Genus of a multiplicative sequence
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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 ...
, a genus of a multiplicative sequence is a
ring homomorphism In ring theory, a branch of abstract algebra, a ring homomorphism is a structure-preserving function between two rings. More explicitly, if ''R'' and ''S'' are rings, then a ring homomorphism is a function such that ''f'' is: :addition preser ...
from the ring of smooth compact manifolds up to the equivalence of bounding a smooth manifold with boundary (i.e., up to suitable
cobordism In mathematics, cobordism is a fundamental equivalence relation on the class of compact manifolds of the same dimension, set up using the concept of the boundary (French '' bord'', giving ''cobordism'') of a manifold. Two manifolds of the same di ...
) to another ring, usually the
rational number In mathematics, a rational number is a number that can be expressed as the quotient or fraction of two integers, a numerator and a non-zero denominator . For example, is a rational number, as is every integer (e.g. ). The set of all ra ...
s, having the property that they are constructed from a
sequence In mathematics, a sequence is an enumerated collection of objects in which repetitions are allowed and order matters. Like a set, it contains members (also called ''elements'', or ''terms''). The number of elements (possibly infinite) is called ...
of polynomials in characteristic classes that arise as coefficients in formal power series with good multiplicative properties.


Definition

A genus \varphi assigns a number \Phi(X) to each manifold ''X'' such that # \Phi(X \sqcup Y) = \Phi(X) + \Phi(Y) (where \sqcup is the disjoint union); # \Phi(X \times Y) = \Phi(X)\Phi(Y); # \Phi(X) = 0 if ''X'' is the boundary of a manifold with boundary. The manifolds and manifolds with boundary may be required to have additional structure; for example, they might be oriented, spin, stably complex, and so on (see list of cobordism theories for many more examples). The value \Phi(X) is in some ring, often the ring of rational numbers, though it can be other rings such as \Z/2\Z or the ring of modular forms. The conditions on \Phi can be rephrased as saying that \varphi is a ring homomorphism from the cobordism ring of manifolds (with additional structure) to another ring. Example: If \Phi(X) is the
signature A signature (; from la, signare, "to sign") is a Handwriting, handwritten (and often Stylization, stylized) depiction of someone's name, nickname, or even a simple "X" or other mark that a person writes on documents as a proof of identity and ...
of the oriented manifold ''X'', then \Phi is a genus from oriented manifolds to the ring of integers.


The genus associated to a formal power series

A sequence of polynomials K_1, K_2,\ldots in variables p_1, p_2,\ldots is called multiplicative if :1 + p_1z + p_2z^2 + \cdots = (1 + q_1z + q_2z^2 + \cdots) (1 + r_1z + r_2z^2 + \cdots) implies that :\sum_j K_j(p_1, p_2, \ldots)z^j = \sum_j K_j (q_1, q_2, \ldots) z^j\sum_k K_k (r_1, r_2, \ldots)z^k If Q(z) is a
formal power series In mathematics, a formal series is an infinite sum that is considered independently from any notion of convergence, and can be manipulated with the usual algebraic operations on series (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, partial s ...
in ''z'' with constant term 1, we can define a multiplicative sequence :K = 1+ K_1 + K_2 + \cdots by :K(p_1, p_2, p_3, \ldots) = Q(z_1)Q(z_2)Q(z_3)\cdots, where p_k is the ''k''th
elementary symmetric function In mathematics, specifically in commutative algebra, the elementary symmetric polynomials are one type of basic building block for symmetric polynomials, in the sense that any symmetric polynomial can be expressed as a polynomial in elementary sy ...
of the indeterminates z_i. (The variables p_k will often in practice be
Pontryagin class In mathematics, the Pontryagin classes, named after Lev Pontryagin, are certain characteristic classes of real vector bundles. The Pontryagin classes lie in cohomology groups with degrees a multiple of four. Definition Given a real vector bundle ...
es.) The genus \Phi of
compact Compact as used in politics may refer broadly to a pact or treaty; in more specific cases it may refer to: * Interstate compact * Blood compact, an ancient ritual of the Philippines * Compact government, a type of colonial rule utilized in Britis ...
,
connected Connected may refer to: Film and television * ''Connected'' (2008 film), a Hong Kong remake of the American movie ''Cellular'' * '' Connected: An Autoblogography About Love, Death & Technology'', a 2011 documentary film * ''Connected'' (2015 TV ...
, smooth,
oriented In mathematics, orientability is a property of some topological spaces such as real vector spaces, Euclidean spaces, surfaces, and more generally manifolds that allows a consistent definition of "clockwise" and "counterclockwise". A space i ...
manifolds corresponding to ''Q'' is given by :\Phi(X) = K(p_1, p_2, p_3, \ldots) where the p_k are the
Pontryagin class In mathematics, the Pontryagin classes, named after Lev Pontryagin, are certain characteristic classes of real vector bundles. The Pontryagin classes lie in cohomology groups with degrees a multiple of four. Definition Given a real vector bundle ...
es of ''X''. The power series ''Q'' is called the characteristic power series of the genus \Phi. A theorem of
René Thom René Frédéric Thom (; 2 September 1923 – 25 October 2002) was a French mathematician, who received the Fields Medal in 1958. He made his reputation as a topologist, moving on to aspects of what would be called singularity theory; he becam ...
, which states that the rationals tensored with the cobordism ring is a polynomial algebra in generators of degree 4''k'' for positive integers ''k'', implies that this gives a bijection between formal power series ''Q'' with rational coefficients and leading coefficient 1, and genera from oriented manifolds to the rational numbers.


