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Contents
Chapter 1: Integrable and soluble systems II. 1.1 Introduction
by
II.1.2 Twistors and
SU(3) monopoles by
II.1.3
Monopoles
and
L.J.Mason A.Dancer 11
Yang-Baxter equations by M.F.Atiyah
II.1.4 A non-Hausdorff mini-twistor space
by
II.1.5 The 3-wave interaction from the self-dual II. 1.6 The
Bogomolny hierarchy
II.1.7
H-Space:
II.1.8
Integrable systems
II.1.9 Twistor
a
universal
higher
Yang
order
integrable system? by
integrability by
II.1.12 Harmonic II.1.13
II. 1.14
morphisms
More
Monopoles,
II.1.15 Twistor
theory
Chapter
2:
by
harmonic
and
correspondences
Applications
II.2.3 A theorem
split signature by
spinor
L.J.Mason 34
L.J.Mason 39
K.P.Tod 45
morphisms
by
K.P.
Tod 47
fields by P.Baird and J.C. Wood 49
by
62 M.G.Eastwood
between twistor spaces of Wolf spaces
to conformal
on
proof
II.2.7 A
simplified proof
of
description
conformally
a
by L.P.Hughston83
diagram’ by B.P.Jeffryes85
eight
dimensions
of Robinson’s theorem
II.2.6 A
75 L.J.Mason
by L.P.Hughston79
null fields in six dimensions
II.2.4 A six dimensional ‘Penrose
II.2.8 A twistor
geometry
by M.G.Eastwood, L.P.Hughston &
II.2.5 Null surfaces in six and
II.2.10 A
27 I.A.B.Strachan
66 P.Z.Kobak
II.2.1 Introduction
by
I.A.B. Strachan 20
Yang-Mills equations by
and mini-twistor space
II.2.2 Differential geometry in six dimensions
II.2.9 A
K.P.Tod 17
30 L.J.Mason
in
morphisms
equations by
and harmonic maps from Riemann surfaces
II.1.16 Contact birational
by
by
self-duality equations
on
harmonic
Mills
spectral problems by
II.1.10 On the symmetries of the reduced self-dual II.1.11 Global solutions of the
M.K.Murray13
23 L.J.Mason
and curved twistor spaces
and
theory
and
&
K.P.Tod 14
by L.P.Hughston87
by L.P.Hughston91
theorem of Sommers by L.P.Hughston93
of null self-dual Maxwell fields
by
96 M.G.Eastwood
invariant connection and the space of leaves of
T.N. Bailey 99
conformally
invariant connection
by T.N.Bailey106
a
shear free congruence
62
II.2.11 Relative
by
cohomology
series, Robinson’s Theorem and multipole expansions
T.N. Bailey 107
II.2.12 Preferred parameters
by
power
in conformal manifolds
on curves
T.N. Bailey & M.G.Eastwood 110
II.2.13 The Fefferman-Graham conformal invariant II.2.14 On the
weights
of
II.2.15 Tensor
products
conformally
invariant operators
of Verma modules and
II.2.16 Structure of the
112 M.G.Eastwood
by
by
M.G.Eastwood 114
conformally invariant
bundle for manifolds with conformal
jet
or
tensors
projective
by
R.J.Baston
structure
by A.R.Gover123 II.2.17
Exceptional
invariants
by
II.2.18 The conformal Einstein
127 A.R.Gover
equations by
II.2.19 Self-dual manifolds need not be
by T.N.Bailey &
3:
Chapter
II.3.3
cosmological
Cosmological
135 L.J.Mason
models
models in 𝕡5
by
by
on
conserved vectorial
by
R.Penrose138
142 T.R.Hurd
II.3.4 Curved space twistors and GHP II.3.5 A note
conformal to Einstein
general relativity
by L.P.Hughston &
II.3.1 Introduction II.3.2 Twistors for
locally
M.G.Eastwood 132
of
Aspects
131 L.J.Mason & R.J.Baston
by B.P.Jeffryes146
quantities
associated with the Kerr solution
L.P.Hughston148
II.3.6 Further remarks
on
conserved vectorial quantities associated with the Kerr solution
by L.P.Hughston152 II.3.7 Non-Hausdorff twistor spaces for Kerr and Schwarzschild II.3.8 More
on
the twistor
description
of the Kerr solution
II.3.9 An alternative form of the Ernst II.3.10
Light
II.3.11 Mass
by
rays
near
positivity
i0:
from
and the structure of
4:
problem
Quasi-local
in
general relativity by
by
R.Penrose163
space-like infinity
power series
quasi-local
momentum
K.P.Tod 177
theory
of 2-surface
by
V. Thomas174
mass
II.4.1 Introduction: two-surface twistors and
II.4.2 A
J.Fletcher157
potential by J.Fletcher160
mass-positivity theorem by
focussing
154 J.Fletcher
A.Ashtekar & R.Penrose169
II.3.12 The initial value
Chapter
a new
by
by
(‘superficial’)
twistors
by
R.Penrose180
& angular
momentum
120
II.4.3 The kinematic sequence II.4.4 Two-surface twistors
(revisited) by L.P.Hughston momentum flux and
angular
II.4.5 General-relativistic kinematics??
Spinors
II.4.9 The index of the 2-twistor of Pell’s
occurrence
Sparling 3-form,
equations by
equation
Symplectic geometry
by
II.4.15 ‘New
improved’ quasi-local
quasi-local
Quasi-local
mass
mass
by
W.T. Shaw 207
in twistor
theory by
K.P.Tod 212
general relativity
and
quasi-local
mass
II.4.18 Two-surface twistors for II.4.19 An
example
suggested
of
a
mass
Higher-dimensional Embedding
II.4.23
Asymptotically
224 by W.T.Shaw
and the Schwarzschild solution
Killing
by
R.Penrose232
by B.P.Jeffryes240
vectors
large spheres by
244 W.T.Shaw
two-surface twistor space with
II.4.22
220
229 K.P.Tod
further modification to the
II.4.21
II.4.24 Two-surface
by B.P.Jeffryes220
N.M.J.Woodhouse238
II.4.17 Two-surface twistors and
two-surface twistors
2-surfaces in 𝕔𝕄 anti-de Sitter
by
complex
quasi-local by
determinant
formula
by
by B.P.Jeffryes
R.Penrose251
R. Penrose252
R.Penrose255
space-times by R.Kelly257
pseudo-twistors by B.P.Jeffryes264
II.4.25 Two-surface twistors and
Index
204 M.G.Eastwood
of ℐ+ and 2-surface twistors
on
II.4.26 A
by
210 R.J.Baston
the Hamiltonian of
II.4.14 More
II.4.20 A
twistors
215 L.J.Mason
by
II.4.16
199 spacelike infinity by W.T.Shaw
quasi-local quantities by
II.4.12 Dual two-surface twistor space II.4.13
the Einstein-Maxwell
R.Penrose194
superficial
II.4.8 ‘Maximal’ twistors & local and
II.4.11 The
by
ZRM fields and twistors at
II.4.7 The ‘normal situation’ for
II.4.10 An
multipoles of
by W.T.Shaw 188 ℐ+
field at
II.4.6
& T.R.Hurd186
quasi-local
mass
hypersurface
construction with
twistors
by
R.Penrose266
positive energy by A.J.Dougan &
268 L.J.Mason
250
Editors and Contributors
Editors L.J.Mason , St. Peter’s
College
and the Mathematical Institute, Oxford.
e-mail: lmason @maths.ox.ac.uk
L.P.Hughston
,
.
Merrill Lynch International and
e-mail: lane @lonnds.ml.com
London.
Kings College,
.
P.Z.Kobak , Scuola Internazionale
Superiore
e-mail: [email protected]
di Studi
Avanzati,
Trieste.
.
Contributors A.Ashtekar , Center for Gravitational e-mail: [email protected]
.
Physics
and
Geometry, Pennsylvania State University,
M.F.Atiyah, Trinity College, Cambridge.
T.N.Bailey Department of Mathematics, University ,
P.Baird , School of
Mathematics, University
R.J.Baston , Paribas A.Dancer ,
A.J
Department
of
Capital
Applied
.Dougan ,
Edinburgh.
e-mail: [email protected]
.
of Leeds.
Markets, London.
Mathematics
The
of
and
Theoretical
Mathematical
Physics,
Cambridge.
Institute,
M.G.Eastwood , Department of Pure Mathematics, e-mail: [email protected] .
Oxford.
University
of
Adelaide.
J.Fletcher Fletcher & Partners, Salisbury, UK. ,
A.R.Gover ,
Department of Pure Mathematics, University
T.R.Hurd , Department of Mathematics e-mail: [email protected] .
B.P.Jeffryes ,
R.Kelly
Schlumberger
,
Cambridge
The Mathematical
M.K.Murray ,
R.Penrose ,
Department
Wadham
W.T.Shaw ,
and
Statistics,
Research
Ltd,
McMaster
Cambridge.
Institute, Oxford (but of
College
Pure
and
Oxford
see
e-mail:
note on
Mathematics,
the
of Adelaide.
University,
[email protected] .
p.257).
University
Mathematical
Systems
Ontario.
of
Institute,
Adelaide.
Oxford.
Solutions,
Oxford.
I.A.B.Strachan , Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Newcastle. e-mail: I. A. B. [email protected] . V.Thomas, The Mathematical Institute, Oxford. e-mail: [email protected] . K.P.Tod, St John's College and the Mathematical Institute,
Oxford.
J
.C.Wood ,
School
e-mail:
of
Mathematics,
[email protected]
University
of
N.M.J.Woodhouse , Wadham College e-mail: [email protected] .
Leeds.
and
e-mail:
the
.
[email protected] .
Mathematical
Institute,
Oxford.
Preface
It was in 1976 that a group of us at the Mathematical Institute, Oxford, began to circulate Twistor Newsletter, an informal publication consisting of short articles written mostly by members of Roger Penrose's research group, relating to active work going on in twistor theory. This was around the time of the publication of the original non-linear graviton construction. It has been said that the art of doing mathematics consists in finding that special case which contains all the germs of generality. The non-linear graviton was just such a 'special case', and as a consequence interest in the theory increased significantly, both among physicists ( especially relativists), but also among an increasing number of pure mathematicians. There was thus a small but steady demand from colleagues outside of Oxford and abroad for the informal communication of new ideas and the latest results, and Twistor Newsletter neatly fit the bill. It was no doubt an odd sort of journal, but it was successful in its own way, and after thirty-eight issues and eighteen years it continues to thrive.
By 1979 enough material had been stockpiled on this basis to warrant publication in a volume called Advances in Twistor Theory, edited by R.S.Ward and one of us (LPH). In it the collected articles were grouped into four broad (sometimes overlapping) categories: massless fields and sheaf cohomology, curved twistor spaces, twistors and elementary particles, and twistor diagrams. This proved to be a useful book, and so we were encouraged to gather together a further collection of subsequent Twistor Newletterarticles to edit for publication under the general title Further Advances in Twistor Theory. Volume I of this new series (which appeared in 1990) was called Applications of the Penrose Transform, and here we present Volume II, which is called Integrable Systems, Conformal Geometry, and Gravitation.
of
logically grouping
on
is
as
variety of related to basic
new
(let
follows. Volume I contains material of sheaf
higher
articles into volumes
improving
and
on
twistor contour
physics,
dimensional
directions;
cohomology as
well
analogues.
(whether
it be
alone
chapters!).
The scheme
primarily concerned,
in
one
we
way or
integral formulae.
as a
host of
loosely
are
properties
established
rigorously)
out and or
and
exploratory, launching
clarifying (and
conjectured.
in
some cases
a
applications to
out in
All of this material refers in
to the well known ‘Penrose
transform’, and thus
generic
a
characteristic feature of much of the analysis in Volume I is linearity. The contents include
or
applications
of
greatly
a
way
way
another, with
also various serious attempts at
speculative
straightening
already
are
simple
mathematically motivated interesting generalizations
Some of the articles
results
There
a
eventually settled
flat twistor space, and with the elucidation of the
whereas others set about
generalizing)
and it has not been easy to find
extensive,
The range of material in these volumes is
(1)
an
overview
(2)
(with
concrete
both mathematical
(i.e.
contour
approaches twistor
cohomology,
integral) approaches
to the Penrose
diagram theory
and
(Methods
For
transform, (4)
twistor
transform, (3)
theory
and
and
one
II,
contains
applications
studies non-linear structures
sometimes associate
space that
abstract
physics), (i.e. cohomological)
elementary particle physics, (5)
(6)
sources
and currents, relative
and non-Hausdorff twistor spaces.
when
example,
point.
to the Penrose
of flat twistor space to non-linear
that introduce ‘deformed’ twistor spaces will appear in volume
applied
one can
and the motivation for the ideas from basic
scattering amplitude evaluation,
The present work, Volume
be
background
local twistors
approximates
Another
example
a
flat twistor space in
are
most
lying a
either in
or on
natural way to
a
given
Flat twistor space
twistor space.
some
the flat space twistors associated to the
closely
III.)
problems. can
Alternatively,
otherwise non-linear
conformally flat
conformal manifold to second order at
object.
Minkowski some
given
arises with 2-surface twistors, which form the solution space of the linear
2-surface twistor equation. Chapter 1 contains articles on integrable or soluble non-linear equations. Here many of the non-linear constructions arise from the study of holomorphic vector bundles on twistor space, which give rise to solutions of the self-dual Yang-Mills equations by virtue of Ward's correspondence. This gives constructions for a wide variety of integrable equations. In fact it has emerged that most such equations arise as symmetry reductions of the self-dual Yang-Mills equations. Solutions of other non-linear equations can be shown to correspond to submanifolds of flat twistor space. Solutions of harmonic map equations and the equations for harmonic morphisms arise in this way.
Chapter 2 contains articles on conformal differential geometry. Here the linear twister spaces involved are the spinors in six dimensions. These are applied to the study of generalizations of the Kerr theorem and Robinson's theorem in six dimensions. Cartan's conformal connection in four dimensions has structure group SO( 4, 2). Its associated spin connection is the local twistor connection. This is used to study conformal invariants and invariant differential operators amongst other topics.
Chapter 3 contains articles on vanous aspects of general relativity. Flat space twisters are applied to cosmological models for which the underlying conformal structure is conformally flat. Space-times admitting solutions of the two-index twistor equation are also studied. In another range of applications, advantage is taken of the fact that the equations for space-times with two symmetries are equivalent to the self-dual Yang-Mills equations with two symmetries, so flat space twistor methods can be applied. We also include some 'exceptional' articles, viz., the Penrose-Ashtekar proof of the positive energy theorem and Thomas's study of the initial value problem for general relativity by exact sets and power series.
Finally, chapter This
uses
4 is concerned with the
2-surface twistors
as
essential
development
ingredients
in
of Penrose’s quasi-local a
mass
construction.
definition of the energy momentum and
angular momentum of the gravitational
and matter fields
threading through
a
space-like
two-surface
in space-time. The chapters start with introductions that give some of the background to the material in each chapter, and a summary of the contents of each chapter. We hope that this introductory material, together with that in volumes O and I, will help make these volumes relatively self contained, even for the non-expert.
Our warm thanks to Roger Penrose, Florence Tsou, their help in the production of this volume.
Debby
Morgan,
and
—L.J. Mason, L.P.
A note
on
global
article 1 in
chapter
preceeding
we mean
the
contributors
Hughston,
R.S.
Ward, editors, Pitman, 1979)
as
for
and P.Z. Kobak, November 1994.
structure and cross references. We refer to the
Theory (L.P. Hughston & volume
all
original
Volume
0,
Advances in Twistor
and
by ∮0.5.1
5 of that book. In the current Further Advances in Twistor the present book is Volume I:
article 3 of
chapter
the present work, Volume II:
2 of that book.
Applications of
By ∮∮II.4.5-8
the Penrose
we mean
theory series,
the
Transform. By ∮I.2.3
articles 5 to 8 of
Integrable Systems, Conformal Geometry,
we mean
chapter
and Gravitation.
4 of
Chapter
1
and soluble
Integrable
systems
§II.1.1 Introduction by L.J.Mason Nonlinear differential
analysis
of nonlinear
equations.
The most
differential
partial
correspondence
There
equations.
where the solutions of certain nonlinear one
impressive applications of twistor theory
partial
differential
with deformations of twistor spaces
constructions arises from the fact that the twistor For local solutions the twistor
original equations.
functions, and in general it
original equations
surfaces in R3 in terms of
free
a
with self-dual
Weyl
correspondence bundles
on
These
analogues
are
described in and
which
§§II.1.2
mostly based
-
11
on
also three articles
corresponds
In today’s
applications
§§II.1.12
-
spinor fields,
analyzes
description
to a solution of the
parlance we
would say that this free
holomorphic tangent
started with Penrose’s nonlinear
are
Yang-Mills equations
concerned with
integrable
Ward’s correspondence
on
§§II.1.7
-
them
.
using
given their
and
analogous
holomorphic
vector
in
systems and their twistor constructions.
(although
there
are some
8 ) and will be described in
harmonic morphisms
morphism
13 A detailed
is
graviton
is established between Ricci flat metrics
correspondence
to the intersection of a
harmonic
a
of these
be realized in terms of free
in minitwistor space, the
curve
construction noted in
graviton
ℙℕ. The basic idea of are
a
utility
tractable than the
is Weierstrass’ construction of minimal
( §§II.1.12
of the Kerr theorem. The Kerr theorem states that
Minkowski space
usually
can
more
to
(Ward 1977).
in twistor space
are
with the nonlinear
usually
are
one
equations directly.
between solutions of the self-dual
regions
There
in which
be shown to be in
curvature and deformations of twistor space. R.S. Ward then found an
In this chapter, articles
later.
Modern
can
structures thereon. The
description
general spirit
holomorphic
a
sphere.
construction, (Penrose 1976),
or
descriptions
holomorphic function.
function describes
bundle of the Riemann
number of twistor constructions
equations
be easier to pass from the twistor
can
than to solve these nonlinear
Probably the first construction in this
holomorphic
are now a
arise in the
a
-
geodesic
14 ),
which
connections more
are
detail
Euclidean
shear free congruence in
holomorphic hypersurface
in twistor space with
and its connections with the standard Kerr theorem
analysis of their properties, including connections
§II.1.14 Finally .
complexification
there is
and
an
an
article
article on
on
harmonic maps
minimal
spheres
in
with
monopoles
( §II.1.15 )
(symmetric)
Riemannian manifolds using generalizations of the Weierstrass construction ( §II.1.16 ).
DOI: 10.1201/9780429332548-1
1.
Integrable
and soluble systems
Twistor theory and with
a
circle of ideas
originating
Yang-Mills equations
in the
of nonlinear differential obtain
can
large
and leads to
(1987),
developed
concerning
equations that, despite
emerged
over a
their
nonlinearity,
theory
number of years
by
of
(1992).
There is
and soluble systems
are
still
book in
concerned
information about
general
Ward
following
an
outline of this
new
overview
Most of the technical details
self-duality.
also Ward 1977, Ward
&
Wells
Yang-Mills equations.
work with ‘low
technology’
algebra
of
classes of
(1985, 1986),
Hitchin
and in various lectures
preparation
on
this
topic by
by
Mason &
are
on
integrable systems arising from
omitted but there
are
ℝ4,
connection
some
It is convenient, when
sufficient references
DDa—=d∂
fixed group G
§1.4.0 (see
discussing integrable systems,
versions of the Ward transform. The self-dual
with coordinates xa,
on a
twistor
1989).
The self-dual
equations
one
(1995).
in the
on
so
This overview
to fill in the gaps. Further details of the basic Ward construction itself can be found in
defined
systems
paradigm for integrability,
a
including
are
relatively tractable,
Sparling (1989, 1992), a
are
completely integrable systems.
many workers
See also Witten
chapter
‘universal’ role for the self-dual
is that the twistor construction constitutes
Mason &
and
possible
precise analytic
(1988),
give
a
integrable systems. Integrable
Woodhouse & Mason
Woodhouse
theory
of
theory
substantial unification of the
a
M.F.Atiyah. I
with R.S. Ward
families of exact solutions and
solutions. What has
has been
The first few articles in this
integrable systems.
a —
=
0,1,2,3, and metric ds2
Aa where d∂
(usually
a
=
=
d∂d∂a and Aa
Mills
to
equations
are
dx0■·dxx + dx1 •·dx2. They
are
—
finite dimensional group of
Yang
Aa(xb)
£∈llwhere llis the Lie
matrices).
The connection Aa
is defined modulo the gauge freedom: a
The self-dual
Yang-Mills equations
[D0, D2] which
are
the
compatibility
are
=
[D1, D2]
conditions
[D0
[D0 D3]
=
+
[D1, D2]
+ , D2 + λD3]
=
=
0
0 for the linear system of
equations
left-parenthesis upper D 0 plus lamda times upper D 1 right-parenthesis times psi equals left-parenthesis upper D 2 plus lamda times upper D 3 right-parenthesis times psi equals 0
(1) where
λ ∈ ℂ
and ψ
is
a
vector in some
The Ward construction of solutions of the self-dual In ‘low
provides
to one
Yang-Mills equations
technology’ language,
self-dual
representation
a one
Yang-Mills equations
one as
goes from
follows.
a
of l.
correspondence and
between gauge
holomorphic vector
bundle
on
equivalence
bundles
dual twistor space to
on a
regions
classes in ℙ𝕋*.
solution of the
§11.1.1 Choose local coordinates and ω2 for the
=
x3
—
region
λx2. One needs at least
near
λ
=
bundles have
a
Čech description
valued
‘patching’
or
! 9;𝕋
that the incidence relations
so
coordinate chart,
one more
large enough region
to cover a
corresponding
can
the bundle
‘clutching’
effectively
local solution
on
to the
point
at
variety of different representations; the
In the
function is
∞
of the line
complement
(λ,ω1,ω2)
can
be obtained from such
a
=
x1
—
case) by
covered is the vector
‘Čech’ and ‘Dolbeault’.
holomorphic SL(N, ℂ)
a
away from λ
=
0. The
patching
to gauge freedom. The
subject
λx0
(1/λ, ω1/λ, ω2/λ)
space-time). Holomorphic
this
(in
=
λ1
(the region
most basic are labelled
function but is
general
patching matrix. patching function P,
differentiation of the solution
by
in
P(λ, ω1, ω2) holomorphic
function
When the bundle is described in terms of a is reconstructed
in twistor space
infinity
be characterized
freely prescribable
a
(λ', ω'1, w'2)
are
Introduction
G±
of
a
the solution
Aa(xb)
on
space-time
parametrized Riemann-Hilbert problem:
up er G plus left-parenthesis x Superscript a Baseline comma lamda right-parenthesis equals up er G Subscript minus Baseline left-parenthesis x Superscript a Baseline comma lamda right-parenthesis up er P left-parenthesis lamda times comma x Superscript 1 Baseline minus lamda times x Superscript 0 Baseline comma x cubed minus lamda times x squared right-parenthesis period
(2) Here
G+
is
nonsingular
Note that the values in a
on
patching
SL(n, ℂ)
|λ|
> 0
including
function P is
at the
point λ
=
∞, and G_ is nonsingular
defined for ∞> |λ|
only
the Birkhoff factorization theorem tells
us
> 0.
Given
at least
that,
on
codimension-one subset of 𝕄, there exist solutions to the above factorization
unique
up to
premultiplication by
The self-dual that G± is
a
Yang-Mills
matrix function of xa alone
by
the
on
generic
|λ|
< ∞.
P with
complement
problem. They
of
are
virtue of Liouville’s theorem.
attempting
to find a connection
Aa such
solution of the linear system
(D0 We find that
a
connection is reconstructed by
a
we
+
λD1)G±
(D2
=
+ λD3)G±
=
0.
would have to have up er A 0 plus lamda times up er A 1 equals StartSet left-parenthesis partial-dif erential plus lamda partial-dif erential right-parenthesis times up er G Subscript plus-or-minus Baseline EndSet up er G Subscript plus-or-minus Superscript negative 1 Baseline comma
with
a
similar formula for A2 + λA3. It turns out that this
read off A0 and A1. The
consistency
equation
is consistent and allows
us
to
follows because
StartSet left-parenthesi partial-dif erential plus lamda partial-dif erential right-parenthesi times up er G Subscript minus Baseline EndSet up er G Subscript minus Superscript negative 1 Baseline equals StartSet left-parenthesi partial-dif erential plus lamda partial-dif erential right-parenthesi times up er G Subscript plus Baseline EndSet up er G Subscript plus Superscript negative 1
which is
a
consequence of
and A1 because the and the
expression
equation (2)
expression with
G+
with G_
has
a
and the fact that
implies
simple pole
extension of Liouville’s theorem, be linear in
satisfy
the self-dual
Yang-Mills equations
as
that the
at λ.
λ
=
right
∞, so
The
there
(∂0 + λ∂1)P
are
=
hand side is
the whole
corresponding
0. One
can
holomorphic
read off A0 for
expression must, by
connection must
solutions, G_ and
G+
to
|λ|
1 Phys. Lett. ,
,
,
-
.
Baxter , R. J. , Perk , J. H. H. and Au-Yang , H. ( 1988 ) New solutions of the the Chiral Potts model , Phys. Lett. A 128 (3,4 ), p. 138 - 142
star-triangle
relations for
.
§II.1.4 A Non-Hausdorff Mini-twistor Space by
K.P.Tod
(TN
This note is about another
complex
manifold
theory.
A mini-twistor space
Weyl satisfies the
example
space
of
funny a
Ж
non-Hausdorff
ways,
a
2-complex-dimensional
condition. Since it is defined a
mini-twistor space is
always
particularly simple Einstein-Weyl space
to be non-Hausdorff in a
fairly
tame way.
as a
space of
1990)
arising naturally
is the 4-real-dimensional space of directed
III, which becomes
Einstein-Weyl
wind around in an
example of a
30, June
geodesics
manifold if the
geodesics,
and
in twistor
of
a
Weyl
3-real-dimensional space
geodesics
can
liable to be non-Hausdorff. I will describe where the mini-twistor space
can
be
seen
Recall first that metric
[g]
a
Weyl
space III is
which is preserved
by
D.
a
manifold with
Given
a
between conformal metric and connection connection and
1-form ωa. Under
a
symmetric
a
choice gab of that
means
change-of-choice
connection D and
representative metric,
a
the
conformal
compatibility
define D in terms of the metric
we can
of representative metric
we
have
g Subscript a b Baseline right-ar ow normal upper Omega squared g Subscript a b Baseline times semicolon omega Subscript a Baseline right-ar ow omega Subscript a Baseline plus 2 nabla log normal upper Omega
(1) so
that
we can
e.g. Hitchin
think of
(1980),
Jones
The connection D has
symmetric. to the
The
Tod
& a
as
space
(1985)
the pair
metric.
condition
This
(gab,ωa) subject
and Pedersen
Riemann tensor and
Einstein-Weyl
(conformal)
representative
Weyl
a
a
Tod
&
For
.
more
details
see
(1993).
Ricci tensor, but the Ricci tensor is not
necessarily
III is that the symmetrised Ricci tensor be proportional
on
be written out
an
equation
metric and the 1-form ωa. In 3 dimensions the
equation
can
(1)
to
as
on
the Ricci tensor of the
is
up er R Subscript a b Baseline minus one-half nabla Subscript left-parenthesis a Baseline omega Subscript normal b right-parenthesis Baseline minus one-fourth omega Subscript a Baseline times omega Subscript b Baseline equals normal up er Lamda times g Subscript a b Baseline times comma some normal up er Lamda period
(2) This
equation is,
from its
generalisation satisfy (2)
since
of the Einstein
(1)
we can use
and
definition, conformally invariant
be
can
regarded
as a
conformally-invariant
Note that spaces conformal to Einstein spaces
equations.
examples
to eliminate ωa. These
can
be
recognised by
the fact that
ωa is exact.
The on
example I
want to consider comes about
flat space. Take the metric and 1-form
and
making identifications
S1 × S2
(this example is given
by conformally rescaling
as
a
and
conformally
rescale with
Ω
g =
Now
impose a periodicity
in Pedersen & Tod The
periodictity
in
(1993);
in X
exp(— ), defining
=
d
2
+
dθ2
to obtain an
+ sin2 θ
=
log r
:
dϕ2; ω=-2d
Einstein-Weyl structure
on
part of the interest of it is that this manifold has
corresponds
to
identifying
the radial coordinate
r
no
Einstein
with λr for
metric).
some
λ with
0 < λ < 1. As I said at the III is
a
beginning,
2-dimensional
the space of directed
complex
goedesics
space is the space of directed lines in ℝ3 which
real vectors
(a, b)
where
a
of
a
3-dimensional Einstein-Weyl
space
manifold Ж, the mini-twistor space of III. For flat space, the minitwistor
is unit and b is
orthogonal
can
to
a.
be
thought
of
Equivalently,
as
pairs
of 3-dimensional
this is T ;1, the tangent
bundle of the complex this
For the example to be considered here
geodesic
in the S1 × S2
Einstein-Weyl
line which, when it hits the outer
making the same angle which is
limiting one
radially
inwards and closed. In
a
point
points
through p (I example).
am
r
grateful
through
this
means
that in the
that there
future,
modify
are
at
r
=
λ
tends to
a
which
‘shadows’ in the space:
given
a
might
by geodesics
be shadows in this
We shall return to these shadows below.
two closed radial
geodesics
Next the non-radial
bringing a
geodesic
straight
limiting one
that there
suggestion
to the zero-section of T ;1, ie. to lines in ℝ3 defined
leaving
the
a
sphere
the other side cannot be reached
on
to Paul Gauduchon for the
basically
to the inner
To construct the mini-twistor space Ж, consider first the closed radial
of
shall need to
1. It is
while in the past is tends to
means
p but
diag.
1, is brought back
=
closed,
particular,
the diameter
on
at
outwards and
radially p,
sphere
structure is as shown in
with the radius vector. This
is
are
we
little.
a
A
projective line.
for each radial
geodesics:
this back from the outer
alone but
rescaling b,
ie. b
geodesic
think of
sphere λb,
a
in
line in
with λ
as
flat-space sphere
so we
as a
figure
at the
doubled-up-zero-section,
since any
geodesic
‘near to’ the continuation of it to the other side A point p in the
corresponds
Einstein-Weyl
in the mini-twistor space. The
space is
specification
to
before.
which is ‘near to’
as a
zerosection.
Then the process
above
identify
b with λb in the
of the zero-section back. It is non-Hausdorff at the radial
then put two
copies
need to double the
pair (a, b).
in the
This is then the mini-twistor space: delete the zero-section from T1;
fibres;
These correspond
by pairs of the form (α,0), but there
flat-space
to the inner
geodesics.
a
radially outgoing
represented by
a
radially ingoing one
ie.
is also
one.
holomorphic
of this twistor line
geodesics,
includes,
curve
at some
(a
‘twistor
stage,
a
line’)
choice of
which of
pair
of
pair of doubled-up points
a
to take. Then any twistor line
through the
in the mini-twistor space will correspond to
doubled-up points
a
other of the relevant
point of the Einstein-Weyl
space in the ‘shadow’ of p. A
complicated example
more
‘Berger sphere’ Einstein-Weyl to ones
in the
example
with non-Hausdorff-ness of it
as a
non-Haudsorff mini-twistor
on
the
3-sphere.
(1985)
along
generators of the
‘weighted projective space’
a
special
was
done
a
set of
goedesic
seems
provided by
geodesics
tends to
one
the
This corresponds
(1993).
like the radial of them in the
to be a sort of deformed
quadric
Henrik Pedersen and I have
family.
same
but it is
space should be
and Pedersen & Tod
There is
The mini-twistor space
two
Like my article II.1.13 , the work for this in Odense, and I
Tod
above with the property that any other
future and another in the past.
description
a
space, Jones &
left-invariant metric
a
of
a
little obscure. visit to Henrik Pedersen
during a most pleasant received.
gratefully acknowledge hospitality
References
( 1980 ) in proceedings of Twistor geometry and non-linear systems, Primorsko Bulgaria, 1980 , eds. Doebner and Palev (Springer Lecture Notes in Mathematics 970).
Hitchin , N.
Jones , P. E. & Tod , K. P.
( 1985 )
Pedersen , H. & Tod , K. P. pp. 74 109
Class.
( 1993 )
Quant. Grav.
2 , pp. 565 577 -
Three-dimensional
.
Einstein-Weyl geometry
,
Adv. in Math. 97 ,
-
§II.1.5
(TN
.
