Courant Algebroid
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In
differential geometry Differential geometry is a Mathematics, mathematical discipline that studies the geometry of smooth shapes and smooth spaces, otherwise known as smooth manifolds. It uses the techniques of Calculus, single variable calculus, vector calculus, lin ...
, a field of
mathematics Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, a Courant algebroid is a vector bundle together with an inner product and a compatible bracket more general than that of a
Lie algebroid In mathematics, a Lie algebroid is a vector bundle A \rightarrow M together with a Lie bracket on its space of sections \Gamma(A) and a vector bundle morphism \rho: A \rightarrow TM, satisfying a Leibniz rule. A Lie algebroid can thus be thought ...
. It is named after Theodore Courant, who had implicitly devised in 1990 the standard prototype of Courant algebroid through his discovery of a skew-symmetric bracket on TM\oplus T^*M, called Courant bracket today, which fails to satisfy the Jacobi identity. The general notion of Courant algebroid was introduced by Zhang-Ju Liu,
Alan Weinstein Alan David Weinstein (born 17 June 1943) is a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley, working in the field of differential geometry, and especially in Poisson manifold, Poisson geometry. Early life and education ...
and Ping Xu in their investigation of doubles of
Lie bialgebroid In differential geometry, a field in mathematics, a Lie bialgebroid consists of two compatible Lie algebroids defined on dual vector bundles. Lie bialgebroids are the vector bundle version of Lie bialgebras. Definition Preliminary notions A ...
s in 1997.


Definition

A Courant algebroid consists of the data a
vector bundle In mathematics, a vector bundle is a topological construction that makes precise the idea of a family of vector spaces parameterized by another space X (for example X could be a topological space, a manifold, or an algebraic variety): to eve ...
E\to M with a bracket cdot,\cdot\Gamma E \times \Gamma E \to \Gamma E, a non degenerate fiber-wise inner product \langle \cdot, \cdot \rangle: E\times E\to M\times\R, and a bundle map \rho:E\to TM (called anchor) subject to the following axioms: # Jacobi identity: phi, [\chi, \psi = \phi, \chi">chi,_\psi.html" ;"title="phi, [\chi, \psi">phi, [\chi, \psi = \phi, \chi \psi] + [\chi, [\phi, \psi # Leibniz rule: [\phi, f\psi] = \rho(\phi)f\psi +f[\phi, \psi] # Obstruction to skew-symmetry: phi,\psi+ [\psi,\phi] = \tfrac12 D\langle \phi,\psi \rangle # Invariance of the inner product under the bracket: \rho(\phi)\langle \psi,\chi \rangle= \langle phi,\psi\chi \rangle + \langle \psi, phi,\chi\rangle where \phi, \chi, \psi are sections of ''E'' and ''f'' is a smooth function on the base manifold ''M''. The map ''D: \mathcal^\infty(M) \to \Gamma E'' is the composition \kappa^\rho^T d: \mathcal^\infty(M) \to \Gamma E, with ''d: \mathcal^\infty(M) \to \Omega^1 (M)'' the de Rham differential, \rho^T the dual map of \rho, and ''\kappa'' the isomorphism E \to E^* induced by the inner product.


Skew-symmetric definition

An alternative definition can be given to make the bracket skew-symmetric as : \phi,\psi= \tfrac12\big( phi,\psi psi,\phibig.) This no longer satisfies the Jacobi identity axiom above. It instead fulfills a homotopic Jacobi identity. : \phi,\psi,\chi\,">\psi,\chi.html" ;"title="\phi,\psi,\chi">\phi,\psi,\chi\, +\text = DT(\phi,\psi,\chi) where ''T'' is : T(\phi,\psi,\chi)=\frac13\langle phi,\psi\chi\rangle +\text The Leibniz rule and the invariance of the scalar product become modified by the relation \phi,\psi = phi,\psi-\tfrac12 D\langle \phi,\psi\rangle and the violation of skew-symmetry gets replaced by the axiom :: \rho\circ D = 0 The skew-symmetric bracket ''\cdot,\cdot'' together with the derivation ''D'' and the Jacobiator ''T'' form a strongly homotopic Lie algebra.


Properties

The bracket '' cdot,\cdot/math>'' is not skew-symmetric as one can see from the third axiom. Instead it fulfills a certain Jacobi identity (first axiom) and a Leibniz rule (second axiom). From these two axioms one can derive that the anchor map ''\rho'' is a morphism of brackets: :: \rho phi,\psi= rho(\phi),\rho(\psi). The fourth rule is an invariance of the inner product under the bracket. Polarization leads to :: \rho(\phi)\langle \chi,\psi\rangle= \langle phi,\chi\psi\rangle +\langle \chi, phi,\psirangle .