L genus

The L genus is the genus of the formal power series : = \sum_ \frac = 1 + - + \cdots where the numbers B_ are the
Bernoulli number In mathematics, the Bernoulli numbers are a sequence of rational numbers which occur frequently in analysis. The Bernoulli numbers appear in (and can be defined by) the Taylor series expansions of the tangent and hyperbolic tangent functions, ...
s. The first few values are: :\begin L_0 &= 1 \\ L_1 &= \tfrac13 p_1 \\ L_2 &= \tfrac1\left(7p_2 - p_1^2\right) \\ L_3 &= \tfrac1\left(62 p_3 - 13 p_1 p_2 + 2 p_1^3\right) \\ L_4 &= \tfrac1\left(381 p_4 - 71 p_1 p_3 - 19 p_2^2 + 22 p_1^2 p_2 - 3 p_1^4\right) \end (for further ''L''-polynomials see or ). Now let ''M'' be a closed smooth oriented manifold of dimension 4''n'' with Pontrjagin classes p_i = p_i(M).
Friedrich Hirzebruch Friedrich Ernst Peter Hirzebruch ForMemRS (17 October 1927 – 27 May 2012) was a German mathematician, working in the fields of topology, complex manifolds and algebraic geometry, and a leading figure in his generation. He has been described as ...
showed that the ''L'' genus of ''M'' in dimension 4''n'' evaluated on the
fundamental class In mathematics, the fundamental class is a homology class 'M''associated to a connected orientable compact manifold of dimension ''n'', which corresponds to the generator of the homology group H_n(M,\partial M;\mathbf)\cong\mathbf . The fundam ...
of M, denoted /math>, is equal to \sigma(M), the
signature A signature (; from la, signare, "to sign") is a Handwriting, handwritten (and often Stylization, stylized) depiction of someone's name, nickname, or even a simple "X" or other mark that a person writes on documents as a proof of identity and ...
of ''M'' (i.e., the signature of the intersection form on the 2''n''th cohomology group of ''M''): :\sigma(M) = \langle L_n(p_1(M), \ldots, p_n(M)), rangle. This is now known as the Hirzebruch signature theorem (or sometimes the Hirzebruch index theorem). The fact that L_2 is always integral for a smooth manifold was used by John Milnor to give an example of an 8-dimensional
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with no
smooth structure In mathematics, a smooth structure on a manifold allows for an unambiguous notion of smooth function. In particular, a smooth structure allows one to perform mathematical analysis on the manifold. Definition A smooth structure on a manifold M is ...
. Pontryagin numbers can also be defined for PL manifolds, and Milnor showed that his PL manifold had a non-integral value of p_2, and so was not smoothable.


Application on K3 surfaces

Since projective K3 surfaces are smooth complex manifolds of dimension two, their only non-trivial
Pontryagin class In mathematics, the Pontryagin classes, named after Lev Pontryagin, are certain characteristic classes of real vector bundles. The Pontryagin classes lie in cohomology groups with degrees a multiple of four. Definition Given a real vector bundle ...
is p_1 in H^4(X). It can be computed as -48 using the tangent sequence and comparisons with complex chern classes. Since L_1 = -16, we have its signature. This can be used to compute its intersection form as a unimodular lattice since it has \operatorname\left(H^2(X)\right) = 22 , and using the classification of unimodular lattices.