The 3-Wave Interaction from the Self-dual
a
& Segur
1981). According
self-dual
Yang-Mills equations.
a
Mills
by
Equations
K.P.Tod
33, November 1991)
There is
them
Yang
of
completely integrable systems to current twistor
this route. I also found,
by
slightly The
family
While
though
different route with similar
starting point
equivalent
trying
called ‘the
dogma, to do
these
n-wave
equations
interaction’
(see
eg Ablowitz
should be reductions of the
something different,
I found
somewhat later, that Chakravarty
&
a
way of
Ablowitz
getting
(1990)
had
end-points.
is the self-dual
Yang-Mills equations
with 2 null
symmetries. aThres
to the commutation relation left-bracket upper D 1 comma upper D 2 right-bracket equals 0
(1)
where up er D 1 equals partial-dif erential minus up er A 1 plus zeta up er B 1 up er D 2 equals partial-dif erential minus up er A 2 plus zeta up er B 2 times comma
(2) the Ai and Bi
Substituting (2) into (1) term is
functions of x1 and x2 only, and ζ is
complex matrices,
are n × n
and
equating separate
powers of
ζ
to zero
gives
a
complex
constant.
3 equations. The O(ζ2)
just left-bracket upper B 1 comma upper B 2 right-bracket equals 0
(3) Mason & n-th
Singer (1991) (see
generalised
K dV
diagonalisable by
are
also II.1.7 ) solve this by
equation. the
The
Yang-Mills
taking
opposite
freedom,
gauge
the Bi to be nilpotent and arrive at the
extreme, which I shall take, is to suppose that the Bi which is
up erBSubscriptiBaselineright-arowup erGSuperscriptnegative1Baselineup erBSubscriptiBaselinetimesup erGsemicol nup erASubscriptiBaselineright-arowup erGSuperscriptnegative1Baselinetimesleft-parenthesi up erASubscriptiBaselinetimesup erGhyphenpartial-difer ntialup erGright-parenthesi period
(4) where G is
an n × n
complex
matrix
depending
on
x1 and x2. Now the O(ζ) term in
(1)
is
partial-dif erential Subscript 1 Baseline upper B 2 minus partial-dif erential upper B 1 plus upper A 2 times upper B 1 plus upper B 2 times upper A 1 minus upper A 1 times upper B 2 minus upper B 1 times upper A 2 equals 0
(5) The
diagonal
entries in
(5) imply
that there is
a
‘potential’ for the
Bi:
up er B Subscript i Baseline equals partial-dif erential Subscript i Baseline up er C
(6) while the
off-diagonal
that I shall write out
entries
imply
explicitly
that the
entries of the
off-diagonal
below. Before that,
we
consider the
Ai
O(1)
are
proportional
term in
(1)
in
a
way
which is
partial-dif erential Subscript 2 Baseline upper A 1 minus partial-dif erential upper A 2 plus upper A 1 times upper A 2 minus upper A 2 times upper A 1 equals 0
(7) The
diagonal
analogous and
can
to
entries in
(6)
(7) imply
that the
A gauge transformation
.
be chosen to
remove
the
diagonal
To summarise the situation at this
point
the Bi
are
diagonal
(ii)
the Ai
are
purely off-diagonal
(iii) finally (7) imposes At what is
essentially
this
and arrive at the
n-wave
made constant
a
shall
see.
by
some
and
with
(4)
entries of the
diagonal
Ai
have
G preserves the
potentials diagonality
in
a
way
of the
Bi
entries of the Ai.
in the argument:
and derived from
(i)
diagonal
can
differential
potential
a
be
expressed
as
in
(6) ;
in terms of C and each other
using (5) ;
equations.
point, Chakravarty & interaction. This is
gauge transformation
C
(4)
,
Ablowitz a
(1990)
specialisation
take the matrices Bi to be constant
in that the B’s can’t in
but it leads to the
same
general
equations eventually
be
as we
Now it is necessary to resort to
taking components so
for
simplicity I
will restrict to 3×3 matrices.
Set upper B 1 equals diag left-parenthesis alpha comma beta comma gamma right-parenthesis equals partial-dif erential upper C semicolon times upper B 2 equals diag left-parenthesis lamda comma mu comma nu right-parenthesis equals partial-dif erential Subscript 2 Baseline upper C
(8) and
alpha minus beta equals partial-dif erential up er P times beta minus gamma equals partial-dif erential Subscript 1 Baseline up er Q gamma minus alpha equals partial-dif erential Subscript 1 Baseline up er R lamda minus mu equals partial-dif erential up er P times mu minus nu equals partial-dif erential Subscript 2 Baseline up er Q times nu minus lamda equals partial-dif erential Subscript 2 Baseline up er R
(9) so
that upper P plus upper Q plus upper R equals 0 period
(10) We will
eventually
switch to
With the choices
using
for the
(8)
two of
Bi,
P,Q,
we can
R
as
solve
independent
(5)
for the
variables.
Ai
in terms of another
off-diagonal
matrix E. Set A1 = then
(aij), A2=(Ebeij),
(5) implies a 12 equals left-parenthesis alpha minus beta right-parenthesis times e 12 times semicolon b 12 equals left-parenthesis lamda minus mu right-parenthesis times e 12
(11) and the 5
equations
Finally, equations
can
obtained from this
substitute
we
(11)
into
by
(7)
the obvious
permutations.
to obtain differential
equations
all be written with the aid of the Poisson bracket in
which the other 5 follow
by permutations,
Thesif erentieal dE.
on
(x1 x2).fotTyrpnhicema,l ,
is
StartSet e 12 comma upper R EndSet equals e 13 times e 32 times StartSet upper P comma upper Q EndSet
(12) We
can
break the symmetry between P,
Write ‘dot’ and
‘prime’
Q, R by adopting P
and
Q
for differentiation with respect to P and
as new
independent
Q respectively
coordinates.
and set
up erEequalsStart3By3Matrix1stRow1stColumn02ndColumnup erH3rdColumnup erV2ndRow1stColumnup erW2ndColumn03rdColumnup erF3rdRow1stColumnup erG2ndColumnup erU3rdColumn0EndMatrix
then
(12)
becomes the system StartLayout1stRow1stColumnup erFprime qualsminusup erVup erWtimes2ndColumnup erUprime qualsup erGup erHtimes2ndRow1stColumnModifyngAboveup erGWithdot imesequalsup erWup erUtimes2ndColumnModifyngAboveup erVWithdot imesequalsminusup erFup erHtimes3rdRow1stColumnModifyngAboveup erHWithdotminusup erHprime qualsminusup erUup erVtimes2ndColumnModifyngAboveup erWWithdotminusup erWprime qualsup erFup erGtimesEndLayout
( 13) which is
equivalent
to the 3-wave interaction.
The further reduction ‘dot
integrable
=
minus
prime’ leads,
Hamiltonian h
=
p1p2q3
+ q1q2p3
after
some
manipulating
of constants, to the
References Ablowitz , M. J. &
Segur
,
H.
Chakravarty S. & Ablowitz preprint PAM ,
of Colorado
Mason , L. J. &
Singer
,
M. A.
Math.
Phys.
§II.1.6
The Bogomolny
,
( 1981 ) M. J.
Solitons and the Inverse
( 1990 ) On
Scattering Transform
reductions of self-dual
,
SIAM Philadelphia.
Yang-Mills equations University ,
62.
( 1994 ) The
twistor
theory of equations
Hierarchy and Higher
Order
of KdV type, to appear in Comm.
Spectral
Problems
by
I.A.B. Strachan
(TN 34, May 1992) The
starting point
for the construction and solution of
the
equation as the integrability condition ;;1 λ is the spectral parameter):
a
wide range of
integrable
models is to write
for the otherwise overdetermined linear system
(where
partial-difer ntialSubscriptxBaselinesequalsminus p erUleft-parenthesi lamdaright-parenthesi periodtimes com apartial-difer ntialSubscript Baselinestimes qualsminus p erVleft-parenthesi lamdaright-parenthesi periodtimes period
(1) The
integrability
condition for
(1)
is partial-dif erential Subscript x Baseline upper V hyphen partial-dif erential upper U plus left-bracket upper U comma upper V right-bracket equals 0 comma
(2) and
equating
powers of λ
of those systems which
(if
are
U and V
are
known to have
SG and N-wave equations) arise from
a
polynomial a
in
twistorial
λ) yields
=
λA
+
equation
description (such
so-called first order U
the
as
the
spectral problem,
in
question. Many
KdV, mKdV, NLS,
with
Q(x,t),
up er V equals normal up er Sigma Underscript i Endscripts times lamda Superscript i Baseline up er A Subscript i Baseline times left-parenthesi x comma t right-parenthesi period
In this article the matrices will be taken to be
where h is the Cartan
i.e. A ∈ h and
Q ∈ k,
of Mason &
Sparling,
terminology
the fields
are
a , with a and
sl(2, ℂ)-valued, subalgebra
of type β; type
a
and k is the
complement.
In the
fields will not be considered here.
A
higher
order
spectral problem
is
one
for which U and fpV gener are uonlycntoi mnaisl,
namely:
The
simplest example (p
nothing and
secondly
The
to
n
λp A + λp-1 Q1
V
=
λnV0+ λn-1.V1+Vn.
4 and
=
reduction of the
a
generalise
Q2
is due to
(2
this
.
(often
called
λ yields,
on
projecting
onto
U
=
that
w
k
,
U
u
=
V
=
=
(λpωAω-1)+
λp
Sparling (1992)
their
integrability.
Qp, V0 ...,Vn for these higher order
.
A
,
λn.A.
so
is gauge
invariant,
so
if w(x,
defined
that U and V involve
the λ0
term)
and
V
,
ωtω-1
,
by decomposing ω as ω
by
t)
is
a
λ-dependent
w
h.k
=
,
only non-negative
negative
powers of
powers of
λ the equations ,
=(λnωAω-1)+, =
(λpωAω-1)-
.
where h
,
hi(x,t)
h and
k. One then has
ki(x,t)
V
,
Let An-i denote the coefficient of λ-i in the
later),
are
ωvω-1 -ωtω-1,
positive (including
=(λpkAk-1)+
will become apparent
retaining
systems
by
is chosen
ωxω-1 =(λpωAω-1)further
Q1,...,
Schrödinger
=ωuω--1ωxω-1,
V
.
while
‘dressing transformation’),
a
U
satisfy (2) Assuming
to show how such
introduced in Mason &
l)-dimensions
+
equation
with wi ∈ sl(2, ℂ), then U and V, defined
will also
firstly
Let
trivially satisfy (2) However,
simplify
Qp,
+
Bogomolny hierarchy
these systems to
Crumey (1992).
gauge transformation
These
...
results in the derivative non-linear
0)
=
+
method to generate the matrices
following
problems
These
than
,
=
The purpose of this article is two-fold:
(or DNLS) equation. more
2
=
U
=(λnkAk-1)+
expansion
of k Ak-1
.
(the
reason
for this skew choice
i.e.
up erASubscriptnminusiBaseline qualsnormalup erSigmaUnderscriptrequals1OverscriptiEndscriptsStartFraction1Over factorialEndFractiontimesnormalup erSigmaUnderscriptleft-parenthesi StartSetsSubscriptjBaselineEndSetcol n ormalup erSigmatimes SubscriptjBaseline qualsirght-parenthesi Endscripts imesleft-bracketkSubscripts1Baselinetimescom aleft-bracketkSubscripts2Baselinecom aperiodperiodperiodtimescom aleft-bracketkSubscriptsSubSubscriptrSubscriptBaselinetimescom aup erAright-bracketperiodperiodperiodright-bracketright-bracketperiod
From this are
procedure
one
obtains the
matrix valued fields. The
fields with their above
equations,
general
form of the functions U and V
integrable equation
spacial derivatives), together or
equivalently, equation (2)
itself
with the .
(which
.
The matrices k1,...,
kp
connects the time evolution of these
remaining matrices,
may be found
using
the
found the
Having the
general
form of U and V it remains to show how these
Bogonolny hierarchy. Assuming
m
≡n
—
p
≥ 0, the matrix V
are
contained within
may be written in the form
up er V equals lamda Superscript m Baseline period up er U plus normal up er Sigma Underscript i equals 0 Overscript m minus 1 Endscripts times lamda Superscript i Baseline times up er A Subscript i Baseline times comma
and hence the
original system (1)
may be rewritten as
partial-difer ntialSubscriptxBaselinesequalsminusStarSetnormalup erSigmaUnderscriptiequals0Overscript Endscripts imeslamdaSuperscriptiBaselinetimesup erASubscriptmplusiBaselineEndSetscom apartial-difer ntialsminuslamdaSuperscriptmBaselinepartial-difer ntialSubscriptxBaselinesequalsminusStarSetnormalup erSigmaUnderscriptiequals0Overscriptm inus1Endscripts imeslamdaSuperscriptiBaselinetimesup erASubscriptiBaselineEndSetsperiod
(3)
Recall from Mason & Sparling (1992) that given the minitwistor the Riemann
sphere
of Chern class
{[∂zi where
Ai,
together
and
Bi+1
with Bi
eliminating
+
≥ 1, the Ward construction
λ[∂zi+1+ Bi+1]}s
-
sl(2, )-valued
are
0,i
=
Ai]
n
=
1,...,, n
—
gauge
=
(3)
over
rise to the linear system
0, -1=0,. n i
potentials.
1 , Bn ≡ An+1 ,A0
the other variables results in
gives
the line bundle
O(n),
space
With the symmetry A
=
,
relabelling
z0
generated by ∂Zn, =
t,
zm
=
x
,
and
:
StartLayout 1st Row left-bracket partial-dif erential negative lamda partial-dif erential right-bracket s times equals negative up er A period times 2nd Row elipsi elipsi 3rd Row left-bracket partial-dif erential negative lamda partial-dif erential right-bracket s times equals minus up er A Subscript m minus 1 Baseline times period times EndLayout right-brace left-bracket partial-dif erential minus lamda Superscript m Baseline partial-dif erential right-bracket s right double ar ow minus StartSet normal up er Sigma Underscript i equals 0 Overscript m minus 1 Endscripts times lamda Superscript i Baseline times up er A Subscript i Baseline EndSet period times com a
Thus these
higher
Solutions of the
O(4)
order
an
𝕋m,P and
~
elegant generalisation
(3) by λm∂y
systems. Thus the DNLS
=
given
a
one
equation
twistorial
{(Z0, Z1, Z2, Z3)}/
is the
equation, correspond
Bogomolny hierarchy.
to bundles over the space
symmetries.
These systems have the term λm∂x in
These may be
that of the DNLS
simplest example,
with certain
may all be embedded within the
spectral problems
equivalence
~
,
naturally
has the
to
(2+1)-dimensions, Strachan (1993). By replacing
obtains
examples
of
(2
+
1)-dimensional integrable
following generalisation:
i∂tψ
=
∂xyψ + 2i∂x[V.ψ],
∂xV
=
∂y|ψ|2.
description by introducing
where Z0 , Z1
are
coordinates
a on
weighted
twistor space defined
the Riemann
relation
(Z0,Z1,Z2,Z3)
~
(μZ0,μZ1,μmZ2,μpZ3),
∀μ
𝕄;𝕡1.
sphere, Z2 Z3 ,
by 𝕄,
Reimposing
the symmetry ∂x
vector field on space
O(m
to recover
𝕋m,P
02y corresponds
=
to
factoring
p), exactly analogous
+
out
by
a
non-vanishing holomorphic
to the construction of the minitwistor
from standard twistor space.
O(2)
References Mason , L. J. & of
Geometry
Crumey preprint. ,
Sparling G. A. J. ( 1992 ) Physics 8 243 271 ,
and
A.
-
,
Phys.
,
( 1993 ) Some 34 , 243 259 -
§II.1.7 H-Space: The
a
aspects of the ideas
Integrable
universal
have not been fulfilled yet
There is
a
large
forest of
as a
Riemann surfaces
for
play
an
Two gaps in the story the KP and some
of the solution of
equations gap is
a
these equations,
example
however, be somewhat nontrivial,
is
Kac-Moody Algebras and their twistor
,
Leeds
description
,
may
(TN 30,
never)
June
1990)
but I feel that the concrete
are
intriguing.
integrable systems. R.S.Ward, amongst others, of
question
as
are
reductions of the self-dual
bookkeeping,
the inverse
scattering
it
gives
a
substantial
has
pointed
Yang-Mills into
insight
transform for these systems
can
be
symmetry reduction of the Ward construction for solutions of the self-dual Yang-Mills
equations. (See
systems into
L.J.Mason
(and
integrable systems
equations. This observation isn’t just
understood
(2 + 1)-dimensions
of interest and the various relations involved
are
theory underlying
models in
integrable system? by
out that many, if not indeed most
the
and
.
following speculations
Motivation.
for the Soliton Hierarchies , Journal
Correspondences
Integrable Hierarchies, Homogeneous Spaces
( 1992 )
Strachan , I. A. B. J. Math.
Twistor
.
more
see
essential are as
Mason & in
Sparling
particular
1989 and 1992; the symmetry reduction can,
Woodhouse & Mason 1988 in which non-Hausdorff
role).
follows.
Firstly
Davey-Stewartson equations.
there appear to be There is little
kind of twistor framework if the inverse a
Riemann-Hilbert
subtle and
particularly irritating
requires
problem.
difficulty
scattering
However the inverse
the solution of
a
genuine in
difficulties in
transform is realised
scattering problem
‘non-local Riemann-Hilbert
in view of the theoretical importance that the KP
with their relations to the
theory
incorporating
incorporating integrable by
means
for the KP
problem’.
equations
of Riemann surfaces and infinite dimensional
This
have
acquired
grassmanians
and
so on.
The second gap is that there appears to be little role for the self-dual
and its twistor construction, Penrose’s nonlinear
out, is
graviton
not based on the solution of a Riemann-Hilbert
state the
vacuum
equations
construction—this, it should be either.
problem
pointed
However I should like to
following conjecture:
CONJECTURE. The KP and
Davey-Stewartson equations
are
reductions of the self-dual Einstein
equations. The circumstantial evidence is with
with metric of
space-times
LEMMA 1. KP reduced
by
two
orthogonal null
∑2, S Diff(∑2)
can
be
translations.
The Lie
algebra
by
of Mason & Newman
results would self-dual
If it
imply
a
∞ of the
SL(n)
Yang-Mills equations
extends the results of Mason
(This of the
equations
self-dual
preserving diffeomorphism
area
that of SL(n)
as n
to the self-dual
equivalent
are
Sparling 1989).
&
group of
—>
a
surface
∞
Yang-Mills equations
Diff(∑2). (This
extends the results □
the
were
that
case
SL(n)
that all 2-dimensional least by
Yang-Mills equations (at
yields
taken to be concerned
1989).
mark. However, my current still
—>
orthogonal null translations with gauge group S
two
REMARK.
as n
approximated arbitrarily closely by
LEMMA 3. The self-dual Einstein reduced
are
signature (2,2 ).)
be obtained in the limit
can
(Hoppe, J.)
LEMMA 2.
(The self-duality equations
follows.
as
opinion
reasonable class of
subgroup
were a
models
integrable is
SL(n)
only
and
integrable systems
are
SL(∞)
=
obtainable
Diff(∑2)
S
then these
reductions from the
as
Hence the title of this note and the
translations).
is that
of
a
subgroup
certainly
the
of S
more
Diff(∑2)
for
famous
ones
n
question
=
2. This
such
as
the
KdV, nonlinear Schrödinger and sine-Gordon equations. Proof of lemma 1. See for instance
approach.
The
I shall
Segal &;
equations
solution Vd to the
(∂t2,
use
the
(1985)
Wilson
of the KP
following system -
(Q2)+)ψ
=
0,
of the KP
presentation in the
hierarchy
of linear
(∂t3
-
proceedings are
the
partial
hierarchy
of the I.H.E.S for
consistency
differential
(Q3)+)ψ
=
differential operators
u
by
(Qr)+
the are
equations.
description
of this a
equations
0,..., (∂tr
-
=
determined in terms of
a
conditions for the existence of
(Qr)+)ψ
(∂x)r (Qr)+ is an rth order O.D.E. in the x variable, Qr u(x,t2,t3,...) is the subject of the KP hierarchy equation and wr is
where
due to Gelfand and Dickii.
+
=
0,
ru(∂x)r-2
some
...
+
...
+ wr and
function which will be
The notation is intended to indicate that the
the differential operator part of the
ordinary
pseudo-differential operator Q
raised to the rt h power where
pseudo-differential operator
Q
∂x +
=
defined
by
u(∂x)-1+ (lower order)
and where
(∂x)-1
is
a
formal
the relation
left-parenthesi partial-difer ntialSubscriptxBaselineright-parenthesi Superscriptnegative1Baselineftimesequalsftimesleft-parenthesi partial-difer ntialSubscriptxBaselineright-parenthesi Superscriptnegative1BaselineplusModifyngAbovenormalup erSigmaWithinf ityUnderscriptiequals1Endscripts imesleft-parenthesi minuspartial-difer ntialSubscriptxBaselineright-parenthesi SuperscriptiBaselinetimesfleft-parenthesi partial-difer ntialSubscriptxBaselineright-parenthesi Superscriptnegativeiminus1Baselineperiod
The
original for
variables
(∂t2
KP equation is the —
(Q2)+)ψ
symmetries
are
=
u(x,t1,t2) that (Q3)+)ψ 0 alone.
equation
0 and
(∂t3
of the basic
—
on
=
equations (and
each
nth time variable tn, then the reduced system is referred
(n
=
2
gives
the standard KdV
hierarchy
The idea is that the operators on
L2(∝)
where
is
x
a
coordinate
(Qr)+ on
(n
—
(∂t2
can
be
=
(Q2)+)ψ
=
with respect to
x.
The evolution in the
other).
If
to as the
one
∂tn ψ
imposes
higher
conditions time
invariance in the
nth generalized KdV hierarchy
of
as
infinite dimensional matrices
approximate this by =
consistency
Boussinesq).
thought
can
(setting
3 the
in the n-dimensional solution space of this
1)-derivatives —
n
∝. One
symmetry in the nth time variable since
only ψ lying
and
follows from the
λψ)
we
have
n× n
matrices
(Qn)+ψ
equation, represented,
With this reduction
we
=
λψ and
say,
by
acting
by imposing we
a
consider
ψ and its first
have:
0 reduces to
StarSetparti l-difer ntialminusStar 6By6Matrix1stRow1stColumn2u2ndColumn03rdColumn14thColumn05thColumn elips 6thColumn02ndRow1stColumndot2ndColumn2u3rdColumn04thColumn15thColumn elips 6thColumn elips 3rdRow1stColumndot2ndColumndot3rdColumn2u4thColumn05thColumn elips 6thColumn04thRow1stColumndot2ndColumndot3rdColumndot4hColumn elips 5thColumn elips 6thColumn15thRow1stColumndot2ndColumndot3rdColumndot4hColumn elips 5thColumn elips 6thColumn06thRow1stColumndot2ndColumndot3rdColumndot4hColumndot5hColumndot6hColumnleft-parenthesi 2minusnright-parenthesi uEndMatrixpluslamdatimesStar 5By5Matrix1stRow1stColumn02ndColumn03rdColumn04thColumn elips 5thColumn02ndRow1stColumn elips 2ndColumn elips 3rdColumn04thColumn elips 5thColumn03rdRow1stColumn02ndColumn elips 3rdColumn elips 4thColumn elips 5thColumn elips 4thRow1stColumn12ndColumn03rdColumn elips 4thColumn elips 5thColumn05thRow1stColumn02ndColumn13rdColumn04thColumn elips 5thColumn0EndMatrixEndSetModifyngBelowpsiWith̲equals0
and
(∂t3
—
(Q3)+)ψ
where 0r is the and
can
be
seen
r
=
0 reduces to
× r zero matrix. This matrix linear
to be the linear
system of
a
system is linear in the spectral parameter λ
reduction of SDYM with 2 null
symmetries. NOTE. A
orthogonal
translation □
large
gap in the above discussion is that the linear system is shown to be contained
within the SDYM linear systems, but I have not characterised those SDYM solutions with the 2
orthogonal null symmetries
that
give
rise to the nth KdV system.
Proof of Lemma 2. of
diffeomorphisms fields
corresponding
coordinates
HA
=
on
These ideas
a
by using
torus
the torus such that the
{HA, HB} For
SL(N)
where A
plane
=
A basis for the Lie
the
=
form is dθ1 Λ dd2, then
diagonal Uij
algebra
of
constructed
ξVU where
SL(N)
=
(A Λ B)
where
algebra
ξiδij
ξN
area
preserving
representing
their Hamiltonians. Let θ1 and θ2 be
(A1, A2) ℤ× ℤ The
=
algebra of the form and
symplectic
as a
Diff(∑2) by
(A Λ B)HA+B
relations: UV
ξ down
form
area
area
basis for the Lie
we use a
with powers of
the
to elements of Lie S
exp{2πi(A1θ1 + A2θ2)}
the quantum
standard. One presents the Lie
are
a
and V
a
Lie bracket is the Poisson bracket:
A1B2
=
using
a
pair
shift matrix
is then furnished
angular
basis for the Hamiltonians is
-
A2B1.
of matrices U, V
satisfying
1. An explicit representation has U
=
vector
Vij
=
δi(j+
diagonal
1mod N).
by
up er T Subscript up er A Baseline quals up er N xi Superscript StartFraction up er A 1 times up er A 2 Over 2 EndFraction Baseline up er U Superscript up er A 1 Baseline times up er V Superscript up er A 2 Baseline period
The commutators
are
then
given by:
left-bracket up er T Subscript normal up er A Baseline times comma up er T Subscript normal up er B Baseline right-bracket equals up er N sine StartFraction 2 times pi normal up er A normal up er Lamda times normal up er B Over normal up er N EndFraction up er T Subscript normal up er A plus normal up er B Baseline times left-parenthesi normal up er A times normal up er Lamda times normal up er B right-parenthesi times normal up er T Subscript normal up er A plus normal up er B Baseline
which gives the same commutation relations as above for HA in the limit as N ∞. → □
Proof of lemma 3. paper it
symmetries volume
This is
a
corollorary
shown that if you take the
was
on
the self-dual
equations.
Yang-Mills equations conditions
on
Lemma 3 4
on
algebraic
relations obtained
of
can
some
4-manifold then,
be reformulated
with metric ds2
connection components
=
by imposing
(1989).
In that
four translational
and take the gauge group to be the group of
Yang-Mills equations
preserving diffeomorphisms
vacuum
of the results in Mason & Newman
du
so as
dy
roughly speaking,
to be a
+ dv dx
one
obtains the self-dual
special
case
of this. The self-dual
(signature
2,2 )
are
the
integrability
(Au, Av, Ax, Ay) in the Lie algebra of the gauge group for the
the linear system
{∂u + Au {∂v When G is S on
Diff(∑2)
the coordinates
on
the system
{Vu + λVX}ψ
on
=
+ Av +
0
the coordinates =
{Vv + λVy }ψ on
preserving diffeomorphism
Yang-Mills equations diffeomorphisms
+
on
the
are
symmetries
quotient, ℝ2. are
ℝ2 × ∑2 and
so
group.
0.
all vector fields
where the V’s
with 4 translational
of ℝ2 × ∑2.
= 0
Ax)}ψ
λ(∂y + Ay)}ψ =
two translational
fields preserve the natural volume form of the volume
λ(∂x
the connection components
ℝ4). Impose
components depend only
+
on
the ℝ4
∑2 (depending also
so
that the connection
The linear system then reduces to
vector fields on ℝ2 × ∑2. These vector
determine elements of the Lie
The linear system is
symmetries
on
precisely
algebra
that for the self-dual
and gauge group the volume
preserving
Concretely
introduce coordinates
and suppose the the coordinates
hx
symmetries (u,v)
etc.. The field
on
ℝ2. Represent
equations
hu
=
02;q
and
∂qg
for
Ay some
=
∂p.
that the
so
area
the vector fields Ax
λ2[AX, Ay]
The term
0
=
proportional
form is the
symplectic form dpΛdq,
on
∑2 by
depend only
on
their Hamiltonians denoted
so
to
that
we
can
choose coordinates
λ implies ∂qhv
=
∂phu,
on
that hv
so
∑2 =
so
that
∂pg
and
The final equation yields in terms of g
≡ g(u, v, q,p).
g
∑2
Au + λ Ax ,∂v + Av + λAy] = 0
+
The first implication of this is that
=
on
are
[∂u
Ax
(p, q)
to be in the x and y directions so that the variables
g which
is
Plebanski’s
Thanks to G.A.J.
second
Sparling and
heavenly
equation.
□
E.T. Newman for discussions.
References Mason , L. J. & Newman , E. T.
( 1989 )
Comm. Math. Phys. 121 659 668
A connection between the Einstein and
Yang-Mills equations
,
-
,
,
Mason L. J. h
.
Sparling G.A.J. ( 1989 ) Non-linear Schrodinger Yang-Mills equations Phys. Lett. A. 137 29 33 ,
and KdV
are
reductions of the self-dual
-
,
,
,
.
Mason L. J. & Sparling , G. A. J. Phys. 8 , 243 271
( 1992 ) Twistor correspondences
Ward , R. S. ( 1985 ) Soc. A 315 , p. 451
and solvable systems and relations among them , Phil.
for the soliton hierarchies , J. Geom.
-
.
Integrable
Woodhouse , N. M. J. & Mason , L. J.
Nonlinearity
Trans. R.
.
1 , 73 114
( 1988 ) The
Geroch group and non-Hausdorff Riemann surfaces ,
-
,
.
§II.1.8 Integrable Systems
and Curved Twistor Spaces
by
I.A.B.Strachan
(TN
35, December
1992) One of the ways in which the self-dual Einstein equations may be understood is chiral model with the gauge fields
taking
values in the Lie
algebra
as a
two dimensional
sdiff(∑2)of volume preserving
sdiff(∑2),
∑2 (Q.
of the 2-surface
diffeomorphisms
solutions of certain
Han Park
integrable
1990). Moreover,
systems associated with
the geometry of the nonlinear
graviton (Mason §II.1.7).
rank
algebras,
subalgebras
such
a
which
description
not
are
may be achieved.
of
Another
dimensional gauge groups is that the
This
sdiff(∑2). reason
equations
for
often
since
sl(2, ᵔ ; )
sl(2,𝕄)
description
is
a
subalgebra
of
may be encoded within
breaks down for
higher
However, by generalising the algebras
studying integrable systems
simplify
,
and in
with infinite
some cases even
linearise,
(Ward 1992). Let
{
}
,
be
Poisson bracket
generalised
a
some
manifold N
,
satisfying the
conditions:
(antisymmetry)
{f,g} = -{g,f}
{f, gh}
acting on
{f, g}h
=
{f, {g, h}} With respect to
+
+
cyclic
{f, h}g
basis xi, i
a
(derivation) (Jacobi identity)
0
=
=
1,... dimN, ,
one
may take
StartSetfcom agEndSet qualsnormalup erSigmaUnderscripticom ajEndscriptsup erGSuperscriptijBaselinel ft-parenthesi xright-parenthesi timesStartFractionpartial-difer ntialfOverpartial-difer ntialxSuperscriptiBaselineEndFractionStartFractionpartial-difer ntialgOverpartial-difer ntialxSuperscriptjBaselineEndFractioncom a
(1) where Gij
(x)
is constrained
by
the
equations Gij + Gji
=
0
normalup erSigmaUnderscriptlequals1Overscriptdimensiontimes Endscriptsup erGSuperscriptliBaselineStarFractionpartial-difer ntialup erGSuperscriptkjBaselineOverpartial-difer ntialxSuperscriptlBaselineEndFractionplusup erGSuperscriptljBaselineStarFractionpartial-difer ntialup erGSuperscriptikBaselineOverpartial-difer ntialxSuperscriptlBaselineEndFractionplusup erGSuperscriptlkBaselineStarFractionpartial-difer ntialup erGSuperscriptjiBaselineOverpartial-difer ntialxSuperscriptlBaselineEndFractionequals0period
(2) Such
Poisson structures
generalised
Given such fields. Let
a
bracket
(2)
.
