Weitzenböck identity

Weitzenböck identity

In mathematics, in particular in differential geometry, mathematical physics, and representation theory a Weitzenbock identity expresses a relationship between two second-order elliptic operators on a manifold with the same leading symbol. Usually Weitzenbock formulae are implemented for "G"-invariant self-adjoint operators between vector bundles associated to some principal "G"-bundle, although the precise conditions under which such a formula exists are difficult to formulate. Instead of attempting to be completely general, then, this article presents three examples of Weitzenbock identities: from Riemannian geometry, spin geometry, and complex analysis.

Riemannian geometry

In Riemannian geometry there are two notions of the Laplacian on differential forms over an oriented compact Riemannian manifold "M". The first definition uses the divergence operator δ defined as the formal adjoint of the de Rham operator "d":::int_M langle alpha,deltaeta angle := int_Mlangle dalpha,eta anglewhere α is any "p"-form and β is any ("p"+1)-form, and langle -,- angle is the metric induced on the bundle of ("p"+1)-forms. The usual form Laplacian is then given by::Δ = dδ + δd.

On the other hand, the Levi-Civita connection supplies a differential operator:: abla:Omega^pM ightarrow T^*MotimesOmega^pMwhere Ωp"M" is the bundle of "p"-forms and "T"*M is the cotangent bundle of "M". The Bochner Laplacian is given by ::Delta'= abla^* ablawhere abla^* is the adjoint of abla.

The Weitzenbock formula then asserts that::Δ' - Δ = "A"where "A" is a linear operator of order zero involving only the curvature.

The precise form of "A" is given, up to an overall sign depending on curvature conventions, by::A=frac{1}{2}langle R( heta, heta,#),# angle + Ric( heta,#)where :*"R" is the Riemann curvature tensor, :*"Ric" is the Ricci tensor,:* heta:T^*MotimesOmega^pM ightarrowOmega^{p+1}M is the alternation map,:*#:Omega^{p+1}M ightarrow T^*MotimesOmega^pM is the universal derivation inverse to θ on 1-forms.

pin geometry

If "M" is an oriented spin manifold with Dirac operator ð, then one may form the spin Laplacian Δ = ð*ð + ðð* on the spin bundle. On the other hand, the Levi-Civita connection extends to the spin bundle to yield a differential operator:: abla:SM ightarrow T^*Motimes SMAs in the case of Riemannian manifolds, let Delta'= abla^* abla. This is another self-adjoint operator and, moreover, has the same leading symbol as the spin Laplacian. The Weitzenbock formula yields:::Delta'-Delta=-frac{1}{4}Scwhere "Sc" is the scalar curvature.

Complex differential geometry

If "M" is a compact Kähler manifold, there is a Weitzenbock formula relating the ar{partial}-Laplacian (see Dolbeault complex) and the Euclidean Laplacian on ("p","q")-forms. Specifically, let::Delta=ar{partial}^*ar{partial}+ar{partial}ar{partial}^*, and::Delta'=-sum_k abla_k abla_{ar{k in a unitary frame at each point.

According to the Weitzenbock formula, if α ε Ω(p,q)"M", then::Δ'α-Δα = "A"(α)where "A" is an operator of order zero involving the curvature. Specifically, if::alpha=alpha_{i_1i_2dots i_par{j}_1ar{j}_2dotsar{j}_q} in a unitary frame, then::A(alpha)=-sum_{k,j_s} Ric_{ar{j}_alpha}^{ar{kalpha_{i_1i_2dots i_par{j}_1ar{j}_2dotsar{k}dotsar{j}_q} with "k" in the "s"-th place.

Other Weitzenbock identities

*In conformal geometry there is a Weitzenbock formula relating a particular pair of differential operators defined on the tractor bundle. See Branson, T. and Gover, A.R., "Conformally Invariant Operators, Differential Forms, Cohomology and a Generalisation of Q-Curvature", "Communications in Partial Differential Equations", 30 (2005) 1611-1669.

References

*citation|title=Principles of algebraic geometry|first1=Philip|last1=Griffiths|first2=Joe|last2=Harris|authorlink1=Philip A. Griffiths|authorlink2=Joe Harris (mathematician)|publisher=Wiley-Interscience|publication-date=1994|isbn=978-0471050599|year=1978


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • List of mathematics articles (W) — NOTOC Wad Wadge hierarchy Wagstaff prime Wald test Wald Wolfowitz runs test Wald s equation Waldhausen category Wall Sun Sun prime Wallenius noncentral hypergeometric distribution Wallis product Wallman compactification Wallpaper group Walrasian… …   Wikipedia

  • Laplacian operators in differential geometry — In differential geometry there are a number of second order, linear, elliptic differential operators bearing the name Laplacian. This article provides an overview of some of them. Connection Laplacian The connection Laplacian is a differential… …   Wikipedia

  • Laplace operator — This article is about the mathematical operator. For the Laplace probability distribution, see Laplace distribution. For graph theoretical notion, see Laplacian matrix. Del Squared redirects here. For other uses, see Del Squared (disambiguation) …   Wikipedia

  • List of differential geometry topics — This is a list of differential geometry topics. See also glossary of differential and metric geometry and list of Lie group topics. Contents 1 Differential geometry of curves and surfaces 1.1 Differential geometry of curves 1.2 Differential… …   Wikipedia

  • Laplace-Beltrami operator — In differential geometry, the Laplace operator can be generalized to operate on functions defined on surfaces, or more generally on Riemannian and pseudo Riemannian manifolds. This more general operator goes by the name Laplace Beltrami operator …   Wikipedia

  • Bochner's formula — In mathematics, Bochner s formula is a statement relating harmonic functions on a Riemannian manifold (M, g) to the Ricci curvature. More specifically, if u : (M, g) ightarrow mathbb{R} is a harmonic function, so riangle g u = 0 ( riangle is the… …   Wikipedia

  • Levi-Civita connection — In Riemannian geometry, the Levi Civita connection is the torsion free Riemannian connection, i.e., the torsion free connection on the tangent bundle (an affine connection) preserving a given (pseudo )Riemannian metric.The fundamental theorem of… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”