Todd genus

The Todd genus is the genus of the formal power series :\frac = 1 + \fracz + \sum_^\infty (-1)^\fracz^ with B_ as before, Bernoulli numbers. The first few values are :\begin Td_0 &= 1 \\ Td_1 &= \frac1 c_1 \\ Td_2 &= \frac1 \left (c_2 + c_1^2 \right ) \\ Td_3 &= \frac1 c_1 c_2 \\ Td_4 &= \frac1 \left(-c_1^4 + 4 c_2 c_1^2 + 3c_2^2 + c_3 c_1 - c_4\right) \end The Todd genus has the particular property that it assigns the value 1 to all complex projective spaces (i.e. \mathrm_n(\mathbb^n) = 1), and this suffices to show that the Todd genus agrees with the arithmetic genus for algebraic varieties as the
arithmetic genus In mathematics, the arithmetic genus of an algebraic variety is one of a few possible generalizations of the genus of an algebraic curve or Riemann surface. Projective varieties Let ''X'' be a projective scheme of dimension ''r'' over a field '' ...
is also 1 for complex projective spaces. This observation is a consequence of the
Hirzebruch–Riemann–Roch theorem In mathematics, the Hirzebruch–Riemann–Roch theorem, named after Friedrich Hirzebruch, Bernhard Riemann, and Gustav Roch, is Hirzebruch's 1954 result generalizing the classical Riemann–Roch theorem on Riemann surfaces to all complex algebra ...
, and in fact is one of the key developments that led to the formulation of that theorem.


 genus

The  genus is the genus associated to the characteristic power series : Q(z) = \frac = 1 - \frac + \frac - \cdots (There is also an  genus which is less commonly used, associated to the characteristic series Q(16z).) The first few values are :\begin \hat_0 &= 1 \\ \hat_1 &= -\tfrac1p_1 \\ \hat_2 &= \tfrac1\left(-4p_2 + 7 p_1^2\right) \\ \hat_3 &= \tfrac1\left(-16p_3 + 44p_2 p_1 - 31 p_1^3\right) \\ \hat_4 &= \tfrac1\left(-192p_4 + 512 p_3 p_1 + 208p_2^2 - 904p_2 p_1^2 + 381p_1^4\right) \end The  genus of a
spin manifold In differential geometry, a spin structure on an orientable Riemannian manifold allows one to define associated spinor bundles, giving rise to the notion of a spinor in differential geometry. Spin structures have wide applications to mathemati ...
is an integer, and an even integer if the dimension is 4 mod 8 (which in dimension 4 implies
Rochlin's theorem In 4-dimensional topology, a branch of mathematics, Rokhlin's theorem states that if a smooth, closed 4-manifold ''M'' has a spin structure (or, equivalently, the second Stiefel–Whitney class w_2(M) vanishes), then the signature of its inters ...
) – for general manifolds, the  genus is not always an integer. This was proven by Hirzebruch and
Armand Borel Armand Borel (21 May 1923 – 11 August 2003) was a Swiss mathematician, born in La Chaux-de-Fonds, and was a permanent professor at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, United States from 1957 to 1993. He worked in ...
; this result both motivated and was later explained by the
Atiyah–Singer index theorem In differential geometry, the Atiyah–Singer index theorem, proved by Michael Atiyah and Isadore Singer (1963), states that for an elliptic differential operator on a compact manifold, the analytical index (related to the dimension of the sp ...
, which showed that the  genus of a spin manifold is equal to the index of its
Dirac operator In mathematics and quantum mechanics, a Dirac operator is a differential operator that is a formal square root, or half-iterate, of a second-order operator such as a Laplacian. The original case which concerned Paul Dirac was to factorise form ...
. By combining this index result with a Weitzenbock formula for the Dirac Laplacian,
André Lichnerowicz André Lichnerowicz (January 21, 1915, Bourbon-l'Archambault – December 11, 1998, Paris) was a noted French differential geometer and mathematical physicist of Polish descent. He is considered the founder of modern Poisson geometry. Biograp ...
deduced that if a compact spin manifold admits a metric with positive scalar curvature, its  genus must vanish. This only gives an obstruction to positive scalar curvature when the dimension is a multiple of 4, but
Nigel Hitchin Nigel James Hitchin FRS (born 2 August 1946) is a British mathematician working in the fields of differential geometry, gauge theory, algebraic geometry, and mathematical physics. He is a Professor Emeritus of Mathematics at the University ...
later discovered an analogous \Z_2-valued obstruction in dimensions 1 or 2 mod 8. These results are essentially sharp. Indeed, Mikhail Gromov, H. Blaine Lawson, and Stephan Stolz later proved that the  genus and Hitchin's \Z_2-valued analog are the only obstructions to the existence of positive-scalar-curvature metrics on simply-connected spin manifolds of dimension greater than or equal to 5.