LfLg
algebra
H am of Hamiltonian vector
and -
algebra
Lg
as
may be defined in two
different, but equivalent,
ways:
differential operators, and define the Lie bracket for the
algebra by
LgLf,
Lg as vector fields on N and define the Lie bracket for the algebra be the Lie of vector fields [Lf, Lg]Lie. cases L{f,g} The fact that this forms a Lie algebra follows trivially from (1) and [Lf, Lg] and
=
The idea
now
is to
study
the self-dual
in this infinite dimensional Lie Let
Lie.
up erLSubscriptfBaseline qualsnormalup erSigmaUnderscripticom ajEndscripts imesup erGSuperscriptijBaselinetimesleft-parenthesi xright-parenthesi tmesStarFactionpartial-difer ntialfOverpartial-difer ntialxSuperscriptiBaselineEndFractionStarFactionpartial-difer ntialOverpartial-difer ntialxSuperscriptjBaselineEndFractionperiod
Regard Lf In both
by Sophus
H am, where
Lf
Regard Lf
[Lf ,Lg]
first studied
structure one may define an associated Lie
The Lie bracket for the
=
were
yAA' be spinor
condition).
with gauge
potentials taking
values
algebra.
coordinates for
The self-dual
Yang-Mills equations
ᵔ ; 4 (or perhaps ℝ2+2
Yang-Mills equations
are
the
etc.
depending
compatibility
on a
choice of reality
condition for the otherwise
overdetermined linear system: script up er L Subscript up er A Baseline normal up er Psi equals pi Superscript up er A prime Baseline StartSet StartFraction partial-dif erential Over partial-dif erential y Superscript up er A times up er A prime Baseline EndFraction plus up er A Subscript up er A up er A prime Baseline EndSet normal up er Psi comma up er A comma up er A prime equals 0 comma 1 times comma pi Superscript up er A prime Baseline times element-of double-struck up er C double-struck up er P Superscript 1 Baseline period
(3)
The AAA'(y) are Lie algebra valued functions known as gauge potentials. In what follows it will be assumed that these take values in the Lie algebra H am constructed above. Thus the AAA'’s are represented by vector fields AAA' ↔ LfAA', where the functions fAA' depend on both the coordinates on 𝕄4 and on N
With this, the linear operators
LAare
Ǖ 4;4 × N,
vector fields on
now
scriptup erLSubscriptup erABaseline qualspiSuperscriptup erAprimeBaselinel ft-braceStarFractionpartial-difer ntialOverpartial-difer ntialySuperscriptup erAtimesup erAprimeBaselineEndFractionplusnormalup erSigmaUnderscripticom ajEndscripts imesup erGSuperscriptijBaselinel ft-parenthesi xright-parenthesi StarFractionpartial-difer ntialfSubscriptup erAtimesup erAprimeBaselineOverpartial-difer ntialxSuperscriptiBaselineEndFractionStarFractionpartial-difer ntialOverpartial-difer ntialxSuperscriptjBaselineEndFractionright-braceperiod
(4) to the
Owing the
equivalent
definition of the Lie bracket, the
conditions for the distribution
(Frobenius) integrability
surfaces of this distribution may be surfaces The
regarded
curved twistor space, fibred
as a
converse
construction involves
the Riemann
over
studying
(1991)
which also
developes
(4)
,
i.e.
are a
[L0, L1]Lie
=
special
0. The
of
case
integral
curved twistor surfaces, and the space of such
as
sphere.
appropriate Riemann-Hilbert problem
an
dimensional group. Similiar ideas have been
& Takebe
self-duality equations
to the
applied
the notion of
a
SU(∞)-Toda equations
for the infinite
in Takasaki
τ-function for this system and its associated
hierarchy. As mentioned at the
of this
beginning
curved twistor space construction to certain it in the
algebra sdiff(∑2).
The
structure constants for the Lie
.
e
From this
one
Mason in
integrable systems
§II.1.7
shows that
associated with
,
with respect to
may define
some
generalised
a
basis ei ,i
=
one
could
give
algebra
g. Let the
1,..., dim g be Cijk
Poisson bracket
a
sl(2, ℂ) by embedding
is true for any finite dimensional Lie
same
algebra g
article,
,
so
by setting
up er G Superscript i j Baseline left-parenthesi x right-parenthesi equals normal up er Sigma Underscript k Endscripts times c Superscript i j Baseline Subscript k Baseline times x Superscript k
(the
conditions
(2)
are
automatically
satisfied due to the
let the associated infinite dimensional Lie
original
Lie
algebra
is
now a
subalgebra
algebra
properties
of the structure
functions),
of Hamiltonian vector field be denoted
by g̃.
and The
of g̃, since
left-bracketup erLSubscriptxSubSuperscriptiSubscriptBaselinetimescom aup erLSubscriptxSubSuperscriptjSubscriptBaselineright-bracket qualsnormalup erSigmaUnderscriptkEndscripts imescSuperscriptijBaselineSubscriptkBaselinetimesup erLSubscriptxSubSuperscriptkSubscriptBaselinetimesperiod
Thus any solution to the self-dual encoded within the structure of Another
(1992), direct
approach
in which
is to
higher
a
use a
Yang-Mills equations
curved twistor space deformation of
order derivatives
geometrical interpretation
are
Han Park ,
( 1990 ) Phys.
by
sdiff(∑2)
first
a
of the results is absent.
Lett. B238 , 287 290 -
.
finite dimensional algebra may be
embedding
known
present. This leads
References
Q.
with
as
the
to some
g in g̃.
Moyal algebra,
Strachan
interesting results,
but
a
Mason , L. J.
( 1990 )
Twistor Newsletter 30 , 14 17 and §11.1.7. -
Ward , R. S. ( 1992 ) J. Geom.
Phys.
Takasaki , K. & Takebe , T. Lett. Math.
Strachan , I. A. B.
Twistor
§II.1.9
( 1991 23 , 205 214
Phys.
) SDifF(2)
Toda
( 1992 ) Phys.
Lett. B282 , 63 66
theory
integrability by
give
Tau Function and
equations Hierarchy,
Symmetries
,
.
and
mostly
-
of certain
.
L.J.Mason
and
speculative
in my 5 minute contribution to the
In this note I wish to make the
point
integrable systems
should lead to
and
results in the
hopefully
new
In various articles it has
being
.
(TN 33,
conjectural
special
November
1991)
comments that I gave or would
twistor
workshop
to celebrate the 60th
of the founder of many of these ideas.
birthday
systems
-
-
This note consists have liked to
8 , 317 326
are
new
that the
recently
techniques of
theory
established links between twistor
and results in twistor
theory
emerged that,
hierarchy. Furthermore,
the KP
reasonably
a
correspondence
direct way
with
a
for the self-dual
much of the as
well
as
unification
most
integrable
integrable systems. small number of
exceptions,
symmetry reductions of the self-dual Yang-Mills equations, the
understood in
as
theory and
theory
most notable
exception
and structure of these equations
can
be
various features of the symmetry reductions of the Ward
Yang-Mills equations.
See Ward
(1986),
Mason &
Sparling (1992)
and references therein. As far as
as
the
equations
reductions from self-dual
are
concerned,
Yang-Mills
it appears that
in 4-dimensions
by
we can
a
gauge group,
b)
a
symmetry group
c)
a
normal form for the gauge and the various constants of
a
possible
discrete
most
integrable systems
choice of:
a)
(with
classify
component), integration
that arise in the reduced
equation. For
large
example,
classes of
the Drinfeld Sokolov systems
can
all be understood in this way
as can
various other
integrable systems.
The standard
theory
of the
transform and realizations of the
equations partial
consists of such constructions
differential
equations
as
flows
on
as
the inverse
grassmanians.
scattering These
can
be understood bundles
on
as
various ansatze and normal forms for the
symmetry reductions of the Ward transform for the self-dual However, these ideas from the theory of twistor ideas, and in others
completely
are
of methods from the theory of The
following conjectures
in twistor
corresponding
in many
are
refinements of
cases
There is therefore the possibility
theory.
used to solve problems in twistor theory.
integrable systems being
and connections include
vector
Yang-Mills equations.
integrable systems
new
holomorphic
that arise from the
appropriate symmetry properties
twistor space with the
data of the
patching
examples
where twistor
theory
may benefit from
this interaction. Inverse
1)
space of
integrable partial
for the Ward bundle
equation
we
twistor space
on
and Sk is the
the
linearizing
cartesian
equations (for
ℂ*
One would expect this pattern
signature.
Minkowski space with
equations with
a
perhaps
is
So
are
which
parametrization of the solution
a
can
be used to build
patching
the attractive nonlinear
linear
a
to be
complex
The first factor are
Schrodinger
the Fourier
are
numbers, II is the
disjoint
solutions that
would expect
transform)
one
the Radon transform. A similar
but the second factor
for solutions of the self-dual on
the
that the solution space of the
picture
union
are
analogue.
generic
be the
presumably
that the first factor
data
where D is
non-zero
Yang-Mills equations
compactified
can
(2,2 ) analogues
be understood
as a
4-dimensional
self-dual
SU(n)
of maps from ℝ𝕡3 to unit determinant Hermitean
product
mentioning
the
they
soliton type sector, which would worth
example for
would expect for example that
one
signature (2,2 )
Cartesian
a
For
product.
the soliton solutions which do not have
in indefinite
The parameters
equations. directly.
provides
space identified with: M
complex plane ℂ,
symmetrized
transform
scattering
differential
get the solution
the unit disc in the
from
The inverse
scattering.
Yang-Mills
n× n
matrices
of instantons.
nonlinear
It is
generalization
should hold for the symmetry reductions to
equations
of in
2+1 dimensions and other 1 + 1 dimensional systems.
2) that of
The inverse
scattering
distinguish it clearly
incorporating
transform in 2+1 dimensions such
from
existing twistor correspondences
it into the above framework.
framework for the KdV
equations
It is
so
perhaps
role in the KP
that it leads to worth
some new
remarking that
equations
also
problem—the patching operation by integration against Another
point
a
kernel
was
just
the
a
coherent inverse
hope, then,
that there a
natural
scattering
seems
has features
little real
generalization can
hope
of the
transform based
that the transform
pseudo-differential operators
on
a
be articulated
in
one
given by pseudo-differential in the KP inverse
scattering
that
play such
a
prominent
of Penrose’s earlier discussions of the
a
as
is that the inverse
so
hierarchy
category of twistor constructions.
naturally
arose
for the KP
Nevertheless, it is
and leads to
non-local Riemann-Hilbert transform. One may
geometrically
as
operator that
can
be
googly
represented
scattering problem.
transform does work for many other field equations
in
dimensions but is
higher
solution
practical
no
generation
longer implementable by
methods. It may nevertheless lead to
general relativity using spin 3/2 twistors
3)
(see
It is
KdV type
possible
equations
to
use
the Ward
certain
workable framework for understanding
asymptotic
work).
theory
of free
Fermions, developed by
holomorphic sections
of the KdV
equations
of the Ward bundle
and the quantum field theoretic Greens function for the
are
given by amplitudes
associated to flows
twistor space restricted to
on
in
amplitude
∂̄-operator. Finding
the line which is the
on
the
Segal & Wilson (1985) and Witten (1988). Solutions (at least those acting on
vectors in the free Fermion Fock space. The link is that the free Fermions
special
vector bundle
on
to understand the connections between the
correspondence
and the 2-dimensional quantum field
reflectionless)
are
a
fields and Penrose’s elemental states based
Penrose’s article in 𝕋ℕ 10 to appear also in volume III of this
Japanese school and described in that
linear procedures and hence does not lead to
question
is the
2-point
in
obtaining
equivalent
the self-dual
the
complex projective line,
function that
the Greens function is
key step
a
are
to
gives
rise to the
trivializing
Yang-Mills
the
field in terms
of the bundle. One may ask the constructions such
as
question
2-dimensional quantum field
by Ooguri & 4)
graviton In
theory.
Vafa between N
There is much scope for how to
then of whether its
the nonlinear
=
2
possible
construction this
particular
string theory
might explain
ideas from the quantum inverse
using
complicated
twistor
complicated, perhaps interacting the remarkable link discovered
and the self-dual Einstein
twistor methods in the context of
use
to realize other more
as a more
equations. transform to understand
scattering
integrable quantum
field
theory.
In
particular
the Russian school’s introduction of the R-matrix to describe the Poisson bracket structure should
directly
pass over
have
managed
hope
to
on
5)
quantize
for
on
The
using
(1989)
scattering
patching
transform survives
existing theory
is still in need of further
data. Other workers
quantization
twistor space and then transform the results to obtain
on
has
attempted
the
knot
studying
a
unification of the
theory.
polynomials. Unfortunately
spectral parameter
satisfactory understanding
as a
a
Chern-Simons quantum field
understanding
this
the Poisson bracket relations for the twistor
insights
a
so
that
one can
quantum field theory
that twistor
theory
may be
provide.
Witten
models
give
to show that the inverse
space-time.
able to
to
quantum field
theory
that is of
so
This
of
integrable
produces
it does not
crucial to
integrable
of self-dual
theory
/i-matrices that
provide
integrability.
statistical mechanical
the
dependence
So it is not
statistical mechanics. One may
Yang-Mills
are
possible
sufficient of the R-matrices to
conjecture
regard
that
by
reduced to 3-dimensions this gap would be
remedied. It is
(see
perhaps
their article
also worth
§ 11.1.3 ).
drawing attention
to the
Atiyah-Murray conjecture
also in this context
Author’s comment
This will appear in
projects.
and
theory
integrability to
be
forthcoming book by the
significant
progress
of the above
on some
author and N.M.J.Woodhouse called Twisior
published by Oxford University
The first has been realized by
1)
Minkowski space with small open
neighbourhood
Ward bundle
operator, leads to
on
Press. More immediate
developments
on
! D;𝕡3.
generalized
the
direct
a
copies
of ℂ𝕡3
analogue
compactified
glued together
of the Inverse
over
scattering
to be
as
equations
(see Ablowitz,
replaced by
on
general
a more
linear differential
parameters, with non-trivial index. This
based
on
the ‘d-bar’
approach
M. & Clarkson, P.A.
1991).
due to Fokas &
For further details
(1994).
quantum field still in
so
sphere depending
There has also been progress in
3)
two
twistor space for the
type of twistor construction in which the the ∂̄-operator of the
Ablowitz and Zakharov & Manakov Mason
appropriate
These leads to
construction for the KP
a new
that the
in the form alluded to above. See §II.1.11 for further details.
a new
twistor space is
Dirac operator
a
of
Yang-Mills
The second has led to
2)
observing
signature ( 2, 2 ) is non-Hausdorff being
transform for self-dual
see
been
follows.
are as
some
a
already
There has
(1994):
and twistor
theory
clarifying
theory.
the connections between Grassmanians and 2-d
This is to appear in Mason &
Singer (1994).
Part II is
preparation.
References Ablowitz , M. & Clarkson , P. A.
( 1991 ) Solitons,
LMS lecture note series 149 , CUP Mason , L. J.
( 1994 )
proceedings
of the Seale Hayne conference
Mason , L. J. & Math.
Generalised twistor
Singer
,
M. A.
( 1994 )
Nonlinear Evolution Equations and Inverse Scattering,
.
d-bar
correspondences, on
and the KP
problems
equations
Twistor Theory , ed. S. Huggett , Marcel Dekker
The twistor
theory
of
of KdV type part I
equations
,
,
in
.
Comm.
Phys.
Mason , L. J. &k
Sparling G.A.J. ( 1989 ) Korteweg de Yang-Mills equations Phys. Lett. A ,
Mason , L. J. &k
Physics
Sparling ( 1992 )
8 , 243 271
137 ,
#1,2,
29 33
Schrodinger
are
reductions
-
.
for the soliton hierarchies , J.Geom.&k
correspondences
.
Wilson , G.
Ward , R. S.
( 1986 )
,
,
Twistor
,
-
,
Segal G. k Strings
Vries and nonlinear
,
of the self-dual
( 1985 ) Loop
groups and
Multi-dimensional
eds. H.J. de
Vega
equations
integrable systems
,
of KdV type , Publ. I.H.E.S. 65 , 5 65 -
in Field
and N. Sanchez , Lecture Notes in
Witten , E.
( 1988 )
Quantum field theory
Witten , E.
( 1989 )
Nucl. Phys. B.
and
grassmanians
,
Physics
and
Theory, Quantum Gravity 246 Springer Berlin ,
Comm. Math.
,
Phys.
.
113 , 529 600 -
,
.
.
§II.1.10 by
On the
L.J.Mason
One of the remarkable features of reductions of the self-dual
to
systems in
of
space-time symmetries)
projection one
is
two dimensions is that the
priori,
one
is much
on
&, Sparling (1992) it
(1987)
+
2-plane
on
was
as
opposed
of the gauge group.
to
(or
2-dimensions An a
a
rotation and
equations
totally
a
than
also has
complex
an
just
the
Yang-Mills invariant
actually conformally (a priori
one
would
only expect In Mason
plus scalings).
Yang-Mills by
2 translations
spanning
infinite dimensional symmetry group of the Galilean group in
underlying
examples
null ASD
just GL(2)),
2-plane
so
this result and state it
of this
phenomena,
called
one
independently
being
the
where the symmetry group is the
and the other
being
the reduction
in which the symmetry group is the
of Hitchin’s result is that it makes it
give
they considerably
alternate ways of
Yang-Mills Higgs equation on
self-dual
one
enrich the
hyperbolic
transferring
We
use
with
(z, w, z̃, w̃)
z̃
=
z̃ etc.
as
a
for Euclidean
theory
on
ℝ4
that
signature.
of
geometric
Riemann surface.
coordinates
possible
to transfer the
by
two
group in
holomorphic
equations
are
I first
Yang-Mills
structures.
give
independent
a
brief review of Hitchin’s
and real for
We start with the Lax
pair
signature (2, 2)
formulation of the
Yang-Mills equations.
The self-dual
Yang-Mills equations Lo
=
are
Dz
—
the
compatibility
λDw̃, L1
=
conditions for the
Dw + λDz̃.
to
vector bundles.
different reductions of the self-dual
to 2-dimensional surfaces endowed with different
equations. or
two translations are
the geometry
clarify
translation)
Riemann surface where
The above results
The
a
equations
infinite dimensional.
to be
the linear Galilean group in 2-dimensions..
just
(rather
being
context
(SL(2, ℝ) .
important corollary
general
by
I also discuss two other
group
often
observed that the reductions of the self-dual
SL(2)—nonlinear analogues
by symmetries spanning
diffeomorphism
rotations
was
observed that reductions of self-dual
The purpose of this note is to
whole
it
which the metric has rank
0)-dimensions
reduction
expected,
in the residual 2-dimensional space
sense
at least when the gauge group is
(1
have
to be invariant under the 2-dimensional Euclidean group
equations
a
might
one
in 4-dimensions that normalize the invariance group that
Euclidean 4-dimensional space
in the infinite dimensional the
than
larger
symmetries
In Hitchin
Yang-Mills equations
symmetry group of the reduced equations (in the
would expect the symmetry group of the reduced
of those conformal
reducing by.
equations
Yang-Mills equations
(TN 34, May 1992)
Introduction.
A
of the reduced self-dual
symmetries
pair
of operators:
where λ
ℂ is
an
auxiliary complex parameter
connection in the direction
directions. In
(w, w̄), Dw leave the
=
pair
∂/∂w
we
start in Euclidean
invariant gauge
an
φ̄and '
+
of operators
Yang-Mills
∂/∂z.
For Hitchin’s equations
∂/∂w
and Dz is the covariant derivative of some
cc.
(with
and
and impose symmetries in the
in which the gauge
one
potentials
are
∂/∂w
and
independent
throw away the derivatives with respect to
we can
little
a
(i.e.
signature
(w, w̄)
of to
rearrangement):
up er L 0 equals up er D Subscript z Baseline minus lamda normal up er Phi prime comma up er L 1 equals up er D Subscript z overbar Baseline plus StartFraction 1 Over lamda EndFraction normal up er Phi overbar prime period
We
can
make this
geometric by multiplying L0 by
more
dz and L1
by
dz and
defining
φ = φ'dz.
We then obtain the one-form valued operator: upper L equals d z circled-times upper L 0 plus d z overbar circled-times upper L 1 equals upper D minus lamda normal upper Phi plus StartFraction 1 Over lamda EndFraction times normal upper Phi overbar period
The
Yang-Mills Higgs equation
Riemann surface
on a
the
are
consistency
conditions for these
operators: D2
=
φ Λφ 4;,
= Dφ 0,
Where D is the covariant exterior derivative. These group in two dimensions
they only require
Alternatively,
these
symmetries.
equations depend only
The data consists of
a
equations
are
invariant under the conformal
bundle with connection and
a
Φand Φ̄. One solution will be transformed
define
of the
as
= 0. Dφ̄
on
complex
a
to another if z
↦ z'(z) and Φ
the *-operator
on
connection D
on a
1-forms
bundle, E and
and D
on
a
the
structure to
pull
back.
quotient
space
section Γ = φ + φ̄ of
Ω ⊗ End(E). The operator L is up er L equals up er D plus left-parenthesis minus lamda StartFraction 1 minus i asterisk Over 2 EndFraction plus StartFraction 1 plus i asterisk Over 2 lamda EndFraction right-parenthesis normal up er Gamma period
Thus the field the
equations arising
diffeomorphisms preserving
The Galilean one
analogue.
non-null symmetry
from the consistency conditions of this operator
x
=
(z
+
z̃)
and
If, in (2,2 ) signature,
along ∂/∂z
we
=
have
∂/∂z̃ we
Dx
—
to the
trick, multiplying L0 by L
—
=
we
impose
obtain the Lax
λφ, L1
reorganized
part of the Higgs field associated the above
invariant under
*, i.e. the conformal transformations in 2-dimensions.
L0 where
are
=
Dw
+
null symmetry
+ ψ)
the covariant derivative in the
by
dxLo + dwL1
dw to and
=
D+
along 02;/ 02;w̃ and
pair:
λ(Dx
symmetry in the ∂z
dx and L1
one
—
x
direction to include
02z̃ direction. We
adding together
λ(Γ + dwDx)
can
again perform
to obtain
where Γ = φdx + ψdw. To write this that
can
be
of
thought
geometrically,
more
we
introduce
a
degenerate *-operator
map from 1-forms to 1-forms:
as a
asterisk equals d w StartFraction partial-dif erential Over partial-dif erential x EndFraction comma alpha right-ar ow from bar alpha times left-parenthesi StartFraction partial-dif erential Over partial-dif erential x EndFraction right-parenthesi times d w period
The operator L then becomes: L The field equations
arising from
the
D2 where D above is
acting
as
equations. Geometrically with
a
D+
+
Γ).
consistency equations
-
0, DΓ
=
0, D
*
for this system
these
equations
determine
are:
Γ + Γ Λ Γ = 0
a
so
that the
equations
flat connection D
on a
are
all 2-form
bundle E,
together
section Γ of ω1 ⊗ End(E).
will be invariant under
equations arising
diffeomorphisms
of ℝ2
are
h(w)
These
from the
preserving
consistency the
the nonlinear Galilean transformations referred to
(w, x) ↦ (w', x') where
λ(*D
the covariant exterior derivative
It is clear, now, that the field
These
=
and
g(w)
equations
to
higher
are
=
rank gauge groups
system. At least in the SL(2)
degenerate *-operator,
dw ⊗ ∂/∂x.
previously:
(h(w), (∂wh(w))x + g(w))
free functions except that ∂wh
embed the nonlinear
conditions for this operator
Schrodinger
(the Drinfeld
≠ 0.
and KdV
equations
etc.)
into
completely
fixed
Sokolov hierarchies
case, this coordinate freedom is
and most of their a
generalizations
Galilean invariant
by
the reduction to
KdV and NLS. The
totally
null
case.
In the
case
where the
symmetries
span
an
again
a
anti self-dual null
2-plane
we
obtain the linear system L where field
again
D is
equations
a
flat connection
on a
equations
the ‘zero’ These
D + λΓ
bundle E and Γ is
section of Ω1 ⊗ End(E). The
are now:
D2 These
=
are now
=
0, DΓ
=
0, Γ Λ Γ
=
0.
invariant under the full 2-dimensional
diffeomorphism
group
another way of
writing
(preserving
*-operator). equations
are
therefore
‘topological’
equations (Strachan 1992).
and indeed
are
Their reductions include the
n-wave
the Wess-Zumion-Wit en
equations
and
those parts of the Drinfeld-Sokolov hierarchies not obtainable from the Galilean reductions. These
further reductions constant. In the
that their exists coordinates and
require
SL(3)
case one can
and
by
2 rotations gave the
SL(2,ℝ);
same
field equations
difficult to To
z
see
(1990)
as
it
was
one
preserving
hyperbolic
a
translation
unexpected symmetry;
These equations a
observed that the
the reduction by
are
invariant under
metric. While this
was
it
was
plane
and
(1987),
space-time.
on
impose
we
z̄and
+
these additional conditions.
clear from the reduced twistor correspondence in Woodhouse & Mason
this
see
=
However,
is true.
more
the group of motions of the residual space
some sense
set x
by using
rotation. This fact alone endows the 2 rotation reduction with
a
the residual translation symmetry.
in
gauge in which the components of Γ are
In Fletcher & Woodhouse
Stationary axisymmetric systems. reduction of SDYM
a
fix the coordinate freedom
impose
a a
rotational invariance with respect to θ in the symmetry in the ∂z
—
w
=
y exp(iθ)
02;z̄ direction. We obtain the linear system:
up er D Subscript x Baseline minus i up er A plus lamda e Superscript i theta Baseline left-parenthesis up er D Subscript y Baseline plus StartFraction i Over y EndFraction left-parenthesis partial-dif erential negative up er B right-parenthesis right-parenthesis comma e Superscript minus i theta Baseline left-parenthesis up er D Subscript y Baseline minus StartFraction i Over y EndFraction left-parenthesis partial-dif erential negative up er B right-parenthesis right-parenthesis minus lamda left-parenthesis up er D Subscript x Baseline plus i up er A right-parenthesis period
We cannot
just
throw away the ∂θ as there is
explicit dependence
connected with the fact that the Lie derivative of work
independently
this is the
θ in the operators. This is
spinor and hence λ along ∂θ is
not zero.
of θ and to avoid derivatives with respect to the ‘spectral parameter’
use, instead of λ the parameter
as
a
on
simplest
function
we
To
must
gamma equals StartFraction y e Superscript i theta Baseline lamda Over 2 EndFraction plus x minus StartFraction y Over 2 e Superscript i theta Baseline lamda EndFraction
on
the
spin
bundle that is both invariant and constant
along
the
twistor distribution. nf
we
introduce the
complex
coordinate ξ =
+ iy,
x
a
bit of massage
yields
the
following form
for
the linear system: 2 up er D Subscript xi Baseline plus i StartRo t StartFraction gamma minus xi overbar Over gamma minus xi EndFraction EndRo t left-parenthesi up er A plus StartFraction i Over y EndFraction up er B right-parenthesi comma 2 up er D Subscript xi overbar Baseline plus i StartRo t StartFraction gamma minus xi Over gamma minus xi overbar EndFraction EndRo t imes left-parenthesi up er A minus StartFraction i Over y EndFraction up er B right-parenthesi period
In order to
out the invariance
bring
first operator
by dξ
coordinates γA
=
(γ0,γ1)
complex conjugate reduces,
after
and the second
some
with γ =
properties
by dξ̄ and
γ1/γ0
and
of ξA and denote the skew
of this system,
add them
similarly
we can
together.
first of all
Then introduce
for ξA. Define ξ̄A to be the
product γ1ξ0 ξ0 —
=
multiply
the
homogeneous
componentwise
γ ξ. The linear system then •
further massage, to: 2 up er D plus i StartRo t StartFraction gamma dot xi overbar Over i xi dot xi overbar gamma dot xi EndFraction EndRo t normal up er Phi xi dot d xi plus i StartRo t StartFraction gamma dot xi Over i xi dot xi overbar gamma dot xi overbar EndFraction EndRo t imes normal up er Phi overbar xi overbar dot d xi overbar
a put have we where
It on
can now
be
ξA preserving
seen
the
that the linear system is invariant under
reality
structure ξpxer03br0ol4ic;A ↦ hyξA the hence and met . m
SL(2, ℝ);
the Mobius transformations
The
conditions
integrability
Γ(O(—1) ⊗ E)
that is
a
The field equations
are
dual
equations for
spinor valued
connection D
a
section of
bundle E and
on a
a
section φ
End(E).
are
up er D squared equals left-bracket normal up er Phi comma normal up er Phi overbar ight-bracket StartFraction xi dot d xi tmes normal up er Lamda times xi overbar times dot d xi overbar Over xi dot xi overbar EndFraction comma partial-dif erential normal up er Phi equals StartFraction normal up er Phi overbar Over 2 xi dot xi overbar EndFraction comma partial-dif erential normal up er Phi overbar equals minus StartFraction normal up er Phi Over 2 xi dot xi overbar EndFraction
where ∂ and 02;̄ here denote the ‘eth’ operator and its of the covariant derivative
Remarks. above to
in Hitchin’s case,
as
and
(1,0) parts
Dirac field and satisfy the
a
provides
might hope
one
background coupled
the curvature of the connection. to be able to transfer the other
equations
case, the
hyperbolic
equations
clearly
can
be transferred for g > 2
using
the
unique
metric
the Riemann surface with curvature —1. For the Galilean
instead of
analogue,
endow it with
might
one
the Riemann surface with
endowing
measured foliation which
a
boundary
*-operator introduced above. *-operator has
an
They
both determine
affine structure
the
on
whereas the measured foliation has
a measure
leaves. Nevertheless,
that
diffeomorphisms is still
the linearized a
Further
one
in the
might hope
global
context
of these
analogues
condition that will have
analysis
give
rise to any
case
for which
Thanks to
is
required
difficulty
more
the
as
analysis
Jorgen
is
a
leaves,
but
no
structure;
relations is the Thurston
concept
as
the
degenerate
structure transverse to the
transverse to the an
leaves, but
equivalence
good
existence
no
leaves,
structure on the
between the two, modulo
are
for solutions of this
theory
have *Γ covariant constant
solutions when the leaves
for the other
equations
same
complex
kind of uniformization result. Even if this is feasible, it
equations no
complex structure,
foliation of the Riemann surface, but the degenerate
could prove
one
as a
not clear that one can obtain a
perhaps
foliation,
equivalence
for Teichmuller space. It turns out that this is not the
a
to a limit of a
corresponds
indeed the space of measured foliations modulo certain
as
(0,1)
Riemann surface also.
a
In the on
Just
constitute
Their commutator
equation.
the
respectively.
‘Higgs fields’ φ and φ̄ together
So the
massive Dirac
complex conjugate,
cases.
The
totally
are
along
equation
the leaves of the
dense.
null reduction will
presumably
underdetermined anyway. This leaves the
not
Hyperbolic
required.
Andersen for conversations.
References Fletcher , J. &. Woodhouse , N.M.J. of Einsteins
equations
,
( 1990 )
L. M. S. Lecture Notes Series 156 , CUP Hitchin , N. J.
( 1987 )
The
Twistor characterization of
in Twistors in Mathematics and
stationary axisymmetric solutions Physics eds. Bailey T. N. & Baston ,
,
.
self-duality equations
on a
Riemann surface Proc. L.M.S. ,
,
Mason , L. J. & 243 271
Sparling
,
G. A. J.
( 1992 )
Twistor theory of the soliton hierarchies, J.Geom
.
Phys.
,
8,
-
.
Mason , L. J. &
Singer
,
M. A.
theory
The twistor
( 1994 )
I , to appear in Comm. Math.
Phys.
Strachan , I. A. B.
Lett. B282 , 63 66
§II.1.11 by
(TN
35, December
Introduction.
globalization the
global
self-duality equations
of twistor
in
a
in
particularly simple In
particular
Yang-Mills equations
description
examples
of
in
split signature
in
conformally
a
This is obtained
and
of the space of
parametrization
signature ( 2,2 ). Despite
by examining some
unusual features of
appealing parametrization of the
split signature on
leads to the non-linear
S2 × S2 which specializes
anti-self-dual metrics described
desire to understand the
and see
thereby give also
§11.1.9
When
one
to
twistor
considers
α-planes
give
by
of the Penrose transform in
of the Radon transform and the inverse
one
might try
compactification of ℝ4, S2 × S2/ℤ2
in S2 × S2
S2 × S2 (where
boundary
are
not
one can
simply
ask the
would be to as
the
require
arose
from
signature (2, 2 )
scattering transform,
equations
are
conformally invariant.
question
as
are
rectified if
we
so
Affine (2,2 ) Minkowski space 𝕄0 is ℝ4 with metric of
compactification
by adjoining
a
‘light
cone
at
that
one
cannot
go to the double cover,
to which fields are invariant under the
𝕄, obtained
We will
theory. Furthermore,
connected and have fundamental group ℤ2
problems
equations on ℝ4 in
that solutions should extend to
conditions eliminate all solutions in linear
Penrose transform. These
global geometry.
The conformal
the twistor
K.P.Tod in his article
conditions for solutions of conformally invariant
the first condition
immediately apply the
2. The
description
boundary
see, however, that these
the
globalization of other aspects
global
for further discussion.
signature (2, 2 ), the conformal
a
solution
graviton construction
which will appear in volume III of this work. Part of the motivation for this construction a
global
the appropriate
the treatment of the Ward construction for
for anti-self-dual metrics of signature ( 2,2 ) of the
give
signature ( 2,2 ).
correspondences
self-duality equations.
solutions of the self-dual
de Vries type part
Korteweg
1992)
duality equations
geometry, it leads to
space of the
of
.
The purpose of this note is to
solutions of the self
equations
-
Global solutions of the
L.J. Mason
1.
