, a directed graph is an ordered pai ...
without loops on 2 external vertices, labeled ''f'' and ''g''; and internal vertices, labeled . From each internal vertex originate two edges. All (equivalence classes of) graphs with internal vertices are accumulated in the set . An example on two internal vertices is the following graph, :


Associated bidifferential operator

Associated to each graph , there is a bidifferential operator defined as follows. For each edge there is a partial derivative on the symbol of the target vertex. It is contracted with the corresponding index from the source symbol. The term for the graph is the product of all its symbols together with their partial derivatives. Here ''f'' and ''g'' stand for smooth functions on the manifold, and is the
Poisson bivector In differential geometry, a Poisson structure on a smooth manifold M is a Lie bracket \ (called a Poisson bracket in this special case) on the algebra (M) of smooth functions on M , subject to the Leibniz rule : \ = \h + g \ . Equivalent ...
of the Poisson manifold. The term for the example graph is :\Pi^\partial_\Pi^\partial_f\,\partial_\partial_g.


Associated weight

For adding up these bidifferential operators there are the weights of the graph . First of all, to each graph there is a multiplicity which counts how many equivalent configurations there are for one graph. The rule is that the sum of the multiplicities for all graphs with internal vertices is . The sample graph above has the multiplicity . For this, it is helpful to enumerate the internal vertices from 1 to . In order to compute the weight we have to integrate products of the angle in the
upper half-plane In mathematics, the upper half-plane, \,\mathcal\,, is the set of points in the Cartesian plane with > 0. Complex plane Mathematicians sometimes identify the Cartesian plane with the complex plane, and then the upper half-plane corresponds to ...
, ''H'', as follows. The upper half-plane is , endowed with a
metric Metric or metrical may refer to: * Metric system, an internationally adopted decimal system of measurement * An adjective indicating relation to measurement in general, or a noun describing a specific type of measurement Mathematics In mathem ...
:ds^2=\frac; and, for two points with , we measure the angle between the geodesic from to and from to counterclockwise. This is :\phi(z,w)=\frac\log\frac. The integration domain is ''C''''n''(''H'') the space :C_n(H):=\. The formula amounts :w_\Gamma:= \frac\int_ \bigwedge_^n\mathrm\phi(u_j,u_)\wedge\mathrm\phi(u_j,u_), where ''t''1(''j'') and ''t''2(''j'') are the first and second target vertex of the internal vertex . The vertices ''f'' and ''g'' are at the fixed positions 0 and 1 in .


The formula

Given the above three definitions, the Kontsevich formula for a star product is now :f\star g = fg+\sum_^\infty\left(\frac\right)^n \sum_ w_\Gamma B_\Gamma(f\otimes g).


Explicit formula up to second order

Enforcing associativity of the \star-product, it is straightforward to check directly that the Kontsevich formula must reduce, to second order in , to just :\begin f\star g &= fg +\tfrac\Pi^\partial_i f\,\partial_j g -\tfrac\Pi^\Pi^\partial_\,\partial_f \partial_\,\partial_g\\ & - \tfrac\Pi^\partial_\Pi^(\partial_\partial_f \,\partial_g -\partial_f\,\partial_\partial_g) +\mathcal(\hbar^3) \end


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Kontsevich Quantization Formula Mathematical quantization