Elliptic genus

A genus is called an elliptic genus if the power series Q(z) = z/f(z) satisfies the condition :^2 = 1 - 2\delta f^2 + \epsilon f^4 for constants \delta and \epsilon. (As usual, ''Q'' is the characteristic power series of the genus.) One explicit expression for ''f''(''z'') is :f(z) = \frac\operatorname\left( az, \frac \right) where :a = \sqrt and ''sn'' is the Jacobi elliptic function. Examples: *\delta = \epsilon = 1, f(z) = \tanh(z). This is the L-genus. *\delta = -\frac, \epsilon = 0, f(z) = 2\sinh\left(\fracz\right). This is the  genus. *\epsilon = \delta^2 , f(z) = \frac. This is a generalization of the L-genus. The first few values of such genera are: :\frac\delta p_1 :\frac \left \left (-4\delta^2 +18\epsilon \right )p_2+ \left (7\delta^2-9\epsilon \right )p_1^2\right /math> :\frac \left \left (16\delta^3 + 108\delta \epsilon \right )p_3 + \left (-44\delta^3 +18\delta \epsilon \right )p_2p_1 + \left (31\delta^3 -27\delta \epsilon \right )p_1^3\right /math> Example (elliptic genus for quaternionic projective plane) : :\begin \Phi_(HP^2) &= \int_\tfrac1\big -4\delta^2 +18\epsilon )p_2+(7\delta^2-9\epsilon )p_1^2\big\\ &= \int_\tfrac1\big -4\delta^2 +18\epsilon )(7u^2)+(7\delta^2-9\epsilon )(2u)^2\big\\ &= \int_ ^2 \epsilon \\ &= \epsilon \int_ ^2\\ &= \epsilon * 1 = \epsilon \end Example (elliptic genus for octonionic projective plane, or Cayley plane): :\begin \Phi_(OP^2) &= \int_\tfrac1 \left -192\delta^4 + 1728\delta^2\epsilon + 1512\epsilon^2)p_4 + (208\delta^4 - 1872\delta^2\epsilon + 1512\epsilon^2)p_2^2\right\\ &= \int_\tfrac1\big -192\delta^4 + 1728\delta^2\epsilon + 1512\epsilon^2)(39u^2) + (208\delta^4 - 1872\delta^2\epsilon + 1512\epsilon^2)(6u)^2\big\\ &= \int_\big \epsilon^2 u^2 \big\\ &= \epsilon^2\int_ \big u^2 \big\\ &= \epsilon^2* 1 = \epsilon^2 \\ &= \Phi_(HP^2) ^2 \end


Witten genus

The Witten genus is the genus associated to the characteristic power series :Q(z) = \frac = \exp\left(\sum_ \right) where σL is the Weierstrass sigma function for the lattice ''L'', and ''G'' is a multiple of an Eisenstein series. The Witten genus of a 4''k'' dimensional compact oriented smooth spin manifold with vanishing first Pontryagin class is a
modular form In mathematics, a modular form is a (complex) analytic function on the upper half-plane satisfying a certain kind of functional equation with respect to the group action of the modular group, and also satisfying a growth condition. The theory o ...
of weight 2''k'', with integral Fourier coefficients.


See also

*
Atiyah–Singer index theorem In differential geometry, the Atiyah–Singer index theorem, proved by Michael Atiyah and Isadore Singer (1963), states that for an elliptic differential operator on a compact manifold, the analytical index (related to the dimension of the sp ...
*
List of cohomology theories This is a list of some of the ordinary and generalized (or extraordinary) homology and cohomology theories in algebraic topology that are defined on the categories of CW complexes or spectra. For other sorts of homology theories see the links at ...


Notes


References

*Friedrich Hirzebruch'' Topological Methods in Algebraic Geometry'' Text of the original German version: http://hirzebruch.mpim-bonn.mpg.de/120/6/NeueTopologischeMethoden_2.Aufl.pdf * Friedrich Hirzebruch, Thomas Berger, Rainer Jung ''Manifolds and Modular Forms'' *Milnor, Stasheff, ''Characteristic classes'', * *{{springer, title=Elliptic genera, id=p/e110070 Topological methods of algebraic geometry Complex manifolds