( 1992 ) Phys.
of
ℤ2 action).
signature ( 2, 2 ).
infinity’
to
𝕄0, is the
projective quadric in ! D;𝕡5 given by conformal structure is determined with the tangent To w
and y
planes
that the
see
as
that y · y
=
topology
of
Q
by asserting
=
w ·w
Q 0; this yields S2 × S2 ! D;𝕡5 is S2 × S2/ℤ2.
on
of the round
simply
realized
metric dΩ2
sphere
quadratic
that the
light
in ℝ6 of
form
Q
cones
of 𝕄 are the intersections of 𝕄
S2/ℤ2 diagonalize Q using
ℝ6 such that Q
on
set of a
The
signature (3,3).
of 𝕄.
of 𝕄 is S2 ×
The conformal structure is
pullback
zero
on
y
—
on
pair
a
y. Set the scale
•
the double
each factor and
of Euclidean 3-vectors
by requiring
! D;𝕡5, (w, y)
in ℝ6. However, in
=
0 in
=
points
topology
coordinates 1 also
of
the
cover
w ·w
𝕄̃ = S2 × S2
1
=
(—w, —y)
~
so
so
the
by taking
the
the difference
taking
d
where p1,P2 and
so
the
are
projections
global correspondence.
which the fields for these
are
(or
cases
defined
analytic
components of
This is ℤ2 invariant
U
correspond
to
Points of Lx
by
null self-dual U
𝕡𝕋(U),
the
space-time U,
complexification
we
shall
on
correspondence
assume
of U which will also,
𝕡𝕋(U)
by
an
all fields abuse of
to be the space of connected
in U. For Z
2-planes (α-planes)
𝕡𝕋(U)
we
will denote the
by Ẑ.
can
be
equivalently defined
the twistor distribution
α-planes
are
small
original region
consider the
now
metrics).
the U. We then define its twistor space
corresponding α-plane in
over
on a
where the
cases
ᵔ ;̃. We will
cover
to define the twistor space of a
by
totally
Twistor space,
We will be interested in the
𝕄 and its double
and consider fields
be denoted
notation,
are
deformations thereof for ASD
As, usual, in order
𝕡𝕋(U)
respectively.
descends to 𝕄.
3. The
are
onto the first and second factors
in U.
the
quotient
spanned by πA'▿AA'.
Conversely, points
α-planes through
as
U
x
of the
projective spin bundle
By definition, points
correspond
to
𝕔𝕡1's
of
denoted Lx in
𝕡𝕋(U) 𝕡𝕋(U).
x.
correspondence for 𝕄. Just as compactified complexified Minkowski space 𝕔𝕄is the complex lines in Ǖ 4;𝕡3 via the complex Klein correspondence, is the space of real lines
3.1. The space of
in ℝ𝕡3 via the real Klein 𝕄 are
correspondence.
In the context of the
complex lines in Ǖ 4;𝕡3 that intersect ℝ𝕡3 in
in 𝕔𝕡3 that
are
mapped
into themselves
by
the
a
real line.
complex correspondence, point
Alternatively, they
complex conjugation
Zα
—>
are
complex
Z̄β given
by
of
lines
standard
complex conjugation, component by component. According Z
to the definition above we have
𝕡𝕋(ᵔ ;)
=
ℝ𝕡3 and any real line in ℝ𝕡3 through Z corresponds
intersects 𝕄 in
an
𝕔𝕡3. Given to a
point
Z
𝕋𝕡3,
then if Z
=
Z̄,
in 𝕄 on Ẑ. In this case, Ẑ
ℝ𝕡2. If Z ≠ Z̄ then the complex line through Z and Z̄ is real and corresponds
point of 𝕄. In fact the complex α-plane Ẑ intersects 𝕄 in the unique point corresponding
to a
to
this line. 3.2. Linear theory.
The linear
by
X-ray
Fritz-John
wave
using
equation
on
the
problem
completely
was
solved in the
transform. In twistor notation, the
ℝ4 satisfying appropriate boundary
case
general
conditions
can
of the
equation
wave
solution of the hyperbolic
be obtained from the
integral
formula phi tmes left-parenthesi x Superscript up er A times up er A prime Baseline right-parenthesi equals contour-integral f times left-parenthesi x Superscript up er A up er A prime Baseline pi Subscript up er A prime Baseline times com a pi Subscript up er A prime Baseline right-parenthesi times pi Superscript up er A prime Baseline d pi Subscript up er A prime Baseline period
Here f is
a
freely specifiable equation
wave
One
might naively
by
This
oriented lines in ℝ𝕡3. This is ᵔ ;̃ the double orientation of the line and of the
point
wave
there is
Actually,
is that these solutions
weight
there
choices for
as
far
of the
as
two
possible
the twistor
tautological
which is wrong down
as even
as
equation possible
a
are
the inverse conformal are
bundle from as
functions
O[— 1],
ℝ𝕡5.
is the
𝕡𝕋(ᵔ ;̃)
a
,
point
in this
boundary
the closure of the any
Proof.
a
has
a
by
just
topologically
on
of ℝ𝕡3
ᵔ ;̃ a small
are
the
! D;𝕡3,
integration,
defined
one
the space of
on
under reversal of
that there
no
are
solutions
of the
wave
or
Grgin phenomena—the
equation
are
sections of
O[— 1],
S2 × S2/ℤ2
on
p
real
the Mobius bundle. The correct choice
are
actually
as
this is
just
the restriction
sections of the trivial bundle
So
one can
simply
write them
O[— 1].
complex thickening
correspondences
for ᵔ ;̃. We
of ᵔ ;̃. We have:
by gluing together two copies of 𝕔𝕡3, thickening of ! D;𝕡3 using the identity map.
space obtained
small those
on
the
boundary
of the
glued
down
region—each
the other copy of 𝕔𝕡3 with which it would be identified if were
glued
down.
Any
open set of one such
point
intersects
the other sheet.
on
complement
see
to the
the metric
odd sections of
some
points
partner
of its partner
Points in the
intersect 𝕄 in
will
We must therefore study twistor
together along
neighbourhood
neighbourhood
we
owing
The solutions above
as
ultrahyperbolic
𝕄.
confusion here
(non-Hausdorff)
Remark. The non-Hausdorff
perform
Clearly ϕ changes sign
the trivial bundle
S2 × S2 but
solution of the
the space of lines in
actually
the twistor correspondence is concerned.
on
on
is concerned is the Mobius bundle
shall abuse notation and denote also Lemma 3.1.
on
function
that ϕ is
of 𝕄.
anti-Grgin. Solutions
3.3. The correspondence for ᵔ ;̃.
denoted
a
lines and in order to means
a
integral sign.
naturally
cover
bundle. Given
correspondence
far
ℝ𝕡3. That ϕ is
on
does not descend to 𝕄. Indeed,
so
conformally invariant
Remark.
ϕ is
by integrating f along
orientation of the line.
an
O(—2)
differentiation under the
think that the function
𝕄. However, ϕ is defined needs to have
smooth section of
follows
of
trivial
(the thickening of) ℝD561; in Ǖ 4;𝕡3 correspond
region
and these
are
necessarily
to α-planes that
covered by two components
in the double small
points
ᵔ ;̃. Whereas,
cover
topology ! D;𝕡2
𝕄 with
thickening of)
(thickening of) ! D;𝕡3 correspond
in the so
that when
takes the double
one
to
a-planes
in
(the
cover
the α-plane has
! D;𝕡3
and the double
topology S2.
𝕡𝕋(ᵔ ;̃)
Thus
covering
is
double
covers
glued together
over
𝕔𝕡3 the
with
one
piece lying given by the
multiplying 90
in f
𝕡𝕋(ᵔ ;̃)
lines in
complex
and the other in
the intersection of
P
complex
.
This
thickening
that
yields
! D;𝕡3
line with
from the intersection with C
arrow
of the
complement thickening of ℝ𝕡3.
We reconstruct ᵔ ;̃ as the space of
the line is
the
over
are
of
cut into two
pieces by ᴡ D;𝕡3
the space of oriented lines in
ℝ𝕡3;
and the orientation is determined
to that with C
by
by i, thereby rotating it by
degrees.
The non-Hausdorffness arises ᵔ ;̃ and 3.4.
twistor space is
as
deforms
as one
Complex conjugation.
a
a
quotient
leaf of the foliation, it
Complex conjugation on
can
[Z]
goes to
correspond
to
[Z̄]
points
P
and the real lines of the
equation
wave
means
of the
fact that
complexified)
(the slightly
break into two disconnected leaves.
thickening
of ᵔ ;̃ sends α-planes to
covers
the standard
complex conjugation
that it
interchange
k
conjugation
are
l
and
.
Thus
those described above that
of ᵔ ;̃.
4. The X-ray transform. of the
bundle of
spin
the small
α-planes and hence leads to a conjugation on 𝕡𝕋(ᵔ ;̃). This on Ǖ 4;𝕡3 that fixes ! D;𝕡3 and is lifted to 𝕡𝕋(ᵔ ;̃) by requiring P
of the
on
We
can now
ᵔ ;̃ correspond
Meyer-Vietoris
H1(𝕔𝕡3,O(-2))
=
=
transform in this context. Solutions
X-ray
H1(𝕡𝕋(𝕄̃), O(—2)). These can be studied by covering of 𝕡𝕋(ᵔ ;̃) by P and P Using the
to elements of
sequence 0
understand the
using
the
.
H0(𝕔𝕡3, O(-2))
we
find
up erHSuperscript1Baselineleft-parenthesi double-struckup erPtimes left-parenthesi ModifyingAbove Withtilderight-parenthesi right-parenthesi equalsup erHSuperscript0Baselineleft-parenthesi double-struckup erCtimesdouble-struckup erPSubscriptplusSuperscript3Baselineintersectiondouble-struckup erCtimesdouble-struckup erPSubscriptminusSuperscript3Baselinetimescom atimes left-parenthesi negative2right-parenthesi right-parenthesi equalsup erHSuperscript0Baselineleft-parenthesi double-struckup erRtimesdouble-struckup erPcubedcom a left-parenthesi negative2right-parenthesi right-parenthesi
and the formula for the Penrose transform
5. ASD
fields and the inverse
Yang-Mills
fields
on
ᵔ ;̃,
we can
Theorem 5.1 There is group G
(a)
a
=
SL(n,ℝ)
c2(E) (b)
for G P
or
holomorphic =
=
k/2,
using
obtain a
an
representatives
scattering
Yang-Mills
and second Chern class
vector bundle E
on
𝕋𝕡3
with
of the
connections
C2(F)
is
precisely
=
k
vanishing
on
general on
the X-ray transform.
For anti-self-dual
transform.
analogous parametrization
1-1 map from ASD
SU(n)
these
a
Yang-Mills
solution.
bundle F with structure
ᵔ ;̃, and pairs consisting of
first and third Chern
classes,
and
and
SL(n,ℝ),
a
nondegenerate with P
=
P̄t
map P
with P̄ = P-1 or, for G
=
SU(n),
Remark. Here Ē denotes the the bundle F
Given
or
a
space-time, F̄
bundle
will be Ē* for
F when G
=
The Ward transform
Proof. C
on
on
𝕡𝕋(ᵔ ;̃),
gives
restrict it to C
we can
F̄ = F* when G
or
1-1 map from ASDYM fields
a
by
For
SU(n).
=
ᵔ ;̃ to bundles
on
Ǖ 4;𝕡3.
to obtain the bundle E on
shows that it must be
conjugation
E.
𝕡𝕋(ᵔ ;̃).
on
The restriction to
Ē for
G
=
SL(n, ℝ)
SU(n) by complex conjugation.
The rest of the data of the bundle
given
SL(n, ℝ)
=
different bundle, but the complex
a
vector bundle defined
conjugate holomorphic
(b).
in part
For
compatibility
𝕡𝕋(ᵔ ;̃)
on
with the
is encoded in the
patching
complex conjugation,
P
P must
over
satisfy
𝕔𝕡_ ∩ Ǖ 4;𝕡+
as
the conditions
stated. Note that this illustrate the
1)
implies that
general
When k
Ē Remark. Mason & a
E
or
are
two extreme
examples
of the above that
Ē
=
P
satisfying all
over
E*
=
Ǖ 4;𝕡3,
depending
P̄-1
or
1992 it
was
=
patching function
on
came
bundle E
and the
transform is
scattering one
effectively by paradigm.
could realize the inverse
patching function
‘scattering
data’
consisting
parametrizing the radiative/dispersive modes in linear
theory.
In this four dimensional
is
played by
the bundle E
is
played by
the map P that
Ǖ 4;𝕡3
on
scattering
generalizes
Deformations of
could be factorized into
an
‘algebreo geometric’ analogue
in
of C∞ functions of the real twistor coordinates
we see
linearized
that the role of the
analogue
algebro-geometric part
and the role of the
scattering
transform
straightforward
as
requires
scattering
data
it will
the examination of symmetry
change
the
𝕡𝕋(𝕄).
The nonlinear on
graviton
construction
boundary
S2 × S2 correspond
to
implies
(small)
conditions
preserved,
the
gluing map
P from
some
open set in g
that
(small)
deformations of
Since Ǖ 4;𝕡3 is rigid, the only deformable part is the gluing along ℝ𝕡3. In order structure is
no
global structure.
deformations of the conformal structure
reality
as
not clear how the normal form for the
was
the Radon transform from linearized theory.
reductions of this framework. This is not
6.
no
transform
In
of the solution—these reduce to the Fourier transform
analogue
that has
A direct connection with the inverse
and hence the details of the
Ǖ 4;𝕡3 satisfying
on
G.
shown that
about. The
a
part which parametrized the ‘solitonic’ degrees of freedom of the solutions and have
theory
to
P̄t on ℝ𝕡3.
all the information is contained in
The connection with the inverse
Sparling
P
coordinate realization of the Ward transform, but it
linearized
serve
0, the bundle E is necessarily trivial, and all the information is contained in the
=
When P extends =
There
even.
case.
matrix function
2)
k is
to
ASD
𝕡𝕋(ᵔ ;̃).
guarantee that the
to one in C
must be
with the
compatible P-1
Take a
small
a
small
analytic
embedding also
sending and is
the
ρ̄ of U into
are
the
point
and acts
we
such real
gluing
in Ǖ 4;𝕡3
or
the condition that
follows:
P
P
point
glued
down twistor space
can
This
conjugation clearly
fixes the
.
1
—
maps
map{ℝ𝕡3
ρo x0304;
=
is
ρ-1.
by image of ! D;𝕡3
are
divided into two parts
by
the
by constructing down
glued
region
.
above. These —>
conjugate
then be defined
1 map from ASD deformations of the conformal structure
as
the
ρ has
globally.
and half in C
a
that
is then done with the map P
to C
of the deformed
so
complex conjugate embedding (it
with deformed ASD conformal structure is then reconstructed
P
have
of the
complexification
lines in the deformed space that
half in
arranged
yields
embedding of ! D𝕡3 into Ǖ 4;𝕡3 ! D;𝕡3 in 𝕔𝕡3. Then we also have
U of
gluing from
to the
C
space-time
Thus
ℝ𝕡's
which is the
The deformed
be
can
as
ρ of the standard
neighbourhood
complex conjugation map
complex
and
Ǖ 4;𝕡3
a
This
.
map. This
deformation
extension to
antiholomorphic
The
conjugate
analytic
holomorphic).
The
that sends g
conjugation
P̄ where P̄ is the
=
be
can
Ǖ 4;𝕡3} / Dif {ℝ𝕡3}
thought as a
of
as
the space of
diffeomorphism
of
S2 × S2 and
on
(analytically)
! D;𝕡3
embedded
does not affect the final
P. The
Examples. a
basic idea is to take
gluing
a
some
use
real slice V
=
fixed amount
2 × 2 matrices
! D;𝕡3
sits inside
iλA∂/∂λA
quotient by
the
—
obtained from
of LeBrun’s
the
along
version of the construction of Jones & Tod Use
are
hyperbolic Gibbons-Hawking ansatz, LeBrun (1991). The global holomorphic vector field on Ǖ 4;𝕡3 that is real on ! D;𝕡3 and to drag the
split signature analogue
standard
that K.P.Tod writes down in his article in volume III
examples
PSU(2)
as
with
iμa∂/∂μA corresponds
S2. On ᵔ ;̃ the symmetry
the
λA
can
be
on
twistor space with columns of μA.
SU(2) complex conjugate
a
global
represented
quadric Q
with coordinates
that it rotates
so
just
one
(λA,μA).
The
The vector field
right multiplication by diagonal SU(2)
to
vector field is the
complexified
of the vector field. This is
(1985).
coordinates
homogeneous
as
imaginary part
matrices. The
([λA], [μa„])
and real slice
of the S2 factors and leaves
the other invariant. Choose some
small
a
real
analytic
thickening
(exp(f)λA, exp(—f)μA)
function
The
by gluing
space-time
one
S2, f([λA],[μA] defined
of the real slice. in
P
out the lines λA = 0 and μA obtained
on
where =
we
and
[μA]
given
quadric Q+
are close to
μ̂A and continue it
to another
a
in
being conjugate. Thus,
complex Qover
line bundle
some
in standard form in Jones & Tod d s squared equals d times normal upper Sigma 3 squared plus left-parenthesis d phi plus omega right-parenthesis squared slash upper V squared
=
identify (exp(—f)λa,exp(f)μA)
0, the twistor space 𝕡T is
copy of the
metric is
[λA]
Then
for λA
over
as
we
with take
the space
thickening of the
(1985)
P if
to
Q̃
real slice.
where here d
,
is the
Einstein-Weyl
and
and V
hyperbolic space
u
corresponding
space
to d
It is
conformal
a
4dζdζ̄/sin2 θ(1
+
Discussion.
It is
rescaling (the
|ζ|2)2
possible
respectively orthogonal
*3 is the
hodge
dual with
for the components of
f(wAπA, πA)
be put into this —
cuts the space in half. This uses the same construction but
generated by πA∂/∂wA
(wA, πA). has
can
trivial part is to show that the 3-metric dθ2 /sin2 θ
non
hyperbolic metric).
S2 ×S2 but whose null infinity
translation symmetry
f
*3dV where
Lorentzian
to write down metrics that are Ricci flat with conformal structures that
with
where
main
the Lorentzian
is
over
:=
=
exercise to show that the metrics in Tod’s article
extend a
dw
are
just
.
straightforward
a
form after
satisfy
which is
quadric
the parts of an ASD Maxwell field that
are
and tangent to the symmetry direction and thus
respect
to the
The
gluing
homogeneity
where the real slice is
identifies wA
zero
and is
ifπA
—
rapidly decreasing
given by
with wA +
g
on
now
as
wAπA/(
real values
if
ℝ is harmonic iff φ o
f
by
K.P.Tod
(TN 29,
November
N of Riemannian manifolds M, N with the :
M
→
ℝ is.
As
a
concrete
example,
1989)
following
take M to be
ℝ3
with coordinates x,y,z and N to be
ℝ2
with coordinates u,v. The map
φ is
defined
by giving
u(x,y,z), v(x,y,x) satisfying nabla u equals nabla upsilon equals 0 equals nabla u dot nabla upsilon times semicolon StartAbsoluteValue nabla u EndAbsoluteValue squared equals StartAbsoluteValue nabla upsilon EndAbsoluteValue squared
(1) In this
Baird & Wood
case
the tangent bundle of the defined harmonic
φ is locally
find that
(1988)
line.
complex projective
They
go
in this case, and also in the
morphisms
defined
by
a
holomorphic
to use this fact to
on
of
theory of this property
of N
points
give
curves
harmonic
morphisms
shear-free
congruence.
Now T𝕡1
corresponds there is In
a
is
3, dim N
=
equivalent
to the condition that this congruence
of the flat metric
geodesics
parameter surface in T𝕡1. As
mini-Kerr theorem that this surface is
particular,
when dim M
case
this leads to
an
on
ℝ3 and
holomorphic
a
of
so a
might anticipate
one
T𝕡1,
classify globally
anything,
curve
is the relation
2, the inverse images
=
in M. One purpose of this note is to observe that the
is ths space of to a 2-real
of φ. In the
in
S3 → surface and H3 → surface.
cases
Since T𝕡1 is the mini-twistor space of ℝ3 it is natural to wonder what, if to twistor
curve
defining property of
curves
be
a
geodesic
congruence of
and
geodesics
from the Kerr theorem,
iff the congruence is shear-free.
formula for such congruences: if the generator is
explicit
up er L equals StartFraction 1 minus alpha alpha overbar Over 1 plus alpha alpha overbar EndFraction StartFraction partial-dif erential Over partial-dif erential z EndFraction plus StartFraction alpha plus alpha overbar Over 1 plus alpha alpha overbar EndFraction StartFraction partial-dif erential Over partial-dif erential x EndFraction minus StartFraction i left-parenthesi alpha minus alpha overbar ight-parenthesi Over 1 plus alpha alpha overbar EndFraction StartFraction partial-dif erential Over partial-dif erential y EndFraction
then
α(x, y, z)
is
f(x( 1 for
given implicitly by —
α2) + iy( 1 + α2)
arbitrary holomorphic f
Baird & Wood
or
—
2αz, α)
holomorphic
=
and
As Baird & Wood remark, to find solutions of
I
am
this
or
in
spinors
homogeneous
F(xABαAαB, αc) F
(a
=
0
formula similar to this is in
(1988)).
into the class of non-linear more on
0
(1)
was
set as a
problem by Jacobi.
solvable
differential-geometric problems
by
twistor
This
theory (see
now
falls
II.1.13 for
subject).
grateful
to John Wood and Paul Baird for
telling
me
about harmonic
morphisms.
References Baird , P. & Wood , J.
( 1988 )
Math. Ann. 280 , p. 579 603
Baird , P. & Wood , J.
( 1987 )
Ann. Inst. Fourier, Grenoble 37 , p. 135 173
Baird , P. k, Wood , J.
( 1989 )
-
-
Harmonic
space-forms University ,
2.
.
morphisms
.
and conformal foliations
by geodesics
of threedimensional
of Melbourne Department of Mathematics Research Report
§II.1.13 More
on
I wish to make
harmonic
morphisms by
observations which
some
and to describe what I think is twistor theory
(though
might
way of
a new
geodesic
a
(TN 30,
June
1990)
make my Twistor Newsletter article II.1.12 , clearer,
looking at
in this last connection
Recall that the generator of
K.P.Tod
see
the Kerr theorem
appropriate
to Riemannian
Hughston & Mason 1988).
shear-free congruence is
up er L equals StartFraction 1 minus alpha lpha overbar Over 1 plus alpha lpha overbar EndFraction StartFraction partial-dif erential Over partial-dif erential z EndFraction plus StartFraction alpha plus alpha overbar Over 1 plus alpha lpha overbar EndFraction StartFraction partial-dif erential Over partial-dif erential x EndFraction minus i StartFraction left-parenthesi alpha minus alpha overbar ight-parenthesi Over 1 plus alpha lpha overbar EndFraction StartFraction partial-dif erential Over partial-dif erential y EndFraction
(1) where
α(x,
y,
is
z)
given implicitly by f left-parenthesis x left-parenthesis 1 minus alpha squared right-parenthesis plus i y left-parenthesis 1 plus alpha squared right-parenthesis minus 2 alpha z comma alpha right-parenthesis equals 0 period
(2) In the interest of
(a)
If α =
u
clarity,
I should have added in II.1.12 that:
+ iv then
▯2u ie. the
(b) α(x,
(c)
For
complex function α(x, z)
y,
is constant
given
a
along
▿2v
=
y,
L
constant value of
=
0
=
▿u·
|▿u|2
▿u;
z) obtained from (2)
as
given by (1)
α,
the real and
an
‘elementary’ interpretation
of
(2)
as
|▿u|2
defines the harmonic
morphism of II. 1.12
.
.
imaginary parts
L is then tangent to the line of intersection of the two There is
=
follows:
a
of
(2)
each define
a
plane
and
planes.
line in 𡇓 is
given by
an
equation
of the
form r times normal upper Lamda times a equals b
(3) where
a
is
number
α
a
unit vector and b is
according
to
(1)
,
then
orthogonal
(3)
can
Parametrise the unit vectors with the
to a.
complex
be written
x left-parenthesis 1 minus alpha squared right-parenthesis plus normal i y left-parenthesis 1 plus alpha squared right-parenthesis minus 2 alpha z equals beta
(4) where
β parametrises
the
arbitrary holomorphic ‘direction’,
Argand plane orthogonal to
function of α, ie. the
both understood
as
complex
a.
‘intercept’
is
Now an
(2)
is
equivalent
to
arbitrary holomorphic
morphisms’
in Riemannian twistor
is also the
theory (when
be
an
function of the
variables. When this function is linear, the congruence is
3-dimensional picture of the Kerr congruence and is sketched in Baird & Wood ‘Harmonic
taking β to
answer
to the
there
are no
a
(1988).
question ‘what do you get from the Kerr theorem shear-free
geodesic congruences)?’
To
see
this,
take
a
twistor function
homogeneous holomorphic
in twistor space which is ‘real’ in the
F(Za)
appropriate
sense
and intersect the zero-set of F with
to Riemannian twistor
This
theory.
a
line
gives
upper F left-parenthesis a plus b zeta comma minus b overbar plus a overbar zeta comma 1 times comma zeta right-parenthesis equals 0
(5) writing (1,ζ)
for the
π-spinor (rather
coordinates
complex
than
(1,α)
which I used at the
beginning).
Here
a
and b
are
ℝ4 and the metric is
on
d s squared equals d a times d a overbar plus d b times d b overbar period
(6) Solving (5) gives
function
a
ζ(a, b, ā, b̄)
with
StartFraction partial-dif erential zeta Over partial-dif erential a overbar EndFraction plus zeta StartFraction partial-dif erential zeta Over partial-dif erential b overbar EndFraction equals 0 semicol n StartFraction partial-dif erential zeta Over partial-dif erential b EndFraction minus zeta StartFraction partial-dif erential zeta Over partial-dif erential a EndFraction equals 0
(7) from which it follows that ζ has
vanishing Laplacian
and null
gradient
in the metric
(6) :
StartFractionpartial-difer ntialzetaOverpartial-difer ntialapartial-difer ntialaoverbarEndFractionplusStartFractionpartial-difer ntialzetaOverpartial-difer ntialbtimespartial-difer ntialboverbarEndFractionequals0semicol nStartFractionpartial-difer ntialzetaOverpartial-difer ntialaEndFractiondotStartFractionpartial-difer ntialzetaOverpartial-difer ntialaoverbarEndFractionplusStartFractionpartial-difer ntialzetaOverpartial-difer ntialbEndFractiondotStartFractionpartial-difer ntialzetaOverpartial-difer ntialboverbarEndFractionequals0
(8) If
think of
we
conditions for
(5)
it
implies that,
if
ζ satisfies (8)
as
the
ζ as
to define a harmonic
well
then
as
so
holomorphically-related For the
stereographic defining
does any harmonic
suppose that
converse
a
coordinate
on
the
morphism from ℝ4
harmonic
morphisms η satisfies
to
(8)
is
𝕊2. However, on
2-planes,
and is constant
on
flat
easily
(7)
flat
function ofζ In this sence,
constant on flat
(8)
then
ζ is constant
morphism,
holomorphic
sphere,
one
seen
to be the
is stronger in that Note that
2-planes.
ζ defines
a
of which satisfies
2-planes.
of
family (7)
.
Define ζ by
StartFraction partial-dif erential eta Over partial-dif erential a overbar EndFraction plus zeta StartFraction partial-dif erential eta Over partial-dif erential b overbar EndFraction equals 0 times s o times t h a t imes a l s o times StartFraction partial-dif erential eta Over partial-dif erential b EndFraction minus zeta StartFraction partial-dif erential eta Over partial-dif erential a EndFraction equals 0
then it follows from the conditions
(7)
and
(8)
on
η that ζ is
a
holomorphic function
of η and
so
in turn satisfies
.
To summarise, constant on
a
family
2-planes
of
holomorphically-related harmonic morphisms from ℝ4
defines and is defined
by
a
holmorphic function
to
𝕊2 which
in twistor space. This
can
are
be
called ‘the Riemannian Kerr theorem’. This view of the Kerr theorem
arose
in discussions with Henrik Pedersen.
References Baird , P. & Wood , J.
Hughston 5 , p. 275
.
,
( 1988 )
Math. Ann. 280 , p. 579 603
L. P. and Mason , L. J.
-
( 1988 )
A
generalized
.
Kerr-Robinson theorem , Class.
Quant.
Grav.
harmonic
§II.1.14 Monopoles, October
(TN 31,
In this paper and
morphisms
is
a
real
satisfying harmonic
again
curve
spinor
fields defined
means
of the
morphisms
real structure
a
a
in TS2
curves
equations,
conformality condition,
one
second order
equations. Furthermore,
therefore,
description the
express
may
give
viewed
to
Now let
φ be
φ we are able to
γ1,γ2
a
harmonic
interpret
of twistor bundles.
harmonic
morphisms
(Baird &
Wood
φ. However, the that
they
from
1988),
morphism
the
of the
Higgs
we are
continuously
equivalent
to an
γ1 ,γ2
A direct
objects.
of
a
from
a
a
(m 2)-dimensional
satisfying
(see
section
1)
domain in ℝ4 to in terms of
description a
between
on
ℝ3 and
simple first
a
the
region
morphisms some
examples
of
physical
on
ℝ3
particular
surface.
ℝ3. This
on
At
such
as
interest
may also be
direction.
regular points
holomorphicity properties
of
of sections
of the second author for submersive
surface
advantage
some
field
For instance, in
Unlike the ℝ3
(Wood 1986).
may have ‘unremovable’
critical
morphisms
an
first order
relationship
(multiple-valued) spinor
monopoles.
a
equations explicitly. Indirectly,
field. Note that harmonic
has the great
over
morphism from —
complex
field to the curvature of
valued function with
able to describe harmonic
in terms of
Another connection between harmonic harmonic
a
same
Riemannian 4-manifold to
spinor formulation
extend
M4)
in
in terms of spinor fields
spinor equations
the sections
ideas,
TS2,
studied
we
gradient
This ties in with the a
surface
their classification,
(see below), obtaining
ℝ4 invariant under translation in
on
complex
line of
curve
the
elliptic equation
spinor
algebraic
Thus, remarkably, these solutions
illuminating picture
of the
This
1988).
relating
monopole
k in the
degree
write down all solutions to these
we
morphisms
of
τ)
apparently independent
solutions of Prasad & Rossi,
singularities
harmonic
as
static
a more
axially symmetric
corresponds
so
a
(Hitchin 1982).
from
canonically
&. Wood
4-dimensional Minkowski space
we
an
classified in terms of the
are
k may be constructed
(Baird
solutions remains obscure. However, here
order
charge
Ansatz Ak
Atiyah-Ward
invariant under
algebraic
SU2-bundle, the other
on
of
monopole
from domains in Euclidean 3-space
different
quite
ℝ4 (also
3- and 4-spaces.
on
certain other technical conditions. In
in terms of
to two
by
(that is,
curve
by P.Baird and J.C. Wood
draw attention to the connection between static monopoles, harmonic
we
Hitchin has shown how every static
algebraic
fields
1990)
Introduction.
an
spinor
and
morphisms
singularities
at critical
solutions
that the
spinor
physical
fields is the
can
case
points
of
be chosen
points.
morphisms
and
Riemannian m-dimensional manifold M to conformal foliation of M
by
following: a
surface is
A submersive
locally
minimal submanifolds. In the
case
m
3,
=
we can remove
foliations
are
the Riemannian
rest mass fields
zero
Such conformal
by geodesics.
of the well-known shear-free, null
analogue
relativists in connection with
by
much studied
the restriction ‘submersive’ and the foliation is
geodesic
congruences,
Baird & Wood 1991, 1992
(see
and II.1.12 , II.1.13 ).
Throughout, enables
us
to consider
1. Harmonic φ : M
we use
spinors
spinors
morphisms
described in the
as
defined
vector space with metric of
on a
from ℝ3 in terms of
This
arbitrary signature.
Let M ⊂ ℝm be
spinors.
(1986).
open subset and
an
horizontally conformal if
𝕔 a smooth map. Then φ is said to be
—>
of Penrose & Rindler
Appendix
normalup erSigmaUnderscriptaEndscriptstimesleft-parenthesi StartFractionpartial-difer ntialphiOverpartial-difer ntialxSuperscriptaBaselineEndFractionright-parenthesi squaredequals0com a
(1.1) and harmonic if
normalup erSigmaUnderscriptaEndscripts imesStartFractionpartial-difer ntialphiOverleft-parenthesi partial-difer ntialxSuperscriptaBaselineright-parenthesi squaredEndFractionequals0period
(1.2) Here
coordinates
(x1,... xm) are standard ,
is called
a
harmonic
if both
morphism
on
(1.1)
ℝm and summation is
and
hold. There
(1.2)
mappings
over a
which
pull
characterized
as
functions to local harmonic functions
(see Fuglede
1978, Ishihara 1979).
harmonic
example,
mappings
morphisms
which send Brownian
The two latter definitions then
paths
to Brownian
generalize
manifolds, the equations (1.1) (1.2) becoming ,
Ishihara
1979).