Examples

An example of the Courant algebroid is given by the Dorfman bracket on the direct sum TM\oplus T^*M with a twist introduced by Ĺ evera in 1988, defined as: :: +\xi, Y+\eta:= ,Y(\mathcal_X\,\eta -\iota_Y d\xi +\iota_X \iota_Y H) where ''X,Y'' are vector fields, \xi, \eta are 1-forms and ''H'' is a closed 3-form twisting the bracket. This bracket is used to describe the integrability of generalized complex structures. A more general example arises from a
Lie algebroid In mathematics, a Lie algebroid is a vector bundle A \rightarrow M together with a Lie bracket on its space of sections \Gamma(A) and a vector bundle morphism \rho: A \rightarrow TM, satisfying a Leibniz rule. A Lie algebroid can thus be thought ...
''A'' whose induced differential on A^* will be written as ''d'' again. Then use the same formula as for the Dorfman bracket with ''H'' an ''A''-3-form closed under ''d''. Another example of a Courant algebroid is a quadratic Lie algebra, i.e. a Lie algebra with an invariant scalar product. Here the base manifold is just a point and thus the anchor map (and ''D'') are trivial. The example described in the paper by Weinstein et al. comes from a Lie bialgebroid: if ''A'' is a Lie algebroid (with anchor \rho_A and bracket ,.A), also its dual A^* is a Lie algebroid (inducing the differential d_ on \wedge^* A) and d_ ,YA= _X,YA+ ,d_YA (where on the right-hand side you extend the ''A''-bracket to \wedge^*A using graded Leibniz rule). This notion is symmetric in ''A'' and A^* (see Roytenberg). Here E=A\oplus A^* with anchor \rho(X+\alpha)=\rho_A(X)+\rho_(\alpha) and the bracket is the skew-symmetrization of the above in X and ''\alpha'' (equivalently in ''Y'' and \beta): : +\alpha,Y+\beta ( ,YA +\mathcal^_Y-\iota_\beta d_X) +( alpha,\beta +\mathcal^A_X\beta-\iota_Yd_\alpha).


Dirac structures

Given a Courant algebroid with the inner product \langle \cdot, \cdot \rangle of split signature (e.g. the standard one TM\oplus T^*M), a Dirac structure is a maximally isotropic integrable vector subbundle ''L \to M'', i.e. : \langle L,L\rangle \equiv 0, : \mathrm\,L=\tfrac12\mathrm\,E, : Gamma L,\Gamma Lsubset \Gamma L.


Examples

As discovered by Courant and parallel by Dorfman, the graph of a 2-form \omega \in \Omega^2(M) is maximally isotropic and moreover integrable if and only if d \omega = 0, i.e. the 2-form is closed under the de Rham differential, i.e. is a presymplectic structure. A second class of examples arises from bivectors \Pi\in\Gamma(\wedge^2 TM) whose graph is maximally isotropic and integrable if and only if Pi,\Pi= 0, i.e. \rho is a
Poisson bivector In differential geometry, a field in mathematics, a Poisson manifold is a smooth manifold endowed with a Poisson structure. The notion of Poisson manifold generalises that of symplectic manifold, which in turn generalises the phase space from Hami ...
on ''M''.


Generalized complex structures

Given a Courant algebroid with inner product of split signature, a generalized complex structure ''L \to M'' is a Dirac structure in the
complexified In mathematics, the complexification of a vector space over the field of real numbers (a "real vector space") yields a vector space over the complex number field, obtained by formally extending the scaling of vectors by real numbers to include t ...
Courant algebroid with the additional property : L \cap \bar = 0 where \bar means complex conjugation with respect to the standard complex structure on the complexification. As studied in detail by Gualtieri, the generalized complex structures permit the study of geometry analogous to
complex geometry In mathematics, complex geometry is the study of geometry, geometric structures and constructions arising out of, or described by, the complex numbers. In particular, complex geometry is concerned with the study of space (mathematics), spaces su ...
.


Examples

Examples are, besides presymplectic and Poisson structures, also the graph of a complex structure J: TM \to TM.


References


Further reading

* {{cite arXiv , eprint=math.DG/9910078 , last1=Roytenberg , first1=Dmitry , title=Courant algebroids, derived brackets and even symplectic supermanifolds , date=1999 Differential geometry