Note that in the
case m
which
are
many more, see below. For all m the
holomorphic
in the range, that is, if φ : M where ρ : V
→
(1.1)
(1.2)
—>
only
equations
V ⊂ 𝕔 is
a
mappings
complicated solutions to
functions
are
φ(x1
in this
morphisms
with respect to
local
solution, then
complex
so
is the
coordinate
a
on
the
spinor
covariant derivatives DAB D n
i
i
±-holomorphic
case m
≥ 3 there
map. In
are
particular
M → Ǖ 4; we
may
N; these will satisfy
N.
x Superscript Baseline Superscript a Baseline equals left-parenthesi x Superscript 1 Baseline comma x squared comma x cubed right-parenthesi left-right-ar ow x Superscript up er A up er B Baseline equals StartFraction 1 Over StartRo t 2 EndRo t EndFraction Start 2 By 2 Matrix 1st Row 1st Column x squared plus i x cubed 2nd Column minus x Superscript 1 Baseline 2nd Row 1st Column minus x Superscript 1 Baseline 2nd Column minus x squared plus i x cubed EndMatrix period
∂/∂xa,
are
composition ρ o φ :
Riemann surface
spinors by the correspondence
=
1979).
Riemannian
(see Fuglede 1978,
in the
We consider ℝ3 with its standard Euclidean metric. Vectors xa may be
Writing 02;a
are
invariant under conformal transformations
φ : M → N with values in a
case
,
ix2);
& Davie
arbitrary
(1.1) (1.2) ±
The map φ
Equivalently they
between
𝕔 is any weakly conformal (equivalently ±-holomorphic)
consider harmonic and
or
2 the
antiholomorphic)
(by
we mean
=
more
to
m.
back local harmonic
paths (see Bernard, Campbell
the notion
,
equivalent definitions,
other
are
are
for
1,...
=
given by
expressed
in terms of
(see
also Sommers 1980
⊂ ℝ3
Let M
conformal if and
be
equation (14) ). open subset and
an
only
M
φ :
is
▿φ is
a
spatial
null vector
field),
But the symmetry of DAB φ then
implies
conformal if and
horizontally
φ
Then
φ is horizontally
0
=
and this holds if and
DAB φ
that φ is
mapping.
if det DAB
(that
smooth
→ 𝕔 a
=
that ηB
if
only
ξAηB.
—
λξB for
scalar function λ. So
some
we
deduce
if
only
up er D Subscript up er A up er B Baseline times phi equals xi Subscript up er A Baseline times xi Subscript up er B Baseline
(1.3) for
some
If
spinor field ξA
defined
φ is horizontally conformal,
morphism, if and
only
M.
over
so
that
holds, then φ is harmonic, and
(1.3)
so
is
a
harmonic
if up er D Subscript up er A up er B Baseline times xi Superscript up er A Baseline xi Superscript up er B Baseline equals 0 period
(1.4) Conversely,
as
in Sommers
i
given by
.
THEOREM 1.1. between harmonic
(1980), given
Combining this
Let M ⊂ ℝ3 be
morphisms φ :
a
a
spacial
null vector field va ↔ μAμB, then curl va is
with equation
simply
M → 𝕔 and
(1.4)
obtain
we
,
There is
connected open subset.
spinor fieldsξA on
M
satisfying
a
correspondence
the
spinor equation
up er D Subscript up er A up er B Baseline times xi Superscript up er A Baseline xi Superscript up er C Baseline equals 0 period
(1.5) REMARKS 1.2.
(i)
This
correspondence
φ̃ = φ + c, for
(ii)
The
spinor
morphism,
2)
some
field
ξA
then at
the derivative
a
is one-to-one if
identify
we
complex
number c,and define the
extends
continuously
critical
point (i.e.
a
over
point
components),
then ǁDAB
φǁ2
=
|ξA|4,
where
A
spinor field ψAB
time
independent
a
field up to
points
of
sign only.
φ. For
if
φ is
a
harmonic
where the differential of φ has rank less than
collapses completely (Fuglede 1978),
follows that ξA extends with the value 0 at
(iii)
spinor
critical
to be the Hilbert-Schmidt norm of the derivative
its
morphisms φ, φ̃ whenever
two harmonic
(the ǀξAǀ2
that is DAB φ ≡ 0. sum =
Setting ǁDAB φǁ2
of the squares of the moduli of
|ξ0|2
+
|ξ1|2.
Since φ is smooth, it
critical point.
= ξAξBsatisfying equation (1.5) may be interpreted solution to Maxwell’s equations. This is clear
as a
null,
source
by expressing ▿φ
=
free,
E + iB
in real and
(nullity), (iv)
Then horizontal
imaginary parts.
curl E
curl B
=
0 is automatic and
=
In Baird & Wood
(1988)
corresponds
holomorphic
lines in
ℝ3,
to
a
it should be
on
ℝ3.
thought
of
corresponding
as
where
of the harmonic
line field
a
morphism.
ℝm, is determined by
an
Such
div E
=
In fact such
a
div B was
=
=
defined. This
an
oriented line
morphism. Globally
harmonic
morphism,
infinitesimally close) correspond multiple-valued
0.
the space of oriented
to a harmonic
multiple-valued
to a
equation
TS2,
ǀEǁ ǁBǁ
0 and
=
determines
a curve
corresponds
lines become
nearby
·B
E
generalized harmonic morphism
a
in the mini-twistor space
curve
Locally such
envelope points ( points
z(x),x
the notion of
harmonicity gives
with its natural complex structure.
field defined
points
conformality implies
harmonic
where
to branch
morphism
z
=
of the form
upper P left-parenthesis x comma z right-parenthesis equals 0 comma
(1.6) where P is
holomorphic in
and
z
harmonic
a
morphism
in x, that is
normalup erSigmaUnderscriptaUnderUnderscriptEndscripts imesleft-parenthesi StartFractionpartial-difer ntialup erPOverpartial-difer ntialxSuperscriptBaselineSuperscriptaBaselineEndFractionright-parenthesi squaredequals0timesandnormalup erSigmaUnderscriptaUnderUnderscriptEndscripts imesStartFractionpartial-difer ntialup erPOverleft-parenthesi partial-difer ntialxSuperscriptBaselineSuperscriptaBaselineright-parenthesi squaredEndFractionequals0period
In
general
for each
P is
polynomial
(1.6)
coincide.
generalization surface for Given
a
a
theory,
in
z
=
z(x) correspond
in which
z
higher
for
(1987, 1990)
harmonic =
morphism φ : unit
Branch where
points
∂P/∂z
of the
=
0.
resulting
Frequently
to values x for which two roots z of
harmonic
morphisms
examples
as
a
natural
functions of Riemann
(multiple-valued) analytic
some
1988).
easily
checked that in the chart
In fact
The
M → 𝕡, M open in
positive tangent
Wood
γ extends smoothly
equation (1.5)
ℝ3,
to the fibre of
across
critical
and Gudmundsson & Wood
Harmonic
morphisms φ :
classified in Baird h Wood smooth foliation F of M
M
we can
associate
φ through
has the
points (Baird &
(1993)
—>
𝕔 from
(1988).
and, locally, up
Ǖ 4;, φ is given implicitly by
an
to
are
composition
Baird 1987, Baird &
Wood
γ is
represented
of the fibres
ℝ3
have been
(parts of) straight
with
Then it is
1992).
→ 𝕔 ∪ ∞,
of
open subsets of Euclidean space
Indeed the fibres
Gauss map γ : M →
(i) minimality (Baird 1987, Wood 1986).
simple interpretation map
a
(see
x
given by stereographic projection S2
now
const., and (ii) horizontal ±-holomorphicity of the Gauss
subset of
(x,z)
multiple-valued
dimensions of the
Baird
see
points
they correspond
case
We may think of such to
to
general theory.
S2, given by γ(x)
by ξ0/ξ1.
this may have several roots.
ℝm
x
multivalued function
a
weakly
φ
completely
lines which form
conformal map
=
on an
a
open
equation alpha Subscript a Baseline left-parenthesis phi left-parenthesis x right-parenthesis right-parenthesis x Superscript a Baseline equals 1
(1.7)
where
alpha equals StartFraction 1 Over 2 h EndFraction times left-parenthesis 1 minus g squared comma i left-parenthesis 1 plus g squared right-parenthesis comma minus 2 g right-parenthesis
and g,h
horizontal is
conformality
local leaf
space.)
Note that
writing
a
φ is
to
functions
meromorphic
are
given
z
condition
(1.2)
certain Riemann surface N.
a
the foliation F has
,
φ(x), equation (1.7)
=
M
at x
on
a
is of the form
(Indeed,
because of the
transverse conformal structure and N
(1.6)
The solution to
.
(1.5) corresponding
by xi Subscript up er A Baseline quals StartFraction 1 Over StartRo t 2 Superscript 1 slash 2 Baseline alpha prime period times x EndRo t EndFraction left-parenthesi StartFraction 1 Over StartRo t h EndRo t EndFraction com a StartFraction g Over StartRo t h EndRo t EndFraction right-parenthesi com a
(1.8) where g, h
evaluated at
are
in Baird & Wood
generally
more
(1988),
in
π(x),
Riemann
a
conformal map of 𝕔. In this
h(z)
z, and
=
[ξA],
Note that, where
by
a
infinitesimally
close
field ξA has
The
these
of
morphism
to
a
case
as
k
given by
=
1). g(z)
radial
(1991).
envelope
=
see
=
z.
C,
see
=
1
(z
N)
of this
by
weakly
͌ 𝕔, g is constant and
φ away
defining
sis
where
family
a
from
family
nearby
At such
1993).
Baird
This corresponds to
(1987),
of the fibre is the
points
of lines
lines get
points
the
a
two-valued harmonic
Baird k Wood
through
the point
(1988),
Gudmundsson
(0,0,—1),
with both
single point (0,0, —1).
two-valued harmonic
morphism.
also
corresponds
One branch of this is called the
Davie 1979, Baird 1987, Baird k Wood
1988).
In this
is the circle
through
:
x3
=
0, (x1)2 +
(x2)2
the interior of this circle and the
as we cross
the
(x1, x2)-plane
Gudmundsson k Wood
=
1.
corresponding tangent
outside the circle C.
this example where the line field is discontinuous circle
Ǖ 4;(or,
a
(1982, 1983):
z,h(z)
projection,
C
discontinuous
with values in followed
has smooth solutions
envelope points
Hitchin
example (Bernard, Campbell k
Lines twist
result
monopole of charge k=2). g(za)=z, This
rotationally symmetric the
a
By
is constant.
The fibres consist of lines
envelope
Prasad-Rossi
disk
orthogonal projection
equation αa(z)xa the
globally on ℝ3
choice of coordinates, N
Theorem, (1.7)
points are
are
charge
orientations. The
(ii) (The
defined
the leaf space N.
singularity.
known
& Wood
given by
an
onto
Baird & Wood 1988, Gudmundsson & Wood
simplest monopoles
(i) (Monopole
of the
projection
morphisms
appropriate
Function
Thinking
(see
a
after
are
projectivized spinor field,
N)
z
surface)
case
Implicit .
(parametrized by spinor
the
the
π being the natural
the only harmonic
(1993).)
as we cross
the
(There
is also
(x1, x2)-plane
line field is a
version of
inside
the
2.
Harmonic
from
morphisms
Euclidean metric. Vectors xa may
ℝ4
in terms of be
now
expressed
We consider ℝ4 with its standard
spinors. in terms of
spinors by
the
correspondence
x Superscript a Baseline equals left-parenthesi x Superscript 0 Baseline comma x Superscript 1 Baseline comma x squared comma x cubed times right-parenthesi times left-right-ar ow x Superscript up er A up er A prime Baseline equals StartFraction 1 Over StartRo t 2 EndRo t EndFraction Start 2 By 2 Matrix 1st Row 1st Column i x Superscript 0 Baseline plus x Superscript 1 Baseline 2nd Column x squared plus i x cubed 2nd Row 1st Column x squared minus i x cubed 2nd Column i x Superscript 0 Baseline minus x Superscript 1 EndMatrix
Let M ⊂ ℝ4 be
open subset.
an
only if the gradient ▿φ is
a
Then,
complex
as
ℝ3,
for
a
map
φ :
M → 𝕔 is
null field and this holds if and
horizontally
only
conformal if and
if
nabla phi equals xi Subscript upper A Baseline times eta Subscript upper A prime Baseline
(2.1) for
some
▿AA'
=
fields
spinor
ξA,χA'
defined
on
M, where the spinor covariant derivatives
are
given by
∂/∂xAA'.
REMARK. We
always
have the freedom left-parenthesi xiSubscriptup erABaselinetimescom aetaSubscriptup erAprimeBaselineright-parenthesi right-ar owfrombarleft-parenthesi lamdaxiSubscriptup erABaselinetimescom alamdaSuperscriptnegative1Baseline taSubscriptup erAprimeBaselineright-parenthesi com a
(2.2) for any
non-zero
Suppose a
now
scalar function λ. that
φ is horizontally conformal,
so
that
holds. Then
(2.1)
φ is
harmonic and
so
is
harmonic morphism, if and only if nabla Superscript up er A up er A prime Baseline xi Subscript up er A Baseline times eta Subscript up er A prime Baseline equals 0 period
(2.3) Conversely, given
they We
determine
require
a
a
of spinor fields
pair
harmonic
morphism.
to be zero. This is
t
ξA,ηA'
Now the
would like conditions which
we
product ξAη)A'
to the
equivalent
M,
on
pair
of
determines
ensure
null vector field va.
a
spinor equations:
StartLayout Enlarged left-brace 1st Row nabla times eta Subscript up er B prime Baseline equals 0 2nd Row nabla xi Superscript up er A Baseline equals 0 period EndLayout
(2.4)
Combining (2.3)
and
THEOREM 2.1.
Let M ⊂ ℝ4 be
between harmonic
(2.4)
we
obtain:
morphisms φ:
a
simply
M → 𝕔 and
spinor equations
connected open subset.
pairs
of
spinor
fields
There isa corespondence
(ξA,ηA')
satisfying M the
on
StarLayoutEnlargedleft-brace1stRow nabl Subscriptup erAup erAprimeBaselinexiSupersciptup erABaseline taSupersciptup erBprimeBaseline quals02ndRow nabl xiSupersciptup erB aseline taSupersciptup erAprimeBaseline quals0EndLayout
(2.5) Proof.
It is clear that
equations (2.5)
with A'
=
(2.5) implies (2.3) B'
=
nabla xi Superscript 0 Baseline eta Superscript 0 prime Baseline plus nabla xi Superscript 1 Baseline eta Superscript 0 prime Baseline equals one-half left-parenthesis nabla xi Superscript 0 Baseline eta Superscript 0 prime Baseline plus nabla xi Superscript 1 Baseline eta Superscript 1 prime Baseline plus nabla Subscript 10 prime Baseline xi Superscript 1 Baseline eta Superscript 0 prime Baseline plus nabla xi Superscript 0 Baseline eta Superscript 1 prime Baseline right-parenthesis comma
0. Then
and
(2.4) Conversely, .
suppose
we
consider the first of
by (2.4)
.
But this
equals
by (2.3)
zero
The other equations
.
obtained
are
similarly.
REMARKS 2.2. The
(i)
correspondence
constant and
to critical are now
(iii)
points. For choose
=
α(x),β(x)
case)
on
extend
to 0 at a critical
quadric Q2 ⊂ 𝕔P3, This
Q2.
and
(1984),
determines
[ηA'(x)]
an
x
to ℝ4)
a
(they =
point. point
M
x
a
β-plane β(x).
Then
the identification of Q2
origin in 𝕔4.
the
2-plane through
to the fibre of φ through
(the tangent
ηA'
(ii), ǁ▿AA',φǁ2
at each
determines
real
a
a-plane a(x) (a complex
point corresponds (under
This
the vertical space at
thatǀξAǀ =
continuously
the
point
λ such
of Penrose & Rindler
by
extend continuously
in Remarks 1.2
projectivized spinor [ξA(x)] of
ξA,ηA'
as
the
a
(2.2)
which differ
morphisms .
spinor Helds
Then
1).
=
2-planes in
x),
translated to
origin.
A harmonic
morphism on ȑ3 may be
under
translation. Thus
some
Examples.
Particular
examples
with respect to
±-holomorphic
are
ξA,ηA’
geometric description
intersect in
plane is
two harmonic
any continuous scalar function
with the Grassmannian of oriented
the
(iv)
identify
way that the
a
equivalence |λ|
and both
▿aa'φ i1 0,
line in this
3.
|ξA|4
In terms of the where
in such
λ in (2.2)
defined up to
ǀξA|2|ηA'|2
we
subject the spinor fields to the equivalence
We may choose
(ii)
is one-to-one if
from the standard
one
viewed
as
equation (1.5) of harmonic
one
is
harmonic a
special
morphism on ℝ4 of equations
case
morphisms φ : ℝ4
of the Kähler structures
by identifying ℝ4
obtained
a
with 𝕔×
on
→ 𝕔 are
which is invariant
(2.5)
.
given by
ℝ4. Each Kähler
Ǖ 4;, by composing
maps which
structure arises
with
an
of
isometry
ℝ4. Use coordinates in
ℝ4,
is
(z, w)
holomorphic
which holds if and
for 𝕔× 𝕔,
if and
only
only
so
that
z
=
x0
+
ix1,
clearly
det
=
x2
+
ix3. Then φ : M → Ǖ 4;, M
open
StartFractionpartial-difer ntialphiOverpartial-difer ntialzoverbarEndFractionequalsStartFractionpartial-difer ntialphiOverpartial-difer ntialwoverbarEndFractionequals0com a
if
▿00'φ=▿10oφ? Then
w
if
▿AA,φ
=
=
0.
0 and nabla Subscript up er A up er A prime Baseline phi equals Start 2 By 2 Matrix 1st Row 1st Column 0 2nd Column asterisk 2nd Row 1st Column 0 2nd Column asterisk EndMatrix equals StartBinomialOrMatrix asterisk Cho se asterisk EndBinomialOrMatrix left-parenthesi 0 times asterisk right-parenthesi
so
that ηB'
some
=
(0, λ),
scalar μ. We
for
now
some
scalar λ.
Similarly
consider the effect of
an
φ is
anti-holomorphic
isometry
on
the
if and
only
if
ξA
spinor decomposition
=
of
(μ, 0)
for
▿AA'φ.
There is define
φ̃
action
on
=
a
well-known double
φo θ.
Then
SU(2) × SU(2)
cover
If
▿φ(θ(x))oθ.
SU(2) × SU(2)
(A, B)
that θ
Suppose
→ SO(4).
and
then the induced
θ,
covers
SO(4)
given by
is
spinors
φ̃(x)
=
ξAηA'↦ AξAηA'B* , where
B
ηA'(x)B*. θ. In
(θA,ηA')
that
so
,
Note that under the
particular
we see
from the standard
one
that
by
φ :
an
↦
equivalence (2.2) M → 𝕔 is
only
if and
if
𝕔P1 is
[ξA]
one
EXAMPLE 3.2. Let
to a
may compute the
—>
ℝ4) on
is
a
spinor fields ηA',ξA
harmonic
(A, B) covering
𝕔P1 is
[ηA']
by an
morphism,
constant.
orientation
then Æ is
[ηA']
(after identifying
zw
=
reversing
have
ℝ4 if and only if either =
if
only
obtained
we
η̃A'(θ(x))
to a Kähler structure obtained
with respect if and
and
A(ξA(x))
=
of the choice of
independent
Summarizing
given by ℝ(z,w)
𝕔 be
ξ̃A'(θ(x))
Kähler structure
constant.
of the Kähler structures
テ : ℝ4
this is
preserving isometry
THEOREM 3.1. If φ : N → 𝕔 (M open in with respect to
,
±-holomorphic
orientation
Similarly φ is ±-holomorphic with respect isometry
that is
(AξA,ηA'B*),
[ξA]
or
00B1;-hoiomorphic is constant.
ℝ4 with
𝕔2).
Then
we
to be
eta Subscript up er A prime Baseline equals left-parenthesis 0 comma 1 right-parenthesis comma xi Subscript up er A Baseline equals StartRo t 2 EndRo t imes StartBinomialOrMatrix z Cho se minus i w EndBinomialOrMatrix
In this
case
φ is holomorphic
by [ηA'1] (see Section 4). smoothly
over
this
with
examples
implicitly by
globally,
an
single
critical
point
N
are
those which have
a
origin
and both
on
ℝ4 represented
spinor
fibres. These
totally geodesic
ℝ4,
let N denote the leaf space of the fibres.
can
be
given
the structure of
fields extend
a
is
a
are
classified in
harmonic
Locally,
morphism
and in favourable
smooth Riemann surface and φ is
given
equation
αa(φ(x))xa where
structure
complex
at the
also II.1.13 ). If 㳆 : M → 𝕔, M open in
(1988) (see
totally geodesic fibres,
circumstances
a
point.
Another class of Baird & Wood
with respect to the standard
There is
=
1,
and f, g, h
functions. In this
case
it is
easily
checked that
,
ξA'ηA'
are
:
N
—>
𝕔 ∪ ∞; are meromorphic
given by
xi Subscript up er A Baseline equals StartFraction 1 Over StartRo t 2 Superscript 1 slash 2 Baseline left-parenthesi alpha prime dot x right-parenthesi h EndRo t EndFraction times StartBinomialOrMatrix 1 Cho se normal i g EndBinomialOrMatrix times eta Subscript up er A prime Baseline equals StartFraction 1 Over StartRo t 2 Superscript 1 slash 2 Baseline left-parenthesi alpha prime dot x right-parenthesi times h EndRo t EndFraction left-parenthesi times i comma f right-parenthesi comma
(here, f,g
and h
Note that, in are
not
are
evaluated at
general,
±-holomorphic.
π(x),
where π is the natural
neither of these is
More
generally,
projectively
projection
onto
N).
constant and so the harmonic
morphisms
the second author described all harmonic morphisms from
open sets of
ℝ4 locally
classification into
Locally
a
in terms of
spinor fields,
holomorphic
we can
harmonic morphism
μ
:
functions
(Wood (1992)).
express all solutions to
→
M
(M 5 4;
open in
ℝ4)
When
equations (2.5) is
as
we
translate that
follows:
given implicitly by
equation
an
psi times left-parenthesis z minus mu times w overbar comma w plus mu z overbar comma mu right-parenthesis equals 0 comma
(3.1) or an
equation psi times left-parenthesis z minus mu times w comma w plus mu z comma mu right-parenthesis equals 0 comma
(3.1') where
ψ
Function
ψ(u1,u2, μ)
=
is
holomorphic
a
Theorem, equation (3.1)
function of three
complex
variables.
By the Implicit
μ if
has smooth solutions
up er P identical-to minus w overbar times StartFraction partial-dif erential psi Over partial-dif erential u 1 EndFraction plus z overbar times StartFraction partial-dif erential psi Over partial-dif erential u 2 EndFraction plus StartFraction partial-dif erential psi Over partial-dif erential mu EndFraction ot-equals 0 period
(3.2) Corresponding spinor fields
are
given by
xi Subscript up er A Baseline equals StartFraction 1 Over StartRo t up er P EndRo t EndFraction times StartBinomialOrMatrix negative i partial-dif erential psi slash partial-dif erential u 2 Cho se minus partial-dif erential psi slash partial-dif erential u 1 EndBinomialOrMatrix comma eta Subscript up er A prime Baseline equals StartFraction 1 Over StartRo t up er P EndRo t EndFraction left-parenthesi negative mu comma negative i rght-parenthesi
(or
any
pair equivalent
the rôles of
in the
sense
of
(2.2) ).
We have
a
similar
description
in the
(3.1')
case
with
ξ and η reversed.
REMARKS 3.3
(i)
The
setting
(ii)
with
case
μ
=
totally geodesic
-f
and
ψ(u1, u2, μ)
It follows from Wood
apart from those with 4.
equations (2.5) Let V be
a
the second author Wood
corresponding orthogonal
orientations for each
Vx,Hx,x
changing
M,
so
in
assuming
complex
V,
2-planes
an
2h. not have any solutions
Here
relate
we
our
globally
defined
spinor description
in terms of twistor bundles, thus of Gauss sections. We
on
ℝ4
to the
interpreting
briefly
summarize
oriented 4-dimensional Riemannian manifold M,
2-dimensional distribution.
structures
the orientation of Vx
that Jv and JH
The Gauss section of bundle of oriented
general description by
γ : M →Gti=Vx,mabyγ(d&rn#ahexs03fmtxipan;e2o(Tsd)Min,
in TM.gtcJasTorlumionhHvVbpdesxt
We may
that the combined orientation of Vx ⊗ Hx
All -JH). , (-JV the results below will be
generality
(1986)
more
(1986).
of M. We then define almost Note that
gu2
—
holomorphicity properties
2-dimensional distribution in
and let H be the
+π/2.
u1
-
(1992) that (2.5) does [ξA] or [ηA'] constant.
in terms of
the results of Wood
=
in terms of twistor bundles.
Interpretation
description given by the
fibres may be obtained from this
are
Jv,JH
on
changes
that of Hx, and
independent globally
=
change,
so
choose
TxM is that
each Vx,Hx to be rotation
of this
chosen.
locally
through
replaces (Jv, JH) by
that there is
no
loss of
almost-complex
and J
structures J
Tx M. We have thus defined
compatible
complex
with the orientation; these distribution V defines
that, if M is and there is
Let Z+
incompatible.
is all metric almost
surface,
to a Riemann
(see
1986). Conversely,
(Wood 1986) Let
THEOREM 4.1.
M
→
:
M
→ Z-
is
Now let
φ :
(1986),
a
orthogonal complements
distribution H
on
the
a
M. At each
G̃2(ℝ4)
Q2
Then,
if ▿AA'ϕ =
charts
on
͌
Z±, γ1
to the almost
opposite complex
x,
Write W
=
▷φ,
is the
point
x
The
=
M× S2,
minimal and conformal
integrable,
locally
in this way. We recall
on an
oriented 4-dimensional
structure
J2
only
on
complex structure J1
[ηA'), γ2
=
[ξA].
then
M,
left-bracketup erWright-bracketequals eft-bracketminusileft-parenthesi StartLayout1stRow xiSuperscript0BaselineEndLayoutetaSuperscript0primeBaselineplusStartLayout1stRow xiSuperscript1BaselineEndLayoutetaSuperscript1primeBaselineright-parenthesi com aStartLayout1stRow xiSuperscript0BaselineEndLayoutetaSuperscript0primeBaselineminusStartLayout1stRow xiSuperscript1BaselineEndLayoutetaSuperscript1primeBaselinecom aStartLayout1stRow xiSuperscript0BaselineEndLayoutetaSuperscript1primeBaselineplusStartLayout1stRow xiSuperscript1BaselineEndLayoutetaSuperscript0primeBaselinecom aileft-parenthesi StartLayout1stRow xiSuperscript1BaselineEndLayoutetaSuperscript0primeBaselineminusStartLayout1stRow xiSuperscript0BaselineEndLayoutetaSuperscript1primeBaselineright-parenthesi right-bracketel ment-ofup erQ2period
if the section
M and the section
on
M.
structure was used on the twistor space Z-
with respect to J1.
morphism
from
an
open subset M of 𝕔4
to the fibres determine an oriented
.
Then
2-dimensional
Hx is given by
spinor decomposition,
up erWSuperscriptaBaselineleft-right-ar owStartFraction1OverStartRo t2EndRo tEndFractiontimesStart2By2Matrix1stRow1stColumniup erWSuperscript0Baselineplusup erWSuperscript1Baseline2ndColumnup erWsquaredplusiup erWcubed2ndRow1stColumnup erWsquaredminusiup erWcubed2ndColumniup erWSuperscript0Baselineminusup erWSuperscript1BaselineEndMatrixequalsStartBinomialOrMatrix iSuperscript0BaselineCho seStartLayout1stRow xiEndLayoutSuperscript1BaselineEndBinomialOrMatrixtimesleft-parenthesi etaSuperscript0primeBaselinecom aetaSuperscript1primeBaselineright-parenthesi com a
and at each
an
complex
to the almost
tangent planes
point
gives
Q2 ⊂ 𝕔P3,
is the standard identification of the Grassmannian with the
ξAηA' =
trivial: Z±
are
minimal and conformal if and
[ 1ϕ, ϕ, 3Õ, 4ϕ] where
1985).
oriented Riemannian four-manifold
2-dimensional distribution
submersive harmonic to the
an
any such distribution arises
being antiholomorphic
M → 𝕔 be
Salamon
(Eells&.
the twistor bundles
M → N from
integrable,
holomorphic with respect
which resulted in γ2
compatible (respectively incompatible)
distribution:
Z+ is holomorphic with respect
:
REMARK. In Wood
the
a
V be
Riemannian manifold M. Then V is
γ1 γ2
x
2. Note
space𝕔®4,
morphism
characterization of such
following
J1e2,
M whose fibre at
M→► Z+ and
:
the tangent spaces to its fibres
Wood
over
holomorphic bijectionG̃j2ℝR4)͌« S2× S2.
submersive harmonic
a
be the fibre bundle
the well-known twistor bundles of M
are
Note that J1 is
oriented basis of the form e1, J1 e1, e2,
an
structures on xXM which are
sectionsγ71
well-known
structures on the manifold M.
(respectively -~)
open subset of Euclidean
an a
distribution the
complex
with the orientation, i.e., there exists
whereas J2 is
Given
two almost
each tangent space
on
a
direct
computation
complex quadric.
verifies that in suitable
But the
hand side is the
right
𝕔P1 × 𝕔P1
with
Thus
Q2.
𝕔P1
each
identifying
↦ξ0/ξ1,[η0'η , 1'] ↦η0'/η1',
[ξ0,ξ1]
([ξ0,ξ1] ,[η'η1'])
of
image
under the standard identification of
with 𝕔∪ ∞by the
stereographic projections
find that
we
gam aSuperscript1Baseline qualsStartFractionup erWsquaredminusnormaliup erWcubedOveriup erWSuperscript0Baselineminusup erWSuperscript1BaselineEndFractionequalsStartFraction ormaliup erWSuperscript0Baselineplusup erWSuperscript1BaselineOverup erWsquaredtimesplusnormaliup erWcubedEndFractioncom agam asquaredequalsStartFractionup erWsquaredplusnormaliup erWcubedOveriup erWSuperscript0Baselineminusup erWSuperscript1BaselineEndFractionequalsStartFraction ormaliup erWSuperscript0Baselineplusup erWSuperscript1BaselineOverup erWsquaredtimesminusnormaliup erWcubedEndFractionperiod
In order to show that consider
W2
—
a
iW3
point =
x
0 at
equations (2.5) imply
and suppose, without loss of x.
By
horizontal
the
holomorphicity that
generality, in
conformality
∂2,∂span 3 Vx.
neighbourhood
a
results of Theorem 4.1,
of
x we
Then W2
we
+iW3
have∑(Wa)2
=
0
=
so
that left-parenthesis up er W Superscript 0 Baseline plus normal i up er W Superscript 1 Baseline right-parenthesis times left-parenthesis up er W Superscript 0 Baseline minus normal i up er W Superscript 1 Baseline right-parenthesis equals minus left-parenthesis up er W squared plus normal i up er W cubed right-parenthesis times left-parenthesis up er W squared minus normal i up er W cubed right-parenthesis comma
(4.1) so, at x, either
W0 + iW1
W0 +iW1
so
=
0,
that W0
(W0 for any
a
=
0,1, 2,3,
-
so
0
=
or
W0
—
iW1
iW1)∂a (w0
equations (2.5) (with A'
computation (with
A'
—
+
1, B'
vertically antiholomorphic. Similarly,
holomorphic
=
0, B'
have
=
0,
0
=
=
1) implies
∂1)(W2 + iW3)
=
0)
=
Conversely, fields
0;
—
i∂3)(W2
equations (2.5)
shows
These conditions combine to
directly
conformal distribution determines
a
ξA,ηA'. by
If the
Theorem 4.1
gives
over
corresponding Gauss
a
that the
an
null vector
maps
that theorem the distribution is
ξA,ηA' satisfy equations (2.5)
points).
(∂2
give
iW3) that γ2
+
the
=
is
0
so
γ1
that
horizontally
holomorphicity assertions
spinor equations (2.5) imply
the
be described
by
holomorphicity conditions
of
assertions of that theorem.
Theorem 4.1, then
Theorem 2.1
shows that
the second of
vertically holomorphic.
and
holomorphicity
critical
W1)
-
of Theorem 4.1. We have therefore shown
spinor
have that
with the formula thimolrizmplonriptesahliscy. ig is γ1 hthat
A similar is
we
we
that
(—i∂0 together
(4.1)
choice of orientation
by
iW1) + (W0 + iW1)∂a (W0- iW1)
+
02;a (iW0 at x. Now the first of
0. In fact,
=
iW1 ≠ 0. Differentiating
—
satisfy
integrable
field, the
which
can
and minimal, and the
spinor
fields
.
interpretation
of the
spinor equations
Theorem 4.1 is that it is valid for
arbitrary
in Theorem 2.1. The
harmonic
advantage
morphisms (i.e.,
Indeed, for the harmonic morphism φ of Example 3.2, which has
an
of
those with
isolated critical
point (▿φ the as
0)
=
origin,
projectivized spinors,
in Remark 2.2
extend at least 5.
at the
(iv),
γ1
the distributions V, H do not extend =
[ηA']
extends
with suitable
continuously
Minkowski space.
across
across
the
normalization,
critical
We consider
a
origin,
the
over
whereas
this critical
γ2
[ξA]
=
unprojectivized spinor
point. Regarding
does not.
However,
fields ξA,ηA'
always
points. U → Ǖ 4;, where U is
φ :
map
an
open subset in Minkowski
M4, satisfying the equations
space
left-parenthesi partial-dif erential Subscript 0 Baseline phi right-parenthesi squared minus left-parenthesi partial-dif erential Subscript 1 Baseline phi right-parenthesi squared minus left-parenthesi partial-dif erential Subscript 2 Baseline phi right-parenthesi squared minus left-parenthesi partial-dif erential Subscript 3 Baseline phi right-parenthesi squared equals 0
(5.1) partial-dif erential Subscript 0 Superscript 2 Baseline phi hyphen partial-dif erential phi hyphen partial-dif erential phi hyphen partial-dif erential phi equals 0 period
(5.2) Such
map is
a
functions
a
harmonic
morphism in
Parmar 1991, Lemma
(see
φ is conformal
on
standard Lorentz
the
that it
sense
pulls back
2.1.7). Equation (5.1)
the horizontal space
harmonic functions to harmonic
may still be
(the orthogonal space
to the
interpreted
fibre,
now
as
that
saying
with respect to the
metric), while (5.2) is simply the wave equation—the harmonic equation in
Lorentz
metric. The
spinor correspondence
is
given by
x Superscript a Baseline left-right-ar ow x Superscript up er A up er A Super Superscript Superscript prime Baseline quals StartFraction 1 Over StartRo t 2 EndRo t EndFraction Start 2 By 2 Matrix 1st Row 1st Column x Superscript 0 Baseline plus x Superscript 1 Baseline 2nd Column x squared plus i x cubed 2nd Row 1st Column x squared minus i x cubed 2nd Column x Superscript 0 Baseline minus x Superscript 1 Baseline EndMatrix period
Proceeding exactly
as we
did for the ℝ4
THEOREM 5.1. There is
(i) mappings φ : (5.2)
U
—>
a
case we
correspondence
Ǖ 4;, U ⊂ M4
obtain
between
open and
simply connected, satisfying equations (5.1)
and
and
,
(ii) pairs of spinor Helds (ξA ,ξA' )
on
U
satisfying
the
spinor equations:
StarLayoutEnlargedleft-brace1stRow nabl Subscriptup erAup erAprimeBaselinexiSupersciptup erABaseline taSupersciptup erBprimeBaseline quals02ndRow nabl Subscriptup erAup erAprimeBaselinexiSupersciptup erB aseline taSupersciptup erAprimeBaseline quals0EndLayout
(5.3)
REMARK. Given
thought either a
of as
as
a
time
a
static
monopole
(x0)-independent
solutions to
there
(5.3) independent
of x0,
direction. This contrasts with
particular
corresponds
solution of (5.3) or as
.
a
harmonic
Thus
we
solutions to
describing
them
as
have
morphism on ℝ3. a
This
can
be
different view of monopoles,
(2.5) independent
of translation in
time-independent Yang-Mills fields.
(1994). Harmonic morphisms were studied in the late (1979), as mappings between Riemannian manifolds which
by Fuglede (1978)
Comments
1970’s
Ishihara
preserve harmonic functions.
Their investigation
was
properties
taken up almost ten years later
associated to
a
harmonic
by
Baird and Wood,
morphism
with values in
a
who, noting surface
and
the holomorphicity
(Wood
1986,
Baird
1987),
1991,
1992).
Wood
classified the harmonic morphisms from 3-dimensional manifolds (Baird & Wood 1988,
(1992)
extended this
study
4-manifolds, classifying
to
Einstein 4-manifolds in terms of
holomorphic
the harmonic
Baird
by
anti-self-dual
relativity theory
was
(1992).
With the natural introduction of between static
on
sections of twistor bundles. The direct correspondence
between harmonic morphisms and shear free ray congruences of observed
morphisms
monopoles and
geometrical elegance
spinor fields, morphisms
and harmonic
simplicity
of harmonic
the article in this volume defined
morphisms
the links
explores
3-dimensional Euclidean space. The
on
may lead to
a
greater understanding of
monopoles.
References Baird , P. ( 1987 ) Harmonic morphisms onto Riemann surfaces and Ann. Inst. Fourier, Grenoble 37 : 1 , p. 135 173
generalized analytic
functions ,
-
.
Baird , P.
Harmonic
( 1990 )
Grenoble 40 : 1 p. 177 212
morphisms
and circle actions
on
3- and 4-manifolds , Ann. Inst. Fourier,
-
,
Baird , P. J. Math.
.
( 1992 ) Phys.
Riemannian twistors and Hermitian structures 33 ( 10 ), p. 3340 3355
on
low-dimensional space forms ,
-
.
Baird , P. & Eells , J.
( 1981 ) A conservation law for harmonic maps , Lect. Notes in Math. 894 , (Springer-Verlag ), p. 1 25
Geometry Symp. Utrecht,
Proceedings,
-
.
Baird , P. & Wood , J. C. Ann 280 , p. 579 603
( 1988 ) Bernstein
theorems for harmonic
morphisms
from ℝ3 and S3 , Math.
-
.
Baird , P. & Wood , J. C.
( 1991 ) Harmonic morphisms and
space forms , J. Australian Math. Soc.
( 1992 )
Baird , P. & Wood , J. C. Proc. London Math. Soc.
(3 )
Harmonic
(A )
morphisms,
64 , p. 170 196
conformal foliations
51 , p. 118 153
by geodesics
of threedimensional
-
.
Seifert fibre spaces and conformal foliations ,
-
.
Bernard , P. , Campbell , E. A. k Davie , A.M. ( 1979 ) Brownian motion and inner functions , Ann. Inst. Fourier, Grenoble. 29 : 1 , p. 207 228
generalized analytic
and
-
.
Eells , J. & Salamon , S. Ann. Scuola
Fuglede
,
B.
( 1985 ) Twistorial constructions of Norm. Sup. Pisa ( 4 ) 12 p. 589 640 ,
( 1978 ) Harmonic morphisms between
28 : 2 , p. 107 144
harmonic maps of surfaces into fourmanifold,s
-
.
Riemannian manifolds , Ann. Inst. Fourier, Grenoble
-
.
Gudmundsson , S. & Wood , J. C.
(1993 )
Multivalued harmonic
morphisms
,
Math. Scand. 72
(to
appear). Hitchin N. J. ( 1982 ) Monopoles and geodesics Comm. Math. Phys. 83 ,
,
Hitchin , N. J. Ishihara , T. Math.
Kyoto
( 1983 ) ( 1979 )
p. 579 602 -
,
.
On the construction of monopoles Comm. Math. Phys. 89 p. 145 190 -
,
A
mapping
,
.
of Riemannian manifolds which preserves harmonic functions , J.
Univ. 19 , p. 215 229 -
.
( 1991 ) Harmonic morphisms between
Parmar , V. Leeds
semi-Riemannian manifolds ,
Thesis, University of
.
Penrose , R. &. Rindler , W.
( 1986 ) Spinors and Space-Time, vol. II: Spinor Space-Time Geometry (Cambridge University Press Cambridge ).
and Twisior Methods in
,
Sommers , P.
( 1980 ) Space spinors
(1986 )
Wood , J. C.
Harmonic
,
J. Maths.
p. 2567 2571 -
foliations and Gauss maps ,
morphisms,
American Math. Soc. 49 , p. 145 183
Phys. ( 21 ) ( 10 ),
.
Contemporary Mathematics,
-
Wood , J. C.
( 1992 )
Harmonic
.
and Hermitian structures
morphisms
J. Maih. 3 , p. 415 439
Einstein 4-manifolds , International
on
-
§II.1.15 by
Twistor
M.G.Eastwood
Suppose
Theory
(TN
M and N
are
M is constrained to lie
attempt cases
and
to attain an
equilibrium
parametrized
is
.
and Harmonic Maps from Riemann Surfaces
15, January 1983) oriented Riemannian manifolds with M made of rubber and N of stone. If on
N
by
means
a
smooth
equilibrium configuration.
always possible.
minimal surfaces
review article. To be
of
more
precise,
If ϕ is in
are
mapping ϕ :
This may be
See Eells
define the energy
E(ϕ)
impossible,
it is called
equilibrium
examples.
M → N and then released it will
of
harmonic map. Geodesics
a
& Lemaire
i.e. M snaps. In many
(1978)
for
comprehensive
a
ϕ by
up er E left-parenthesis phi right-parenthesis equals integral Underscript up er M Endscripts one-half StartAbsoluteValue d phi EndAbsoluteValue squared d times vol
where on
N,
|dϕ|
is the Hilbert-Schmidt
ǀdϕV0;2
=
a
critical
compact subdomains of M with
ϕ is
of dϕ : TxM
harmonic iff it satisfies the
point
where ▾ is the connection
on
of E
(if M
on
i.e. in local coordinates xi M and h is the metric
on
is not compact then E must be variations
allowed).
on
M, yα
N. Then
computed
In other
words,
corresponding Euler-Lagrange equations
ω1(ϕ*TN)
gSuperscipt jBaselin timesStarSetSartFactionparti l-difer ntialySupersciptalphaB selin Overparti l-difer ntialxSuperscipt Baselin parti l-difer ntialxSupersciptjBaselin EndFractionminusnormalup erGam aSubscript jSupersciptkBaselin StarFactionparti l-difer ntialySupersciptalphaB selin Overparti l-difer ntialxSupersciptkBaselin EndFractionplusnormalup erOmegaSubscriptbetag m aSupersciptalphaB selin StarFactionparti l-difer ntialySupersciptbetaB selin Overparti l-difer ntialxSuperscipt Baselin EndFractionStarFactionparti l-difer ntialySupersciptgam aB selin Overparti l-difer ntialxSupersciptjBaselin EndFractionE dSet
▾(dϕ)
=
0
induced from the Levi-Civita connections
in mind the elastic nature of M, trace
it becomes
TϕN,
only compactly supported
trace
Bearing
→
∂yα/∂xi∂yβ/∂xigijhαβ where g is the metric
ϕ is said to be harmonic iff it is on
norm
▾(dϕ)
on
M and N.
is called the tension of ϗ. In local coordinates
where
andf
are
g
symbols
Christoffel
mapping ϕ and
the second fundamental form of the
tension,
however, does not in
Perhaps
M and N
on
Without the trace,
behaves well with respect to
compose for the
general
respectively.
composition
of
▾(dϕ)
is
The
composition.
mappings.
neater way to write the energy is as
a
upper E left-parenthesis phi right-parenthesis equals integral Underscript upper M Endscripts one-half times trace d phi times normal upper Lamda times times asterisk times d phi
where
*
Ω1(ϕ*TN)
:
to h. The
—>
Ω.m-1(ϕ*TN)
Euler-Lagrange equations
is the
are
Hodge *-operator
is the
Ωm-1(ϕ*TN)
→
dual of the
Hodge
N, maintaining
a more
is the
Ωm(ϕ*TN)
more
M and the trace is with respect
then
▿(*dϕ) where ▿ :
on
0
=
pull-back of the
Levi-Civita connection
usual tension. In local coordinates
abstract notation
▿(*dϕ) notation) on
(or
N.
on
abstract index
M
on
d At this
point
an
obvious
with the
analogy
Yang-
familiar to many mathematicians and
analogy
maps under the
name
of ‘𝕔𝕡n model’,
of the gauge field F and
analogue
there is the Bianchi
identity
▿F
=
▿(dϕ)
ϕ*▿δ where
δ
=
▿(ϕ*δ)
=
0. The
on
N is the
▿δ is exactly the torsion of ▿. Now recall that the
(being conformally invariant)
and that twistor
It is natural to ask whether there is The
special
invariant when
conformally ±
self-dual,
*F
dimension 2, make
sense
specifically
acting
=
however, *2
▿ is
Kähler,
so
a
so
not ...
Yang-Mills
granite).
analogue
bundle
complex.
But now,
necessarily complex Kähler
the
complex
it is easiest to take N
than the strongest one,
—1
=
so
as a
▿(*dϕ)
=
illuminating
(Kronecker delta)
and
special in dimension 4
way of
looking
equations ▿(*dϕ)
now on
if N has
a
only
can
an
almost
=
be
special *dϕ
=
complex
N is made from
at them.
0
complex
complex
±i▿(dϕ)
=
0
linear is
conformally manifestly
are
solutions
namely
identity.
±idϕ. stone
i.e.
more
(more rigid
an
equivalent
In
For this to
manifold and
nicely compatible metric,
Now, if dϕ is ± self-dual,
▿(±idϕ)
are
=
consequence of the Bianchi
of ± self-dual
linear. Indeed ▿ being
stone from now on.
are
because
case
2 for then the *-operator is
N should be
From
even
section
in dimension 4 there
±F, which satisfy the equations
TN must be
=
1- forms. Thus, the harmonic field
invariant. For Euclidean
holds in the harmonic
of this for harmonic maps.
dimension for harmonic maps is dim M on
For harmonic maps dη is the
Yang-Mills equations an
(an
interested in harmonic
0. Recall that in gauge theories
tautological
theory gives
analogy
an
=
corresponding identity
Ω1(TN)
being
algebra’).
‘current
replaces ▿(*F)
0
=
or
to mind
equations springs
the latter
physicists,
‘π-model’,
▿(*dϕ)
Mills action and
Hermitian
to N
being
as
the Korn-Licktenstein theorem the *-operator
required. By
structure where be
becomes
*
i.e.
complex linear, Now to the
as a
way of
be clearly
dϕ is
in the
after
complex. there is
complex
becomes
a
The
rather
hope
that
by
photon
complexification will throw
ϕ 𝕔M :
our case
→ 𝕔N on some
equations.
The derivative
dϕ may be split
(1, 0)
and
(0,1)
To
going
on
of M. Then
these
equations
are
straightforward
easy to
M but with the If
ϕ
:
(ϕ(p), ϕ̄(q) . in 𝕔M A
so
In
identify: 𝕔M
holomorphic
general
a
complexify. =
▿(dϕ)
ℝ-analytic ϕ :
complexification, ∂ refers to differentiation
regarded
satisfy
one can a
to differentiation
along M̄with
M
=
along
on a
4-dimensional should
one
complexify to
▿(*dϕ)
dϕ 02;ϕ =
+
obtain
version of the =
0
as
follows.
02;̄ε usually
called
0 it follows that ϕ is harmonic ⇔
=
▿( 02;̄ϕ)
=
are
0.
already complex, is the
diagonal (m
a
small
02;ϕ + 02; 4;ϕ is
now
↦ (m,m̄)).
neighbourhood
=
of M
of M in M × M̄.
ψ satisfies
manifested
holding the
occurring parametrically.
complexiflcations
given by 𝕔ϕ(p, q̄)
neighbourhood
of ϕ : M → N iff
M whilst
their
where M̄ denotes the smooth manifold
complexify to only
complexification
as a
complexified
it is best to rewrite
notation for any
general
Gauss),
automatically ℝ-analytic (by
complexification 𝕔ϕ 𝕔M →Ǖ 4; N is
as a
→ 𝕔N is the
to
then take
from Riemann surfaces.
:
The splitting dϕ
p
Kähler,
ϕ will
example,
will
ℝ-analytic case
hope.
structure and g
M → N
then the
way that Maxwell’s
same
mappings
can
‘thickening’
into details it is clear that
Since M and N
M × M̄, for
then its
it is best to maintain 𝕔M
holomorphic ψ : 𝕔M
condition
to
conjugate holomorphic
M → N is
should be
This
the existence of
particular,
the
into its self-dual and anti-self-dual parts
parts. Bearing in mind that
be viewed
construction
ℝ-analytic category (due
exactly
Riemann surface and N
identify
In
Riemannian manifolds is
▿(∂ϕ)=equivalenty In this form it is
in the 2- dimensional
harmonic
further upon this
neighbourhood
harmonic field
the
a
equations
Without
after
dϕ
antiholomorphic).
ℝ-analytic
Cauchy-Riemann equations in
can
simple geometric
a
‘right-flat’).
holomorphicity
geometric light
explain
of M
to
The
Maxwell’s
—
mapping between ℝ-analytic
ellipticity). Thus, in
equally well
analogous
Cauchy-Riemann equations.
A harmonic
theory
4-fold is
original
becomes
example,
works
observation.
which leads to
The purpose of this article is to
for
means
conformally right-flat space).
conformal structure in the
a
simple geometric
lead to the twisted
version of the
procedure
condition
integrability
no
geometric interpretation equations
correspondence, same
structure induced
a
anti-self-dual
geometric significance, namely through a-planes,
on a
The Ward
(for
complex
a
the condition that
Twistor
theory?
More precisely, if the
complexification.
complexification.
(where the
ϕ is holomorphic (and
conformal geometry in dimension 4
doing
conformal structure takes into the
means
to
equivalent
idϕ is precisely
=
what has this to do with twistor
question:
seen
self-dual
Thus, *dϕ
i.
multiplication by
M is
on
the
‘reality’
geometrically:
after
M̄ variable fixed and 02;̄ refers
In other words
(1,0)-forms complexify
to the
holomorphic torsion holomorphic iff
to M̄. The connection ▿ on N
cotangent bundle
▿(∂ϕ)
=
free connection
on
torsion free connection ▿ then
0. To interpret this
can
let μ : 𝕔M
the
as
(plus some simple topological restrictions
reasons
a
as a
section of the bundle
M. In
on
ℝ-analytic)
holomorphic
(holomorphic) projection
=
manifold with
to be harmonic
onto the first factor.
f▿μs + ∂f ⊗ s.
the fibres of
particular,
to a
relative connection▿μ on μ*Ω1(ϕ*TL)
pull-back of a bundle
on
it is
M
Thus
μ*Ω1(ϕ*TL)
(since, by
dimension
μ)▿μis relatively flat).
Therefore
on
constant on the fibres of p or, in other
ϕ is harmonic iff ∂ϕ μ**Ω1(ϕ*TL) is covariant down to
M be
—>
satisfying →μ(fs)
canonically regarded
and hence ϕ*TL maybe
if L is any
generally,
interpreted
be
a
i.e.
complexifies (assuming
define ϕ : 𝕔M → L
we
geometrically
𝕔 : Ω1,0(ϕ*TL) → Ω2(ϕ*TL)
Then
𝕔N. More
words, pushes
this proves
PROPOSITION. The zero set of ∂ϕ consists of the fibres of μ : 𝕔M → M over a discrete set of points and, in particular, by rescaling, ∂ϕ defines a complex direction at ϕ(x) even if ∂ϕ(x) = 0 (unless ∂ϕ ≡ 0). □
This
proposition
is
one
of the
from Riemann surfaces into
key steps
complex projective
solutions in the 𝕔𝕡n-1 model, Nucl. of the
classical 𝕔𝕡n-1
general
& Wood,
in the recent classification of harmonic spaces
Phys.
95B, 419-422. D. Burns,
Lett.
model, Phys.
maps
General classical
(1980)
B174, 397-406. Din & Zakrzewski
Harmonic maps from surfaces to
(1983)
& Zakrzewski
(Din
isotropic
(1980) Properties
unpublished.
Eells
spaces, Advances in Math.
complex projective
49, 217-263). Actually, the whole classification theorem complexifies rather well. Because it would make this article rather too the
Firstly
complexification
Fubini-Study
metric
and
can
so
gives
𝕡(V)
rise to
02;̄ϕ
are
0.
In the
(ðR
to
case
on
a
mapping ϕ : to
of L
some
on
V is the
same as an
ϕ (make local choices and
of the
𝕔M
Fubini-Study
L is said to be
→
derivatives
𝕡(V) × 𝕡(V*)
provided ϕ avoids
the
patch).
F0;̄S
-
The
quadric {(R,S)
key points.
gives
rise to the
isomorphism
V̄ ≅ V*
=
it is
along
metric and there is
isotropic M̄.
iff ∂ϕ and
This is the
⟨R,ð̄S⟩/⟨R,S⟩) proposition
𝕡(V)
×
a
corresponding
higher
case
for
derivatives
example
if
essentially just algebra (albeit cunning algebra)
ϕ 𝕔M → 𝕡(V) × 𝕡(V*) is harmonic and isotropic then
⟨ð,S⟩R/⟨R,S⟩,
V
on
,
:
-
of the
𝕡(V) × 𝕡(V*). The natural pairing ⟨ ⟩ : V ⊗V* → Ǖ 4; 𝕔(V) × 𝕡(v*) induced by ⟨(a,b),(c,d)⟩ (⟨a,c⟩, ⟨b,d⟩) on
02;̄ϕ and higher =
describe
just
space. An Hermitian form
The Hermitian form
complexification
orthogonal
to show that if =
𝕡(V).
to go into detail I will
complex projective
complexified
general,
M
D(R, S)
of
𝕔2-valued metric
a
connection. In
=
be
This is the
V ⊗ V*.
along
on
lengthy
where
(R,S)
:
so
is Dϕ defined
𝕔M → V × V* is
a
by
lift of
above is used to show that D is well-defined
𝕡(V*)
s.t.
⟨R,S⟩ 0} (D =
is
essentially ∂).
Hence
the classification. In the best of worlds there would be Witten ambitwistor
description
of
a
harmonic
Yang-Mills.
analogue
of the
Isenberg-Yasskin-Green
𝕔M is the ambitwistor space for M.
&
References Burns , D.
unpublished. General classical solutions in the 𝕔𝕡n-1 model , Nucl.
Din & Zakrzewski
( 1980 )
Din k, Zakrzewski
( 1980 ) Properties
Eells & Lemaire Eells & Wood ,
( 1978 )
( 1983 )
A report
of the
on
general
classical 𝕔𝕡n-1 model ,
Phys.
harmonic maps , Bull. L.M.S. 10 , 1 68
B174 , 397 406
.
Lett. 95B , 419 422
.
Phys.
-
-
-
Harmonic maps from surfaces to
.
complex projective spaces
Advances in Math
,
.
49 , 217 263 ). -
§II.1.16
Contact birational
correspondences
between twistor spaces of Wolf spaces
by
P.Z.Kobak
Introduction. can
The task of
be often
even
data which
define
harmonic maps
(cf.
in S4 from twistor
as
completely
projections
of
holomorphic
be constructed
as
l
horizontal distribution
Bryant’s (the
manifold of
defined
by
the
result
on
the
language of complex geometry
in
formulae
For
manifolds which
example
horizontal
one can
curves
in 𝕔𝕡3
the twistor space, i.e. is
follows: if
f, g
are
can
(a
curve
functions
a
a
complex
𝕔3).
correspondence
We shall call this the
produce
2-spheres
is horizontal iff it is the twistor
on a
fibres).
Riemann surface
(Bryant 1982).
contact structure and Lawson
contact birational
is
authors
some
be used to
orthogonal to
meromorphic
and
approaches
construct minimal
is horizontal in 𝕔𝕡3
by defining
following
on
𝕔ᵖ3 arises from
complete flags
complex
Rawnsley 1990).
Burstall and
and g ≠ const then the curve
curves can
problem to
characterise such maps. One of several
fibrations of almost
tangent to the horizontal distribution Such
in various classes of Riemannian manifolds
twistor methods have been successful to the extent that
theory. Indeed,
twistor spaces
2-spheres
the
accomplished by translating
specifying holomorphic to use twistor
minimal
classifying
between
(1983)
Ǖ 4;𝕡3
and
The
reinterpreted
F12(𝕔3)
Bryant-Lawson correspondence,
it is
(Gauduchon 1984):
b colon upper F Subscript 1 2 Baseline left-parenthesis double-struck upper C cubed right-parenthesis contains-as-member left-parenthesis x 0 colon x 1 colon x 2 semicolon xi 0 colon xi 1 colon xi 2 right-parenthesis right-ar ow from bar left-bracket x 2 xi 2 minus x 0 xi 0 colon 2 x 0 xi 2 colon x 0 xi 1 colon minus 2 x 1 xi 2 right-bracket element-of double-struck upper C double-struck upper P cubed
(1) where
i
The
flag manifold F12(ℂ3)
be identified with 𝕄T*ℂ𝕡2. Moreover, all non-vertical contact
curves
ℂ𝕡2*
𝔾r2(ℂ3)
≃
in 𝕡T"*ℂ𝕡2
are
is the twistor space of
and
can
Gauss lifts of
curves
in ℂ𝕡2. The birational map b
S4. This map is and
𰎾2
(here
=
conditions
on
in
F12(ℂ3):
on
the divisor S1 ∪ S2
the
Gauss lifts
Burstall
(1990)
of
F12(ℂ3)
ℂ𝕡2 and ℂ𝕡2*
to
used to construct horizontal
are
symmetric quaternion-Kähler
Wolf spaces, have many
have twistor spaces which
interesting generalisation
very
in
properties
common
fibrations of
are
they
manifolds
are
of the
These
endowed with
Burstall and Rawnsley
quaternionic
THEOREM 1 are
proof
to the added a
with
node;
of such
considered here
can
be
from
projectivised
singular
For
example the
a
Bruhat
divisors
decomposition
explicit formulae for which
(1)
is
a
special
S1, S2
For
more
F12(C3); Another
case.
nilpotent
details and
simple
Lie
can
between root
over
algebras.
curves
1983). to
spaces, known
of twistor spaces recruited
1990);
we
reserve
the term
structures
(see
as
with
use
nilpotent
corresponding
Kobak
through
algebras.)
Lie
the nodes linked
Our aim is to present
the fact that the twistor spaces
orbits.
quaternionic
Hasse
This makes it
are
decomposition.
the Schubert varieties in
and the
flag
manifold 𝕄T*ℂ𝕡n+1 of
correspondences
can
be derived from
(1972),
correspondences
(1993), Chapter
the Wolf spaces
to
diagram is shown below. We also derive
of Burstall
Wolf spaces
possible
twistor spaces of Wolf spaces
orbit to its tangent space. Moreover,
ℂ𝕡2n+1
of applications of the
example
dimension
in Baston and Eastwood 1989
crosses
Lie groups described in Warner
see
same
twistor spaces of Wolf spaces
l1, l2 in F12(ℂ3), defined above,
Wolf spaces.
For
symmetric
be described in terms of the Bruhat
interpretation
examples
to constructions of harmonic maps Twistor fibrations
highest
and lines the
We shall
contact birational maps between
the coordinatisations of
§1.1.4.
Dynkin diagrams
correspondences a
conventions
projectivised nilpotent
as
correspondences
of
(With
correspondences.
linear maps from
sets of these
the
Lawson
quaternion-Kähler
quaternionic
generalised Heisenberg
are
represented
construct contact birational
(cf.
twistor spaces of Wolf spaces of the
the fact that
to extended
their nilradicals
geometric description
on
nilradicals.
isomorphic
correspond
flag manifolds
holomorphic
This
contact manifolds.
complex
of Theorem 1 is based
flag manifolds
these
as
respectively).
quaternion-Kähler geometry).
on
(BURSTALL 1990). Quaternionic
birationally equivalent The
are
details
family
a
generalised flag more
0
ℂ𝕡2: being quaternion-Kähler they ℂᵔ ;1. In general,
twistor space for the twistor spaces which arise from
Salamon 1982 for
=
contact manifolds with fibre
from among
(cf.
x0
Bryant-Lawson correspondence
spaces.
with S4 and
complex
Riemannian symmetric spaces of compact type
equations
stay away from L1 ∪ L2 and
transversal to the kernel of the differential of b a
the
given by
and I
rise to minimal immersions in S4 if
give
twistor spaces of compact as
in ℂ𝕡2 which
curves
are
found
projections
to the twistor space of
curves
0 and is well defined away from the lines l
p1 and P2 denote the canonical
imposes
be used to transfer these
away from the surfaces S1 and S2
biholomorphism
a
can
are
in
arising
3 a
.
bijective correspondence
from
su(n)
and
sp(n)
are
with compact the Grass-
𝔾r2(ℂn) and H𝕡n-1 with twistor spaces given by the flag manifolds F1,n-1(ℂn) hyperplanes in ℂn) and ℂ𝕡2n-1 respectively. All flag manifolds have natural projective
mann
manifolds
(lines
in
realisations
Baston and Eastwood
(cf.
tivised
nilpotent
arising
from
orbits. More
precisely,
complex simple
a
system ▵ and root spaces a
and
negative
where N
Gℂo
=
and 0
≠ o
,
nilpotent
Kostant-Kirillov-Soriau
2-form),
with the radial vector field
gives
quaternionic
Lie(Gℂ). a
decomposition
gℂ. Adjoint
denoted here
▵
Cartan
=
by
a
a
nilpotent
projec-
Wolf space
∪ ▵_ into
▵+
natural
a
are
subalgebra
nilpotent orbit;
root
orbits carry
ω. For
G𝕡-equivariant complex
a
a
root then there is an identification Z
highest
orbit in
twistor space of
Let j ⊂ gℂ be
N is called the highest
∈ s
the smallest nontrivial
let Z denote the
α ∈ ▵. We choose
If ρ ∈ ▵+ is the
roots.
twistor spaces of Wolf spaces
particular
algebra gℂ =
Lie
root
In
1989).
positive
𝕄N
=
with
⊂ ᵔ ;gℂ,
this is in fact
symplectic
form
(the
orbit N the contraction of ω
contact structure θ on
𝕡N We have
omega left-parenthesis left-bracket e comma up er A right-bracket comma left-bracket e comma up er B right-bracket right-parenthesis equals left pointing angle e comma left-bracket up er A comma up er B right-bracket right pointing angle comma theta left-parenthesis left-bracket e comma up er X right-bracket right-parenthesis equals left pointing angle e comma up er X right pointing angle comma
(2) [e, gℂ]
where TeN is identified with references
where
Kobak
see
We shall
gℂ
=
LEMMA 2.
Killing
Finally,
(1)
The
denotes the
m_
of the Bruhat
nilpotent
form
on
gℂ(for
details and further
more
1994).
the
properties
root
is the
and
simply
connected. If
viewing a ω lies
decomposition
nilpotent algebra s
decomposition
orbits but the
G
We shall write
denotes the least number of factors in the
root reflexions.
highest
(•, •)
following conventions. Lie(Gℂ) and Gℂis connected
use
gℂthen l(ω) the basic
and
general
case
of
flag
projectivised highest root nilpotent
.
manifolds.
is similar,
see
of
(We
w
as a
in the
Weyl group
into
product
The
a
following
consider here
Baston and Eastwood
orbit 𝕄N ⊂ ᵔ ;gℂ has
of ᵔ ;gℂ,
point
a
Bruhat
of
W of
simple
lemma lists
projectivised 1989.)
decomposition
double-struck up er P equals quare-union Underscript alpha el ment-of up er L Endscripts normal e normal x normal p times Subscript minus Baseline times German g Subscript alpha Superscript double-struck up er C Baseline equals quare-union Underscript alpha el ment-of up er L Endscripts up er N Superscript alpha Baseline German g Subscript alpha Superscript double-struck up er C Baseline times left-parenthesi d i s j o times i n t u n i o n right-parenthesi comma
where L ⊂ ▵ denotes the set of
algebra
nα ⊂ m_ defined
by
long roots
and Nα = exp nα is the
nilpotent
Lie group with Lie
the formula SuperscriptalphaBaseline qualsStarLayout1stRow cir led-plusEndLayoutUnderscriptgam ael ment-ofnormalup erDeltaSubscriptminusBaselinecom aleft-parenthesi alphatimescom agam aright-parenthesi les -than0Endscripts imesGermangSubscriptgam aSuperscriptdouble-struckup erCBaselineperiod
(2)
If α ∈ L then the map
Bruhat cell A of the shortest Let
(1990).
us
a
complex diffeomorphism
length such
=
between
ℂk
and the
and ω ∈ W is the element
where k
consider the
Let ▵k
A is
that
ωα
=
ρ.
following special
∪ {0} : (α, ρv) {α ∈A▵
case =
k}
of
a
grading of gℂ,
defined
by
Burstall and
Rawnsley
and put
GermangSuperscriptleft-parenthesi kright-parenthesi Baseline qualsStartLayout1stRow circled-plusEndLayoutUnderscriptalphatimesel ment-ofnormalup erDeltaSuperscriptkBaselineEndscriptstimesGermangSubscriptgam aSuperscriptdouble-struckup erCBaselinetimes emicol nthentimesGermangSuperscriptdouble-struckup erCBaseline qualsStartLayout1stRow circled-plusEndLayoutUnderscriptkequalsnegative2Overscriptkequals2EndscriptstimesGermangSuperscriptleft-parenthesi kright-parenthesi Baselineandtimesleft-bracketGermangSuperscriptleft-parenthesi irght-parenthesi Baselinecom aGermangSuperscriptleft-parenthesi jright-parenthesi Baselineright-bracketsubset-ofGermangSuperscriptleft-parenthesi iplusjright-parenthesi Baselineperiod
(3)
Here g
is
by
definition the Cartan
algebra j.
We have the
following equalities:
German g Superscript left-parenthesi plus-or-minus 2 right-parenthesi Baseline equals German g Subscript plus-or-minus rho Superscript double-struck up er C Baseline times comma German g Superscript left-parenthesi 0 right-parenthesi Baseline equals German l comma and German g Superscript left-parenthesi plus-or-minus 1 right-parenthesi Baseline circled-plus German g Superscript left-parenthesi plus-or-minus 2 right-parenthesi Baseline equals Subscript plus-or-minus Baseline
where A
is the nilradical and I the reductive part of p.
n
geometric interpretation.
to Theorem 1 any
According
of dimension 2n +1 is birationally equivalent
ℂ𝕡2n+1
contact structure on
ℂ2n
on
comes
with the radial vector
description
of such
Let R for
⊂ ▵+.
gℂ.
The
This
grading (3)
simple
⟨H,Hα⟩
that
by
for
the
z
𢂇 N
we
symplectic
for
have
a
a
=
roots and choose
α(H)
contact
TZN
=
nilpotent
(the complex
geometric
and
ℂ𝕡2n+1
hand, namely 𝕡TZN
TZN.
at
[z, gℂ]
explicit
a more
In fact contact birational follows.
as
H
basis
⟨Xα,X-α) can
orbit
complex symplectic structure
gℂ→ TzN which are defined
for all H ∈ j and
shows that the tangent space
more
Weyl
a
minimal
manifold to ℂ𝕄2n+1
structure on
be constructed from linear maps
denote the set of means
might hope
One
field).
equivalences. Indeed,
𝕡TZN can
complex contact
from the contraction of the constant
with the contact structure induced maps from 𝕡N to
as a
projectivised
,
=
be written
(so [Xα,X-α]
1
=
Hα).
as
up er T Subscript Baseline Subscript z Baseline equals circled-plus double-struck up er C up er H Subscript rho Baseline equals German g Superscript left-parenthesi 2 right-parenthesi Baseline circled-plus German g Superscript left-parenthesi 1 right-parenthesi Baseline circled-plus double-struck up er C up er H Subscript rho Baseline
(4) (here
a
.
This
gives
a
decomposition gℂ
TzN ⊕ Vz
=
where
up erVSubscriptzBaseline quals eft-parenthesi GermangSuperscriptleft-parenthesi 0right-parenthesi Baselinecir led-minusdouble-struckup erCup erHSubscriptrhoBaselineright-parenthesi cir led-plusGermangSuperscriptleft-parenthesi negative1right-parenthesi Baselinecir led-plusGermangSuperscriptleft-parenthesi negative2right-parenthesi Baseline quals eft-parenthesi intersectionup erHSubscriptrhoSuperscriptup-tackBaselineright-parenthesi cir led-plusStartLayout1stRow cir led-plusEndLayoutUnderscriptalphael ment-ofnormalup erDeltacom aleft-parenthesi alphatimescom arhoright-parenthesi les -than-or-slanted-equals0Endscripts imesGermangSubscriptalphaSuperscriptdouble-struckup erCBaselineperiod
Let p
:
gℂ
=
denote the linear
TzN ⊕ Vz → TzN
projection
to the first summand. The map
pi colon g Superscript double-struck up er C Baseline contains-as-member x right-ar ow from bar p left-parenthesis x right-parenthesis plus left-parenthesis x comma up er X Subscript negative rho Baseline right-parenthesis z ampersand up er T Subscript z Baseline times
(5) is
simply
a
of p with
composition
of 2 and is constant
on
the
a
linear
remaining
that
=
on
exp n be the
and let π :
z
of
TZN
components in the direct
between the canonical contact structures LEMMA 3. Let C
endomorphism
gℂ → TZN
which stretchesgℂ by the factor
sum
(4)
.
There is
a
simple
relation
𝕡N and 𝕡TZN:
big cell
be defined
in the Bruhat
decomposition
by Formula (5)
.
of 𝕡N. We
assume
If x ∈ n_ then
pi left-parenthesis e Superscript x Baseline z right-parenthesis equals 2 z plus left-bracket x comma z right-bracket period
(6) Moreover, π induces
Proof.
We
begin
a
1
:
1 contact map from C to 𝕡TzN.
with the
proof
of Formula
(6)
.
If
x
is
an
element of
n_
then
e Superscript x Baseline z equals normal up er A normal d Subscript Baseline Subscript e Sub Superscript x Subscript Baseline times z equals e Superscript normal a normal d Super Subscript x Superscript Baseline times left-parenthesi z right-parenthesi equals normal up er Sigma Underscript n equals 0 Overscript 4 Endscripts times StartFraction 1 Over n factorial EndFraction left-parenthesi normal a normal d Subscript x Baseline right-parenthesi Superscript n Baseline left-parenthesi z right-parenthesi equals z plus left-bracket x comma z right-bracket plus one-half eft-bracket x comma left-bracket x comma z right-bracket right-bracket plus period period period
(7)
where the omitted terms
belong
We
to n
can
write
x
n_
⊂ Vz
we can
where xρ,xα ∈ ℂ. Since X
and
[x,[X-ρ,z]] lie
in
xρX-ρ when calculating π([x, [x, z]]).
The
remaining summands give
the summand
ignore
normalup erSigmaUnderscriptalphael ment-ofnormalup erDeltaSuperscript1BaselineEndscripts imesup erNSubscriptnegativealphatimescom arhoBaselinetimesxSubscriptalphaBaselinel ft-bracketxcom aup erXSubscriptrhominusalphatimesBaselineright-bracketequalsnormalup erSigmaUnderscriptalphacom abetael ment-ofnormalup erDeltaSuperscript1BaselineEndscripts imesup erNSubscriptnegativealphatimescom arhoBaselinetimesxSubscriptalphaBaselinetimesxSubscriptbetaBaselinel ft-bracketup erXSubscriptminustimesbetaBaselinetimescom aup erXSubscriptrhominusalphatimesBaselineright-bracketperiod
Nα,β α + β ࣔ 0,
The constants with
α +
β ≠ ρ are either
defined
are
by
the formula
lie in S
zero or
[Xα, Xβ]
The summands
NαβXα+β.
=
and the summands with
α +
β
ρ give
=
minusone-halfnormalup erSigmaUnderscriptalphacom abetael ment-ofnormalup erDeltaSuperscript1BaselineUnderUnderscriptalphaplusbetaequalsrhoEndscriptsxSubscriptalphaBaselinetimesxSubscriptbetaBaselineleft-parenthesi up erNSubscriptnegativealphacom a lphaplusbetaBaselinetimesup erHSubscriptbetaBaselineplusup erNSubscriptnegativebetacom a lphaplusbetaBaselinetimesup erHSubscriptalphaBaselineright-parenthesi equalsone-halfnormalup erSigmaUnderscriptalphacom abetael ment-ofnormalup erDeltaSuperscript1BaselineUnderUnderscriptalphaplusbetaequalsrhoEndscriptsup erNSubscriptalphacom abetaBaselinetimesxSubscriptalphaBaselinetimesxSubscriptbetaBaselineleft-parenthesi up erHSubscriptalphaBaselineminusup erHSubscriptbetaBaselineright-parenthesi
since
N-α,α+β
since
⟨Hα Hβ,Hα+β⟩
=
—
N-β,α+β
—
(X-p,Xp)
Nα,β (cf.
⟨α β, α+ β⟩ and | α|
to 𝕡N
x,y ∈ n_ and let if and
only
(adx,)ky
=
if
a
=
⟨y,az⟩
as
projections
(Formula (2) ),
0
0 if k > 1. As
a
But
Hα
—
Hβ is perpendicular
This shows that
(6)
and
contact map from C to
a
ex ∈ Gℂ. The vector =
=
=
𝕡TZN
and to
3).
p.
| β| . (7) implies that ⟨exz,X-p⟩z z,
It remains to show that π induces
tangent
1972,
Warner
-
=
1, Formula
=
=
p(exz)
=
i.e.
∈ TazN
𝕡TZN.
⟨a-1y, z⟩
=
projects
[x, z].
+
Hρ
Since
follows. We shall represent vectors
of vectors tangent to N and to TzN
[y,az]
z
to
Let
respectively.
to a contact vector in Tℂ(az)𝕡N
0. But a-1 y
=
Ade-x y
=
y
—
adx
y since
result
left-bracket y comma a z right-bracket element-of upper T Subscript a z Baseline times times p r o j ects to a contact vector in times upper T Subscript double-struck upper C left-parenthesis a z right-parenthesis Baseline times double-struck upper P left right double arrow left pointing angle y minus left-bracket x comma y right-bracket comma z right pointing angle equals 0 period
(8) We shall
now
calculate
We have
π*[y,az].
Baker-Campbell-Hausdorff formula,
so
s
the
by
the differential of π is
given by
the formula
pi Subscript asterisk Baseline times colon up er T Subscript a z Baseline contains-as-member left-bracket y times comma a z right-bracket imes right-ar ow from bar left-bracket y plus one-half times left-bracket y x right-bracket comma z right-bracket imes element-of up er T Subscript left-parenthesi 2 z plus left-bracket x comma z right-bracket right-parenthesi Baseline times left-parenthesi up er T Subscript z Baseline up er N right-parenthesi period
(2)
It follows from
Consequently,
[A, z) ∈TZN projects to π*[y, az] is contact in 𝕄TzN
that X
the vector
=
a
contact vector in
iff
iff
T(ℂy)𝕄TzN
a
⟨A, Y⟩
=
0.
We have:
.
leftpointingangle2zplusleft-bracketxcom azright-bracket imescom ayplusone-halftimesleft-bracketycom axright-bracketrightpointingangletimesequalsleftpointingangleleft-bracketxcom azright-bracket imescom ayrightpointingangletimesplus2leftpointinganglezcom ayrightpointingangletimesplusleftpointinganglezcom aleft-bracketycom axright-bracketrightpointingangletimesplusone-half eftpointingangleleft-bracketxcom azright-bracketcom aleft-bracketycom axright-bracketrightpointingangle2leftpointinganglezcom ayplusleft-bracketycom axright-bracketrightpointingangletimesplusone-halftimesleftpointingangleleft-bracketxcom azright-bracketcom aleft-bracketycom axright-bracketrightpointingangle quals0
(the
last
equality
follows from
The map 𝕄π : 𝕄N → 𝕄TzN a
is
[x, z]
and the fact that
(8) a
candidate for
a
contact birational
map is birational if it is rational and has rational
if it on
can
be written
as z
M. Birational maps
↦ are
r(z)
=
[1
:
f1:...:
∈ g(1) ⊕g(10) and
inverse;
fn]
generically biholomorphic
where
a
map
fi
are
[x, y]
□ ∈ g(-2)
correspondence. r :
M
→
We recall that
N ⊂ ℂ𝕄n is rational
global meromorphic
and well defined away from
a
functions
subvariety
of
codimension 2. It is clear that ᵔ ;π is well defined cell C. It turns out that
𝕄(N∩Vz)
on
is
a
the set
𝕄N𝕄(N∩Vz).
union of Bruhat cells.
This set
can
be
bigger
than the
big
1. Rank two root systems
Figure
Arrows denote negative roots, the roots in ▵1 are marked by ∂, the highest root ρ is marked by ▵ (and -ρ in Dynkin diagrams by ☉ ). Thick lines represent
simple roots. The numbers next to the long roots indicate the dimensions of the corresponding Bruhat
LEMMA 4. With the above notation
cells.
have:
we
double-struck up er P times left-parenthesi intersection up er V Subscript z Baseline Subscript Baseline right-parenthesi equals quare-union Underscript gam a el ment-of up er L com a left pointing angle gam a com a rho right pointing angle les -than-or-slanted-equals 0 Endscripts up er N Superscript gam a Baseline times German g Subscript gam a Superscript double-struck up er C Baseline times left-parenthesi d i s j o times i n t u n i o n right-parenthesi period
Moreover, if γ ∈ ▵ 29; L
First note that if y ∈ g
Proof. Let τ be
have an
m_-module,
a nonzero
It remains to show that 𝕄 is
no
components ing(2) so =
Let in
Fig.
root.
0. This ends the
us
have
proof
look at the
a
1 show that
are
precisely
Now
σα(ρ)
cannot be
diagram
—
To
see
in the
gℂ sp(n,ℂ).
and,
N
on
C
cases, when
gℂ has
variety (codimension 3)
For Ci the set the
on
this note that, are
disjoint
configuration might
seem
from
a
result
This is as we
All
for G2
the roots
If
to
a
is such
precisely
a
(Schubert
2-dimensional
root
2, the cells of
σα(ρ) a
when
(α, ρ) ∩ ϕ.
simple
Diagrams
In fact this situation
α). 𝕄(N∩Vz) precisely
σα(ρ) ≠.
surprising
As
have
(codimension 2)
to Lemma
parametrised by
does not lie in ▵1 .
cell.
big
consider the rank 2 root system span
s
.
rank 2.
Vz) is 𝕄(N∩
according
corresponding
of type A1 ⊕ A1) since
This
since Vz
Elements of N
.
lie in
simplest
cells).
of 𝕄N"
Bruhat cell is
σα(ρ)
to y.
□
𝕄πis defined only
decomposition
⟨ρ, αv)α and
g࠶contains the =
so
equal
𝕄VZ.
[X-ρ,y]
3-dimensional Schubert
1 and it is clear that
for
i.e. when
a
is
each Bruhat cell of codimension at least 1. Let τ ∈ ▵1
≠ ρ (σα∈W is the reflexion
semisimple (i.e. Fig.
shown in
in
since Φ is not radial.
for root systems Cn.
corresponding
ρ
=
entirely
components of
(codimension 1),
σα(ρ)
Lemma 4, the
y in g
all elements of the Bruhat cell
is the union of two 1-dimensional Schubert varieties
𝕄(N∩ Vz)
codimension 1 in the Bruhat α ∈ R and
on
by definition the closures of Bruhat
Schubert variety occurs
lies
variety 𝕄(N∩Vz)
for the root system A2 and is varieties
so
m
singular
nonzero
.
∈ m_ then the component of Adex
x
Consider the vector field Φ : y ↦ [X-ρ,y]
a
π*(Φ)
the Bruhat cell N
component in TzN. If δ ∈ ▵1 ∪ {ρ} then g
the Bruhat cell exp
be
long
and
singular on
root. If τ ∈ ▵1 ∪ {ρ} then g
long
a
N is
then the map π is
for which
root
σα(ρ)
▵1.
This root system
systems of rank 2
when the extended
possible only
then, by
are
Dynkin
for the root systems
Cn,
expect ᵔ ;π to be birational. Moreover,
the
twistor space
quaternionic
however, that in this
case
PROPOSITION 5. If
gℂis
then the linear map π :
𝕄Nis
the map
a
in such
the
projective
extends to
ᵔ ;πtrivially
complex simple
gℂ→
case
Lie
algebra
space
ℂ𝕄2n+1
𝕄N.To summarise,
itself. We shall see,
we
have the
and N ⊂ gℂ is the minimal
TzN, defined in Formula (5) induces ,
from 𝕄N to 𝕄TzN. Moreover, the map 𝕄π is well defined
on
a
following orbit
nilpotent
contact birational map ᵔ ;π
the set
StarLayout1stRow cir led-plusEndLayoutUndersciptalphael ment-ofnormalup erDeltaSuperscipt1Baselineinters ctionup erLunio StarSetrhoEndSetEndscriptsup erNSupersciptalphaBaselinetimesGermangSubscriptalphaSupersciptdouble-struckup erCBaselinetimescom a
and if
gℂis
not of
The cell structure of
REMARK 6.
Eastwood
type Cn then 𝕄πis singular beyond the big cell N
1989);
𝕄(N∩Vz).
For
example
following diagram for the
flag
one
𝕄(N
"*" the
Vz)
one
can
diagrams (see
Baston and
find which Bruhat cells lie in the
singular
set
gets the
the group F4. In
diagram weights corresponding
cells in
manifolds is encoded in Hasse
from these diagrams
to
marked with
are
a
𝕄(N'∩VzZ) is a 10-dimensinal variety (codimension 5 in𝕄N). set
Highest π :
sp(n,(ℂ)
(ei)=i...2n
(ℂ2n)‘.
nilpotent orbit in sp(n,ℂ).
root →
TzN. Let ω be
in which
We have
the Cartan
a
We shall find
explicit
nondegenerate skew-symmetric
2-form
where
a
formulae for the on
ℂ2n. We choose
(ei)i=1...2n
to define a
basis
a
is the dual basis for and
s
algebra consisting of the diagonal matrices
projection
decomposition sp(n, ℂ)
we can use =
TZN⊗VZ
and the associated map π : N → TzN The map
φ :
parametrises 𝕡N
=
the minimal
𝕔𝕡2n-1).
Take
We have i
z
ℂ2n \{0}∋x→x 97;ω(x,.)Nx2 08; orbit in
nilpotent =
and put
φ(e1)
w
=
x
and TzN —
sp(n,𝕔) (this φ*(Te1𝕔2n)
—
shows that N =
{e1 ⊗ω(v, •)
=
+
v
(ℍn \ {0})̸ ⊗ω(e1,
·): v
2
and
𝕔2n}.
x1e1. We get:
phi left-parenthesis x right-parenthesis equals left-parenthesis x 1 e 1 plus w right-parenthesis circled-times omega left-parenthesis x 1 e 1 plus w comma dot right-parenthesis equals x 1 squared e 1 circled-times omega left-parenthesis e 1 comma dot right-parenthesis plus x 1 left-parenthesis e 1 circled-times omega left-parenthesis w comma dot right-parenthesis plus w circled-times omega left-parenthesis e 1 comma dot right-parenthesis right-parenthesis plus w circled-times omega left-parenthesis w comma dot right-parenthesis period
Now
(we
w
w ⊗ ω(w,
can
use
•)
Vz and, since
the scalar
z
=
e1
product ⟨A, B⟩
ω(ei, •), =
we
have
trace AB since it is
x
proportional
to the
Killing form).
(φ*(ei))i=1... 2n
In the basis
so
x
C)
the map π o
for TzN
π vanishes if
x1
0
=
(this
φ is given by
the formula
g
condition defines the complement of the
big
cell
but 𝕔π obviously extends to 𝕔𝕡2n-1.
Highest
root
birational
φ
where D
𝕔n+1
{(x,ξ)
have
surjective
a
:𝕔n+1
×
similar way
a
is the
1,𝕔)
one can
twistor spaces of
quaternionic
where N ⊂ sl((n +
case we
In
sl(n + 1, 𝕔).
between the
and 𝕡N,
≥ 2). In this
n
orbit in
correspondence
𝕔𝕡2n-1
between that
nilpotent
highest
root
find formulae for
r2(𝕔n+1) nilpotent
and
orbit
a
contact
ℍ𝕡n-1, (we
i.e.
assume
map
(𝕔n+1)* N ξ ⊗ x → (x,ξ) ∋ D ⊃
0, x ≠ 0, ξ ≠ 0} (note that there is a bijection (𝕔n+1)* : ξ(x) 𝕡N ∋ [A] → (im A ⊂ ker A) F1,n(𝕔n+1)). We adopt the same notation as in the previous example (but basis elements in 𝕔n+1 are indexed now by the set {0.n}) and take z φ(e0,en) e0⊗en. =
×
=
=
=
Then
TZN
η(e0)
+
φ(T(e0,en)D)
=
en(v)
=
en,
e0⊗
The Cartan
TZN⊗VZ
consists of the tensors e0 ⊗ η +
0. We choose the
e1 ⊗ en,..., en-1 ⊗en, e0 ⊗
algebra j consisting
where Vz is
perpendicular such that
following
to
of the
en-1,
Hρ
e0 ⊗ e0
—
en ⊗ en.
⊗ en where η
⊗en-2
e0
diagonal matrices
spanned by matrices ei⊗ej =
v
(𝕔n)*,
𝕔n and
v
basis for TzN:
with i
Now take
sl(n, Ǖ 4;) gives
in
≠ j,
e0 e0 ⊗
e1,
e0 ⊗
i≠ 0 and
a
—
en ⊗ en.
decomposition sl(n, Ǖ 4;)
j ≠ n,
and
=
by diagonal matrices g and
x
We have
g
xcircled-timesxiequalsnormalup erSigmaUnderscriptiequals1OverscriptnEndscriptstimesx0xiSubscriptiBaselinetimese0circled-timeseSuperscriptiBaselineplusnormalup erSigmaUnderscriptiequals1Overscriptnminus1EndscriptstimesxSubscriptiBaselinetimesxiSubscriptnBaselinetimeseSubscriptiBaselinetimescircled-timeseSuperscriptnBaselineplusnormalup erSigmaUnderscriptiequals0OverscriptnEndscriptstimesxSubscriptiBaselinetimesxiSubscriptiBaselinetimeseSuperscriptiBaselineplusnormalup erSigmaUnderUnderscriptiequals1com aelipsi com anUnderscriptinot-equalsjEndscriptsEndscriptstimesnormalup erSigmaUnderscriptjequals0Overscriptnminus1EndscriptstimesxSubscriptiBaselinetimesxiSubscriptjBaselinetimeseSubscriptiBaselinetimescircled-timeseSuperscriptjBaselineperiod
The last summand in the formula above
projects orthogonally
in j to the matrix
into account the summand
(x ®⊗Xξ-Pρz
belongs
to
Vz and the diagonal matrix
½(x0ξ0— x£ξ)(eo0®⊗e°0— =
xo0ξe00®⊗en
we
en
i
®⊗e"n GC𝕔PρC⊂TZN■.Taking
get
PROPOSITION 7. The formula left-parenthesis x 0 colon ellipsis colon x Subscript n Baseline times semicolon xi 0 colon ellipsis times colon xi Subscript n Baseline right-parenthesis right-ar ow from bar left-bracket 2 x 0 xi Subscript n Baseline colon x 1 xi Subscript n Baseline times colon ellipsis colon x Subscript n minus 1 Baseline xi Subscript n Baseline times colon x 0 xi Subscript n minus 1 Baseline times colon ellipsis colon x 0 xi 1 times colon one-half left-parenthesis x 0 xi 0 minus x Subscript n Baseline xi Subscript n Baseline right-parenthesis right-bracket
defines
a
contact birational map from
the set
{x0
ξn =
=
0}
REMARK 8. In the basis
and
case
F1,n(𝕔n+1)
to
biholomorphic if and only
when
n
=
2
one recovers
𝕔𝕡2n-1. This map is well defined if x0ξn
≠ 0.
Gauduchon’s Formulae e
away from
(1)
.
To
see
this
use
the
References Baston , R. J. and Eastwood , M. G. ( 1989 ) The Penrose transform, its interaction with representation Clarendon Press , Oxford Mathematical Monographs.
theory,
Bryant
R. L
,
( 1982 ) Conformal
DifF. Geom. 17 , 455 473
and minimal immersions
of compact surfaces
into the
4-sphere
,
J.
-
.
Burstall , F. E.
( 1990 ) Minimal surfaces in quaternionic symmetric manifolds, Cambridge University Press 231 235
spaces ,
Geometry
of low-dimensional
-
.
,
Burstall , F. E. and
Rawnsley , J. H. Lect. Notes Math. 1424
( 1990 )
Twistor
theory for
Riemannian symmetric spaces ,
Springer-Verlag,
.
Gauduchon , P. Kobak , P. Z.
( 1987 )
( 1993 )
La correspondance de Bryant ,
Astérisque
181 208 -
,
.
Quaternionic geometry and harmonic maps , D. Phil. Thesis,
University of Oxford
Kobak , P. Z.
Systems
( 1994 ) Twistors, nilpotent orbits and harmonic maps , Harmonic Maps and A.P. and Wood , J.C. , eds.), Vieweg , Braunschweig/Wiesbaden Fordy , (
Astérisque
Salamon , S. M. Swann , A. F. Warner , G.
Integrable
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Lawson , H. B. , Jr , 624 ,
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( 1983 ) Surfaces minimales (Soc. Math. France,
121 122 -
( 1982 ) Quaternionic
( 1991 ) HyperKähler ( 1972 )
Harmonic
Kahler
et la construction de Calabi-Penrose , Sém. Bourbaki 1985
197 211 ). -
,
manifolds
Invent. Math. 67 143 171 -
,
.
and quaternionic Kähler geometry , Math. Ann. 289 , 421 450
analysis
-
on
semi-simple
Lie groups , vol. I ,
Springer-Verlag
.
.
2
Chapter
to conformal
Applications
geometry
M&LHEbyM.I§natursog.dhwP2GJcot.i1nd, There
several
are
significant
geometry. The links the
isomorphism
are
of Lie
ways in which
spinors
particularly strong
and the fact that the irreducible
simple (it
SO(4) into
self-dual and
a
irreducible). dual
only
one
of
su(2)
(whereas
of two
important
𝕔2).
on
As
reason
for this is
and the
easy to describe a
Weyl
Weyl
the
curvature
Weyl
decomposes curvature is
curvature and bundles with self-
achievements of twistor
equations
(as
consequence the group
in other dimensions, the
to define metrics with self-dual
subjects
Yang-Mills
underlying
especially
are
orthogonal group),
construction for self-dual solutions of Einstein’s
for self-dual
conformal differential
ࣅ su(2) × su(2)
spinor representations
such
anti self-dual part
This allows
connections,
graviton
is the
an
the
in four dimensions. The
representations
powers of the fundamental
is not
impinge on
algebras
so(4)
symmetric
and twistors
theory,
Penrose’s non-linear
and Ward’s twistor construction
fields.
A similar coincidence of low-dimensional Lie
algebras
can
be
regarded
as
the basis of twistor
theory, namely so(6, Ǖ 4;) and its various real forms, such
as
so(4,2) The
spin representation
isomorphism. six
These
dimensions, just
of
so(6, D554;)
is
do
spinors
a
in any
n-form is
higher
totally null,
The second the
dimension. cf. the
isomorphism
point being
that
the
in four dimensions
(A spinor
appendix also
su(2, 2).
spinors
are
D554;4 induced by the above
tool for differential geometry in
(cf. §§11.2.2 5 ). -
on
Part of the
automatically
special utility
‘pure’
when the associated
of Penrose & Rindler 1986, and S.B.Petrack in the
use
here
pure, whereas this is not the
in 2n dimensions is said to be
underpins
SO(4,2)
representation
powerful computational
arises from the fact that in six dimensions case
ࣅ
precisely
isomorphisms give as
≅ sl(4),
§1.3.9.)
of twistors in four-dimensional conformal geometry,
is the group of conformal motions of
space. This is familiar in that natural constructions
on
flat twistor space
compactified (such
as
Minkowski
forming
various
DOI: 10.1201/9780429332548-2
2. sheaf
to conformal
Applications
geometry
rise to
cohomology groups) give
Minkowski space. In this context
on
conformally invariant objects (such
‘conformally
differential
as
invariant’ may be taken to
mean
operators)
‘invariant under
conformal motions’. There is also On
compactified
much wider
a
in which twistors enter into conformal differential geometry.
sense
Minkowski space, there is
an
exact sequence of vector
OB1;OA 92; 0.
0 → OA → The bundles at either end twistor space manifold
as
fibre.
are
& MacCallum
with
1972).
bundles and the bundle in the middle is the trivial bundle with this situation
Surprisingly,
(if spin). Moreover,
naturally equipped
spin
a
bundles, usually denoted
persists
the bundle in the middle
conformally
This is the
on a
(called
four-dimensional conformal
general
the bundle of ‘local
twistors’)
invariant connection called local twistor transport connection associated with Cartan’s
spin
SO(4,2)
comes
(Penrose
conformal
connection. The local twistor connection may be defined of
a
metric in the conformal class
factor induces
a
Penrose & Rindler 1986 for full
(see
A choice of conformal
details).
splitting Oα
of the above exact sequence. Under a
quite explicitly in terms of the Levi-Civita connection
twistor Zα represented
a
by (wA, πA')
=
OA c2295; OA,
conformal
rescaling
ĝab
with respect to gab is
→
Ω2gab
the
splitting changes
so
that
represented by
left-parenthesi ModifyngAboveomegaWithcaretSuperscriptup erABaselinecom aModifyngAbovepiWithcaretSubscriptup erAprimeBaselineright-parenthesi equals eft-parenthesi omegaSuperscriptup erABaselinecom apiSubscriptup erAprimeBaselineplusnormalinormalϒSubscriptup erAup erAprimeBaselineomegaSuperscriptup erABaselineright-parenthesi
with respect to ĝab where Υa
=
▿a log Ω. The covariant derivative
can
be
expressed
as
nabla left-parenthesis omega Superscript up er A Baseline comma pi Subscript up er A prime Baseline right-parenthesis equals left-parenthesis nabla omega Superscript up er A Baseline plus i epsilon Subscript up er B Superscript up er A Baseline pi Subscript up er B prime Baseline comma nabla pi Subscript up er A prime Baseline plus i up er P Subscript b up er A up er A prime Baseline omega Superscript up er A Baseline right-parenthesis
where normal up er P Subscript a b Baseline equals normal up er Phi Subscript a b Baseline minus normal up er Lamda g Subscript a b Baseline equals StartFraction 1 Over 1 2 EndFraction up er R g Subscript a b Baseline minus one-half up er R Subscript a b Baseline period
Here Rab, is the Ricci tensor and R is the scalar curvature. It as
defined is invariant under conformal
rescalings.
can
be checked that this connection
Local twistors at
a
point
can
be
thought
of
as
the flat space twistors associated to the flat conformal Minkowski space that best approximates the
space-time
to second order at that
point.
Many of the articles in the chapter
use
this local twistor construction, for example in the
of conformally invariant differential operators concerned with the More
more
generally,
that is anti-self-dual
geometric in 2n
(cf. §§11.2.13
realization of twistors
dimensions,
(resp. self-dual).
an
α-surface
as
-
construction
19 ). Several other articles
‘α-surfaces’
(resp. β-surface)
(and is
a
dual twistors
totally
as
are
β-surfaces).
null n-surface
§11.2.1
Introduction
The interest in foliations of space-times by such surfaces goes back in effect decades to the
1961,
when Ivor Robinson
subsequent development
of
null
a
space-time, a
rays
real curved space-time with
solution of Maxwell’s
naturally
with twistor
in
theory
chapter or
touch
foliations
the articles
the Kerr theorem and the
recurrent theme in the
important
an
as
on
a
this theme and
by Hughston
Summary of chapter. as an
aid to
as
Jeffreyes
interest in its
signature
own
(including generalizations
of twistor
theory.
consequence
as a
and related
has from the outset been
Several of the articles in this
various aspects of the geometry of shearfree ray congruences
explore
the
play
do the familiar two-component
regards
the
complexifies
in
§§11.3.4
-
space-time
a
admits
a
Killing spinor (cf.
6 ).
§§11.2.2-4 by Hughston
and
Jeffryes apply flat
twistor space
the differential geometry of curved six-dimensional spaces. Here the twistors
analysing
the
on
foliation by α-surfaces and
Goldberg-Sachs theorem)
development
The articles in
live in the tangent space, and as
to a
one
of non-trivial ways, and
variety
by α-surfaces. Such foliations also arise when and
influence
hyperbolic signature
If
equations.
equivalent
the illumination of various aspects of this result
constructions, such
significant
of β-surfaces.
consisting
This result ties in
to have a
was
than three
Robinson’s theorem showed that associated with
on a
discovers that the shearfree congruence is
foliation
conjugate
geodesic
(algebraically degenerate)
one
result that
a
general relativity.
any shearfree congruence of null there is
published
more
right,
same
spinors
role relative to the
to
space-time.
of the associated Riemannian and may
ultimately
be of
The
resulting formalism,
(or pseudo-Riemannian)
in the
use
underlying six-dimensional
study
of certain
manifold
which is flexible
metric, is of
global problems
some
in the
geometry of six dimensional manifolds (e.g. in connection with the existence of complex structures). See
§1.4.17 (Minimal
surfaces and
strings
in six
dimensions, by Hughston k. Shaw)
for
a
related
application. In
employed to
eight In
the
§11.2.5
same
to prove
an
dimensions
§11.2.6
theorem. In
a
analogue
(and
was
(see
(using
a
In
these ideas
is used to are
zero
In
and
a
§11.2.9
10
a
p-fold spinor
of
unless p are
studies
a
§7.3)
a zero =
Hughston &
3p +
rest
dimensions)
are
Mason
1988). of Robinson’s
mass
a
on zero
spinor field satisfies
field of valence p + q, then it is
q.
provided
holomorphic functions
conformally
which says that if
characterized in
natural invariant formulation is
Bailey
for geometry in six
extended to embrace the Sommers-Bell-Szekeres theorem
rest mass fields in terms of -
spinors
elementary (i.e. algebraic) proof
an
Sommers 1976, Penrose & Rindler
null self-dual Maxwell fields
alpha-planes, null
produce
repeated spinor of the Weyl spinor, §11.2.8
the
as
of the Kerr theorem in six dimensions. The result is then extended
the shearfree ray condition and is also
twistors
later extended to 2n dimensions in
spinor method
§11.2.7
rest mass fields
methods
terms of
integrable
for Penrose’s
with
original
distributions of identification of
simple poles (Penrose 1968, 1969).
invariant connection obtained
by decomposing
the
local twistor connection in the presence of
conformally Bailey goes
case
naturally sit inside twistor
‘Goldberg Sachs’
also. In
condition is
relative
§11.2.11
relationship
explored
in
§11.2.12
The articles
cohomology
on
an
§§11.2.13
17
-
and many of them
goals A
in
Fefferman & Graham
curved space. This is
to a
Differential on
up to more
(1985) using can
pursued
spinors,
some
flat
alternative
be
generated
that,
applied
of
In
.
are
obtained
tensors
complete
list
in which all the
using representation
connection).
to the
In
§11.2.13
Weyl spinor in
originally
discovered by
is that
§11.2.13
four
conformally
conformally invariant operators in
§11.2.14 it
of the bundles
weights
operators
A subtext of
theory
§11.2.15
In
are
functions
§ 11.2.16
on
is shown that the
assumption
which the invariant operators act
by allowing non-integral weights
§11.2.17
on
projective
a
a
simpler
space
case
in
even
were
representation theory
case one
them
derivatives,
and
by Weyl).
polynomial invariants
with all derivatives
is studied in which
by regarding
classified
(which
conformal
point together
In the flat
corresponding non-projective space, taking tensors
thought of as
the structures of bundles of infinite
of the
corresponding
be
studied in terms of their
their
can
one
of functions
jets and
compared
considers
a
(and
to their
projective
many invariants
generate
homogeneous
as
perhaps
functions
on
the
constructing all the affine invariants In
§11.2.17
it is shown that certain
invariants do not arise in this way.
‘exceptional’ in
admits
degenerates
classified
when
machinery.
structure rather than a conformal structure.
Finally
are
a
(1987)
(using
from the
the bundle of sections at
order).
generally bundles)
weighted
multipole-like
space).
(that is,
finite
a
in conformal manifolds is
non-trivial scalar conformal invariant
in further detail in
counterparts in flat space. In
for
on curves
the local twistor
such
polynomial conformal invariants can
bundles
jet
Then In flat
neighbourhood.
study of conformally invariant operators,
to curved space on
highly
not essential—no new
(and
by α-planes.
formal
rise to
give
is contained in Eastwood & Rice
key step
in Eastwood &; Rice that the conformal
integral is
a
conformal invariants is to construct
studying
generalized
invariant tensors and scalars
dimensions
foliation
in terms of these structures.
interpreted
concerned with the
are
operator is constructed that acts
dimensions, it gives rise
are
Penrose’s
study Killing spinors.
S is studied and shown to
invariant differential operators in Minkowski space
conformally
a
essentially yields
.
invariants.
polynomial
theory,
This
space and therefore have
between conformal circles and parameters
One of the
and scalars. of
spinor fields.
it is shown that this structure survives in the curved
satisfied,
structure. Robinson’s theorem in flat space is
The
of
the structure of the space S of leaves of
investigate
to
on
space the space S would
When the
pair
a
invariant eth and thorn operators. This is first used to
§11.2.18 a
-
19
some
applications
are
given.
conformal factor with vanishing
and fails when the
Weyl
In
§11.2.18
trace free
tensor is self-dual
Ricci
(the
condition that
a
tensor is
result
requires
given. a
a
conformal manifold This condition
nondegeneracy
con-
dition
the
on
distinguishes
in
Weyl tensor). However,
§11.2.19
a
conformally invariant
Weyl tensors
between space-times with self-dual
that have
tensor is
vanishing
presented that
Ricci tensors, and
those that cannot.
References Eastwood , M. G. & Rice , J. and their curved
( 1992 ), 213
144
analogues
( 1987 ) Conformally ,
Comm. Math.
Phys
invariant differential operators on Minkowski space 109 , 207 228 , and Erratum, Comm. Math. Phys., -
.
.
Fefferman , C. & Graham , C. R.
d’Aujourdui Astérisque ,
95 116
( 1985 )
Conformal invariants , in Élie Cartan et les
.
Hughston
,
L. P. k, Ward , R.S.
( 1979 )
Advances in twistor
Hughston
,
L. P. & Mason , L. J.
( 1988 )
A
275 285 -
generalised
theory
Pitman
,
.
Kerr-Robinson theorem , Class.
Quant. Grav
.
5
,
.
Hughston transform
,
,
L. P. & Mason , L. J. ( 1990 ) Further advances in twistor theory, Volume I: The Penrose Pitman research notes in mathematics series, 231 , Longmans .
Penrose , R.
( 1968 ) Twistor quantisation
Penrose , R.
( 1969 )
Solutions of the
Penrose , R. & MacCallum , M. A. H. and
Mathématiques
-
,
space-time Phys. Repts. ,
Penrose , R. & Rindler , W. Robinson , I.
( 1961 )
Null
and curved rest-mass
zero
space-time
equations
( 1972 ) Twistor theory:
6C , 241 315
,
,
Int. J. Theor.
J. Math.
an
Phys.
1 , 61 99 -
,
10 , 38 39 -
,
to the
approach
Phys.
.
.
quantization of fields
-
,
( 1986 ) Spinors
electromagnetic
.
and
space-time
fields , J. Math.
,
Vol. 2 , CUP
Phys.
2
.
290 291 -
,
.
Sommers P.D. ( 1976 ) Properties of shearfree congruences of null geodesics Proc. Roy. Soc. A349 .
309 318
,
-
.
§II.2.2HL.ughPsto.nDifferential Geometry Twistors
are
useful and
illuminating
account of the fact that twistors the
geometry
spinors
in Six Dimensions
are
in the
the
analysis
spinors
by
(TN 19, January 1985)
of manifolds of dimension six.
for the group
O(6, 𝕄).
Thus twistors
of six dimensional spaces similar in many respects to the role
in the geometry of four-manifolds. Whether these considerations
remains to be seen—my purposes here of results in outline form.
are
primarily geometrical,
This is
play
a
on
role in
played by two-component
are
of any
physical
and I shall summarise
a
interest number
Conventions: Point:
Xi
Metric.
i,j, k
0,1, 3,&2,5;4,#x03B123;,
=
Xαβ(skew,
=
gij
etc.
abstract index
Vi(X)
Vector field:
Vαβ(X) (skew)
=
Vαβ P[αQβ],
Null vector field:
=
where
normal up er Omega Subscript i j Baseline times up er V Superscript i Baseline times up er V Superscript j Baseline quals 0 left right double ar ow up er V Superscript alpha beta Baseline quals up er P left-bracket imes Superscript alpha Baseline up er Q Baseline Superscript beta Baseline right-bracket
Two-forms:
Fijk
Anti-self-dual 3-forms: Curvature tensor:
Qα(X)
are
‘spinor fields’.
ϕαβ
Fijk
~
ψαβ
R
spinor:
spinor:
~
(105 components)
a
(84 components)
R
(⊞symmetry,
Vacuum Bianchi identities: Ricci identities: Define
and
d
Self-dual 3-forms:
Ricci
Pα(X)
F
Three-forms:
Conformal
convention)
εαβγδ(εαβγ=ε0B410B2)
=
20
components)
s
b
a
Then
.
we
find the
following
relations:
whitesquareSubscriptbetaSuperscriptalphaBaselinexiSubscriptgam aBaseline qualsnormalup erPsiSubscriptbetagam aSuperscriptalphadeltaBaselinetimesxiSubscriptdeltaBaselineplusnormalup erPhiSubscriptbetagam aSuperscriptalphadeltaBaselinetimesxiSubscriptdeltaBaselineplusdeltaSubscriptgam aSuperscriptalphaBaselinetimesnormalup erLamdaxiSubscriptbetaBaseline
whitesquareSubscriptbetaSuperscriptalphaBaseline taSuperscriptdeltaBaseline qualsminusnormalup erPsiSubscriptbetagam aSuperscriptalphadeltaBaselinetimestimesetaSuperscriptgam aBaselineminusnormalup erPhiSubscriptbetagam aSuperscriptalphadeltaBaselinetimestimesetaSuperscriptgam aBaselineminusdeltaSubscriptbetaSuperscriptdeltaBaselinenormalup erLamdaetaSuperscriptalphaBaseline
where normalup erPhiSubscriptbetagam aSuperscriptalphadeltaBaseline qualsnormalup erPhiSubscriptleft-bracketbetagam aright-bracketSuperscriptleft-bracketalphadeltaright-bracketBaseline qualsnormalup erPhiSubscriptleft-bracketbetagam aright-bracketleft-bracketrhosigmaright-bracketBaseline psilonSuperscriptalphadeltarhosigmaBaselineperiod
Note that these formulae
are
actually simpler in form
‘Maxwellian’ equations: Fijk =F[ijk] are
equivalent
□ψβγ
=
to:
0 where □
General solution of
▿αβϕα; =
=
0
and
than their four-dimensional
analogues!
ψx;x03B1;&9#x053B;2 Set ▿[iFjkl0 ] and ▿iFijk 0. &3x03D5;αβ 0. In flat ▿αβψβγ 6-space these imply □ϕβγ
~
=
=
=
=
These 0 and
▿i▿i.
▿αβϕβγ
=
0 in flat space:
phi Superscript alpha beta Baseline left-parenthesi up er X Superscript rho sigma Baseline right-parenthesi equals contour-integral up er Z Superscript alpha Baseline up er Z Superscript beta Baseline f left-parenthesi up er X Subscript rho sigma Baseline times up er Z Superscript sigma Baseline comma up er Z Superscript sigma Baseline right-parenthesi cubed up er Z times comma
where D3Z a
suitable
O(8, 𝕔),
εαβγδZα dZβ ∧ dZγ ∧ dZδ and F(Wρ, Zσ) is homogeneous region of the space WαZα = 0. Note that the pair {Wα, Zα] =
i.e. is in effect
Comment
(1994).
I. Robinson Festschrift.
a
of is
degree —6, a
spinor
defined
on
for the group
‘twistor’ for the flat six space.
For further discussion of this formula
(Cf.
also Penrose & Rindler
1986,
see
pp.
my article
462-464.)
(Hughston 1986)
in the
Algebraic classification in four dimensions.
symmetric spinor fields
of
Reality
distinct types. The most
Pαpβ for
some
conditions aside,
a
of these
degenerate
in six dimensions is
field
ϕαβ
(which
at each
can
I shall call
intricate matter than
a more
point
‘null’)
be
of four
one
essentially
ϕαβis of the form
is when
spinor field Pα(X).
1. LEMMA. If ▿αρϕαβ = 0 and
ϕαβ
=
PαPα then Pα(X) satisfies
left-parenthesi up er P Superscript alpha Baseline nabla up er P Superscript left-bracket gamma Baseline right-parenthesi up er P Superscript delta right-bracket Baseline equals 0 times period
(*) 2. REMARK. This condition is
to the
analogous
shear free condition
geodesic
left-parenthesi o Superscript up er A Baseline nabla Subscript up er A prime up er A Baseline o Superscript left-bracket up er B Baseline right-parenthesi o Superscript up er C right-bracket Baseline quals 0
for
a
spinor field
in four dimensions.
3. PROBLEM. such that Solutions of
(*)
spinor
degree,
field
satisfies
▿αβϕαγ
a
can
4. THEOREM. of some
Suppose Pα(X)
be
0 for
=
regions
Pα(X) according
above. Does there
consideration of
Suppose Fr(Wα, Zα), on
as
suitable choice of the scalar
generated by
defined
(*)
r
of the
1, 2, 3 is
=
a
analytic triple
quadric WαZα
=
Pα(X)
satisfies
(Pα▿αβP[r)Pδ]
5. PROBLEM. Does every 6. LEMMA.
spinor
Suppose
a
exist
a
field
ϕαβϕPαPβ =
ϕ(X)?
varieties of
appropriate
of holomorphic
0. Then the
codimension:
functions, homogeneous
variety Fr
=
0 determines
a
to the scheme
Fr(XαβPβ(X),Pα(X)) and
necessarily
=0,
0.
=
analytic Pα(X) satisfying (*)
arise in this
curved six-dimensional space satisfies
Rij
=
way?
0 and has
a
degenerate Weyl
to the extent that normal up er Psi Subscript gam a delta Superscript alpha beta Baseline quals up er P Superscript alpha Baseline up er P Superscript beta Baseline up er Q Subscript gam a delta
(**) for
some
Pα, Qαβ.
Then
(Pα▿αβP[γ)Pδ]
7. PROBLEM. Does the
Weyl spinor necessarily 8. DEFINITION. let
converse
of the form
&
(Robinson
ka(x) (a
=
1...n)
metric of M then for suitable
=
hold,
0.
in the
Ω(x)
that if Pα satisfies
(*)
and
Rij
=
0 is the
(**) ?
Trautman)
be
sense
a
In
a
manifold
vector field which is
we
have gab
=
Ω2ĝab
Mof n
dimensions
conformally geodesic,
such that ka▿akb
=
(signature
unimportant)
i.e. if ĝab is the
0, where ▿a is the
connection associated with gab and indices
Lkak[agb][ckd]
=
ϕk[agb][ckd] for some
9. REMARK. If M is or
space-time
ϕ,
or
raised and lowered with gab. Then ka is
are
equivalently ▿(akd)
+
ξ(akb)
for
then this definition reduces to the ‘standard’
shear-free
if
some a,
ones
if ka is null
timelike.
10. LEMMA.
the
Suppose
spinor
fields Aα and Bα each
Kαβ A[α Bβ] is geodesic and shearfree in the =
11. REMARK. To show we
ψgab
=
have
Kαβis geodesic
Aα▿αβAρ = λβAρ and
is
sense
Bα▿αβBρ
=
=
Then the vector field
.
noted above.
straightforward enough:
AαBβ▿αβBρ μBρfor suitable λ, μ.
λAρ and
satisfy (*)
μβBρ for
Since
; ;β,
some
μβ.
Aα and Bα satisfy (*) Thus
AαBβ▿αβAρ
=
Whence
up er A Superscript alpha Baseline up er B Superscript beta Baseline nabla up er A Superscript left-bracket rho Baseline up er B Superscript sigma right-bracket Baseline equals left-parenthesis lamda plus mu right-parenthesis up er A Superscript left-bracket rho Baseline up er B Superscript sigma right-bracket Baseline times period times white square
To show
Bβ] is A[α
shearfree is
more
12. PROBLEM. Show that the
13. REMARK.
conjugation rules, +-----
we
Reality a
i.e.
impose
14. PROBLEM. In
a
all ‘null’ solutions of the
intricate.
converse
conditions: for with
standard
a
to Lemma 10 does not hold.
signature
Hermitian correlation of
conjugation,
equations,
impose
signature
the ‘usual’ twistor
+ +--. For
signature
component by component.
i.e. s
real six-dimensional curved vacuum
we + +----
space-time
of
f
i.e. for which
determine
signature +---.
References
Hughston
,
Festschrift
L. P.
( 1986 ) Applications
volume),
of
SO(8) spinors
,
eds. W. Rindler and A. Trautman
Penrose , R. & Rindler , W.
( 1986 ) Spinors
and
in Gravitation and
Geometry (I.
( Bibliopolis Naples )
pp. 253 287
,
Space-Time Vol. ,
2
,
Robinson
-
.
Cambridge University
Press
.
§II.2.3
A Theorem
Null Fields in Six Dimensions
on
Hby ughston L.P.
(TN 20, September
1985) In what follows I shall outline
regarded By
a
as a
generalization
rather
a
striking result, holding
of Robinson’s theorem
‘massless field’ in six dimensions I
▿δαϕαβ.;
0;
=
LEMMA.
to be a
‘totally
mean
null’ field it must
Suppose ϕαβ. γsatisfies
on
null
in six
electromagnetic fields ϕαβ. [P0x0B3B34;;]
satisfy
0 for
=
these conditions; then Pα must
can
be
in four dimensions. ϕαβ. γ which satisfies
symmetric spinor field
a
which
dimensions,
some
spinor
Pα.
satisfy
left-parenthesi up er P Superscript alpha Baseline nabla up er P Superscript left-bracket gamma Baseline right-parenthesi up er P Superscript delta right-bracket Baseline equals 0 period
(1) Proof.
It will be
easily
seen
that
ϕαβ. γis totally
null iff there exists
a
scalar ψ such that
phi Superscript alpha beta el ipsi gamma Baseline equals e Superscript psi Baseline up er P Superscript alpha Baseline up er P Superscript beta Baseline period period period up er P Superscript gamma Baseline times period times
(2) The
zero
rest mass condition then
and indeed is
implies,
equivalent
to:
up er P Superscript beta Baseline up er P Superscript gamma Baseline times el ipsis up er P Superscript delta Baseline nabla psi plus up er P Superscript gamma el ipsis Baseline times up er P Superscript delta Baseline nabla Subscript alpha beta Baseline up er P Superscript beta Baseline plus left-parenthesis n minus 1 right-parenthesis up er P Superscript beta Baseline left-parenthesis nabla up er P Superscript left-parenthesis gamma Baseline right-parenthesis times el ipsis up er P Superscript delta right-parenthesis Baseline equals 0 comma
(3) where
(1)
n
is the valence of
follows at
THEOREM. Let Pα be
over
γ and
e
the condition □
locally, a
a
result that is
essentially
a converse
holomorphic spinor field satisfying (1)
manifold endowed with
holomorphic with
Pε and skews
(n ⩾2).
once
Now I shall establish,
complex
ϕαβ. γIf one multiplies (3) by
a
non-degenerate holomorphic
connection. Then
locally
there exists
a
to this lemma.
on a
region
of a six-dimensional
metric tensor and
totally
a
Riemann-compaatible
null massless field of valence n,
principal spinor Pα, providing that left-parenthesi n minus 2 right-parenthesi up er P Superscript alpha Baseline up er P Superscript beta Baseline times normal up er Psi Subscript alpha beta Superscript rho left-bracket sigma Baseline times up er P Superscript au right-bracket Baseline quals 0 com a
(4) where
s
is the
Proof. (1)
is
Weyl spinor (conformal
equivalent
curvature
to the existence of a
spinor).
spinor ∧α such
that
up er P Superscript alpha Baseline nabla up er P Superscript gamma Baseline equals normal up er Lamda Subscript beta Baseline up er P Superscript gamma Baseline times comma
(5) whence up er P Superscript beta Baseline nabla Subscript alpha beta Baseline psi plus nabla up er P Superscript beta Baseline minus left-parenthesis n minus 1 right-parenthesis normal up er Lamda Subscript alpha Baseline equals 0
(6)
as follows from (3). Now consider an equation of the form upper P Superscript beta Baseline nabla Subscript alpha beta Baseline psi plus upper A Subscript alpha Baseline equals 0
(7) with
ψ unknown, Aα specified,
and
Pβsatisfying (1)
Such
.
an
equation admits solutions, locally,
the Frobenius theorem, iff Aα satisfies
by
up erPSuperscriptalphaBaselinenablaSubscriptalphaleft-bracketbetaBaselineup erASubscriptgam aright-bracketBaseline qualsnormalup erLamdaSubscriptleft-bracketbetaBaselineup erASubscriptgam aright-bracketBaselineperiod
(8) To
see
use
of
the necessity of
(5)
(8)
operate
(7)
on
with
P 3C1;▿σρap,
and skew
over
α and σ; (8)
then follows
by
.
We wish to
whether there exists
see
a
scalar
ψ such
(6) holds;
that
thus
we
examine the
expression
up er P Superscript alpha Baseline nabla Subscript alpha left-bracket beta Baseline up er A Subscript gam a right-bracket Baseline minus normal up er Lamda Subscript left-bracket beta Baseline up er A Subscript gam a right-bracket Baseline qual-col n up er I Subscript beta gam a
(9) with up er A Subscript alpha Baseline equals nabla up er P Superscript beta Baseline minus left-parenthesis n minus 1 right-parenthesis normal up er Lamda Subscript alpha Baseline times period
(10) A
straightforward
calculation
gives up er I Subscript beta gamma Baseline equals minus left-parenthesi n minus 2 right-parenthesi up er P Superscript alpha Baseline nabla Subscript alpha left-bracket beta Baseline normal up er Lamda Subscript gamma right-bracket Baseline times period
(11) To arrive at
(11)
use
is made of the Ricci
identity
(12) where R is the scalar curvature; furthermore
we
require
the
simple identity
left-parenthesi nablaSubscriptdeltaleft-bracketbetaBaselineup erPSuperscriptalphaBaselineright-parenthesi timesleft-parenthesi nablaSubscriptgam aright-bracketalphaBaselineup erPSuperscriptdeltaBaselineright-parenthesi equals0period
(13) Now
we
skewing
wish to examine the over
ηand β.
expression appearing
A short calculation
in
(11) Suppose .
we
operate
on
(5)
with Pξ▿ξη
gives
(14) but the
vanishing
of the left side of this
equation is, by
another Ricci
identity, equivalent
to
up er P Superscript alpha Baseline up er P Superscript beta Baseline normal up er Psi Subscript alpha beta Superscript rho left-bracket sigma Baseline up er P Superscript au right-bracket Baseline quals 0 period
(15) Therefore the vanishing of Iβα, the desired integrability condition, is equivalent Note that for no
restrictions
n
are
=
2, the
imposed
case on
corresponding
the curvature
to
(4)
□
.
to the classical Robinson theorem in dimension
beyond
those
already implied by (1) ;
these
four,
conditions,
incidentally,
are
p
as
Pε over γ and ε. In flat these may be
given
space,
generated
via
appropriately simple pole
a
solution of
contour
a
follows from
integral
(1)
,
(14) directly by skew-symmetrization
null fields of any valence
formula with
a
holomorphic
can
with
be constructed:
function
showing
an
structure.
Gratitude is expressed
to Lionel Mason and Ben
Jeffryes,
both of whom in discussion and correspondence
made contributions to these results.
(1994).
Comment
For
a
generalization
of these results to
higher
dimensions
see
Hughston,
L.P.
k. Mason, L.J. (1988) A generalized Kerr-Robinson theorem, Class. Quant. Grav. 5, 275-285.
§II.2.4 A
Six Dimensional
One of the in the
areas
algebraic
approaches).
'Penrose
in which the
use
of
classification of the
Rather than
looking
Jefryes diagram' by
(TN
B.P.
21, February 1986)
spinors greatly simplifies four-dimensional general relativity Weyl
for
tensor
(see
eigenspinors
Q
is
Penrose & Rindler 1986 for details of various and
eigenvalues λ of the Weyl spinor ΨABCD
such that phiSubscriptup erCSuperscriptup erABaselinetimesnormalup erPsiSubscriptup erAup erBSuperscriptup erCup erDBaseline quals amdaphiSubscriptup erBSuperscriptup erD
(1) (classification space
then
being
with
regard
spanned by the eigenspinors),
(pnd’s)
is used. oA is
a
pnd
of
a
to the
multiplicity
classification
of the
and the dimension of the
by the multiplicity of the principal
oAoBoCoD ΨABCD
ΨABCD
eigenvalues
0,
=
or
written
null directions
alternatively
oSuperscriptup erABaselineoSuperscriptup erB aselineoSuperscriptleft-bracketup erCBaselinenormalup erPsiSubscriptup erAtimesup erBSuperscriptup erDright-bracketleft-bracketup erEBaselineoSuperscriptup erFright-bracketBaseline quals0semicol n
(2) oA is
a
double pnd if oSuperscriptup erABaselineoSuperscriptup erB aselineoSuperscriptleft-bracketup erCBaselinenormalup erPsiSubscriptup erAup erBSuperscriptup erDright-bracketup erEBaseline quals0
(3) and
so on.
The
reason
for the curious
case; here of course
position of the
anti-symmetrisation
indices is for easier
with
an
upstairs
comparison
index is
with the six-dimensional
equivalent
to contraction with a
downstairs index. We
might hope
Hughston’s
for
a
similar
article II.2.2 for the
simplification
in
spinor notation),
studying
curved six-dimensional spaces
within which the
Weyl tensor
is
(see
L.P.
represented by
the
totally trace-free Weyl spinor to
classify
by
the
The
than in four
multiplicity
use
of the
d which has 84
dimensions;
of its
as an
analogous
example
This
eigenvalues.
components! Everything consider the
gives ({partitions
of
use
is much
of equation
2} +1
—
3)
(1)
more
to
different
complicated
classify ΨABCD
algebraic
classes.
scheme in six dimensions phiSubscriptgam aSuperscriptalphaBaselinetimesnormalup erPsiSubscriptalphabetaSuperscriptgam adeltaBaseline quals amdaphiSubscriptbetaSuperscriptdelta
(4) leads to
({partitions
directions
By
way of
analogy the
on
does not of
imply
+ 1
=
with
different classes.
136)
Weyl spinord
and
Luckily
a
concept similar
Pαs with the
a
(3)
wish to consider
we
number of copies of a
to
principal
null
indices ofs
upstairs
then there will be
s
and Pα. Unlike in four dimensions the
operations
of
or
that
possible
contracting
some
algebraic operation
an
spinor Pα such
Pα = 0. It is clear that all that is
or
Should
d
and
equations (2)
that either i
anti-symmetrising
indices of
14}
still be used.
can
O
of
is
combination
Pαs with the downstairs
algebraic relationship
anti-symmetrisation
g
some
between d
and contraction
are
not
equivalent. Now for the
diagram. Given
d and Pα we abbreviate up er P Superscript left-bracket epsilon Baseline normal up er Psi Subscript gam a delta Superscript alpha right-bracket beta Baseline up er P Superscript delta Baseline quals 0 times a s times normal up er Psi Subscript bulet star Superscript right-bracket bulet
and normal up er Psi Subscript gamma delta Superscript alpha beta Baseline equals 0 times a s times normal up er Psi Subscript bul et bul et Superscript bul et bul et
and
so on.
Then
(5)
The
diagonal relationships
are
obvious;
involves
This classification scheme
just
carried out inverted with
downstairs
a
an
the vertical
ones
arise because t is
upstairs spinor Pα; clearly
spinor instead.
The
the whole
corresponding
totally
trace-free.
procedure
number of freely
can
be
specifiable
components for each class is
(6)
Reality
conditions may restrict the
then a
is
impossible. Unlike
algebraic types possible,
in four dimensions
a
for instance if the space is Riemannian
generic Weyl spinor
will not have
pnd’s.
For
a
a in
given
a
chosen basis the condition
four components of Pa. The question arises “What out to be connected to the existence of
is six
’JiJJ
use
special spinor
homogeneous quartic equations
on
the
is all this!”. This classification scheme turns
fields. If Pa satisfies
left-parenthesi up erPSuperscriptalphaBaselinetimesnablaSubscriptalphabetaBaselineup erPSuperscriptleft-bracketgam aBaselineright-parenthesi timesup erPSuperscriptdeltaright-bracketBaseline quals0
(7) then the
Weyl spinor
this
equation).
of
Pα such that
a
is of type
If the space is
a with
respect
to Paα (see II.2.2 and II.2.3 for the
Kähler manifold
a
it
(not necessarily vacuum)
of
significance
implies
the existence
up er P Superscript left-bracket gamma Baseline nabla up er P Superscript delta right-bracket Baseline equals 0 times
(8) forcing .
Weyl spinor
the
to be of
is a If in addition there
fashionable Calabi-Yau
a
type awith respect
constant
spaces),
holomorphic
to Pα. If the space is vacuum it is of
3-form
there would be in the
(as
Weyl spinor
this PB1; is constant and the
case
of
type
currently
is of typea .
References
Hughston
,
L. P. ,
§11.2.2
and
§11.2.3.
Penrose , R. & Rindler , W.
(1986 ) Spinors and Space-Time, Space-Time Geometry Cambridge University Press
§II.2.5
vol. II:
Spinor
and Twistor Methods in
.
,
Null Surfaces in Six and
Eight
(TN 22, September 1986)
Dimensions Hby ughston L.P.
1. This note is concerned with the construction of null surfaces of dimension of dimension 2n. For the construction of null 2-surfaces in four dimensions ‘Kerr theorem’
(see
Penrose 1967,
general analytic spinor field ξA
§8;
Penrose & Rindler 1986,
which satisfies ξAξBBF;A'A£ψB
essentially arbitrarily specified analytic of this construction exist in six and In dimension six the
ξαV▿αβξγ
=
Λβξγ for
‘twistor
quadric).
surface in
eight
some
Λβ is
space’ (which in
given this
in terms of
case
projective
dimensions
general analytic spinor
=
as
field an
§7.4)
n
we
in
complex flat
which shows how to
0. The solution is twistor space.
given
specify
the
in terms of
an
Remarkably, analogues
well.
ξα(Xi) (α
1...4i
=
=
analytic variety of dimension
is the space of
space
have the well-known
‘pure’ spinors
for
1...6) satisfying three in the associated
SO(8)—a six-dimensional
In dimension
ξαξβΩαβ= 0 is
and
ξαΓiαα1iξβ BF; Λα1ξβ =
the associated twistor
(of
general analytic spinor
the
eight
a
given helicity)
The pattern of
=
question
1
...
8, i
=
1
...
8) satisfying
variety of dimension four in is the space of pure
spinors
‘purity’
conditions
on
the relevant
essential way.
We wish to solve the
2. Dimension Six.
α
arbitrary analytic
the twistor space in
case
similar in each case, and involves the
proof is an
given by
an
ξα(Xi) (here
SO(10).
for the group
and twistors in
spinors
space—in
this
field
equation
left-parenthesi xiSuperscriptalphaBaselinenablaSubscriptalphabetaBaselinexiSuperscriptleft-bracketgam aBaselineright-parenthesi timesxiSuperscriptdeltaright-bracketBaseline quals0com a
(1) where
α
=
1...4. Here %VF;αβ
equation (1)
is that it is the
arbitrary,
ηβ], ηβξ[α
=
A twistor for
ᵔ ;6
integrability
be
can
(1) corresponds (locally)
an
Let
to
ZαWα
pair
a
analytic variety =
coordinatises 1D5546. The
—Xβα
0
(r
0, and suppose
=
a
significance
of
of null vector fields of the form
family
commutation, hence providing for
a
family
of null 3-surfaces.
Zα, Wα satisfying ZαWα = 0: the
projective
in 𝕄1D561;7. It will be shown that each solution of
projective quadric Q
Fr(Zα ,Wα) =
=
condition for the
represented by a
projective quadric
where Xαβ
to be closed under
twistor space for ᵔ ;C6 is thus
THEOREM 1.
∂/∂Xαβ,
of dimension 3 in
1, 2, 3) be
an
Q
.
analytic variety
spinor held ξα(Xi)
defined
of dimension 3 in the
on an
open
region
U of
𝕄6
satisfies up er F Superscript r Baseline left-parenthesi xi Superscript alpha Baseline comma up er X Subscript alpha beta Baseline times xi Superscript beta Baseline right-parenthesi equals 0
(2) for each value of Xi
⊂ U. Then ξα(Xi) satisfies
Proof. Since Fr(Zα, Wα) we
have
whence
is
(ZαẐα + WαŴα)Fr
ξα(Ẑα
—
XaαβŴα)Fr
—
(1)
.
by hypothesis homogeneous nrFr
—
0
by
=
0
on
the
of
degree (say)
variety (where Ẑα
the substitution
(Zα, Wα)
=
=
nr in
Zα and Wα jointly
∂/∂Zα,Ŵα
=
∂/∂Wα);
(ξα, Xαβξβ). Writing
up erRSubscriptalphaSuperscriptrBaselinecol n-equal eft-parenthesi ModifyngAboveup erZWithcaretSubscriptalphaBaselineminusup erXSubscriptalphabetaBaselinetimesModifyngAboveup erWWithcaretSuperscriptalphaBaselineright-parenthesi up erFSuperscriptr
(3) we
have xi Superscript alpha Baseline upper R Subscript alpha Superscript r Baseline equals 0 comma times left-parenthesis r equals 1 comma 2 comma 3 right-parenthesis times period
(4) Furthermore, by
differentiation of
(2)
we
get
left-parenthesi nablaSubscriptrhosigmaBaselinexiSuperscriptalphaBaselineright-parenthesi timesModifyngAboveup erZWithcaretSubscriptalphaBaselineup erFSuperscriptrBaselineSuperscriptBaselineplusleft-parenthesi nablaSubscriptrhosigmaBaselineup erXSubscriptalphabetaBaselinetimesxiSuperscriptbetaBaselineright-parenthesi timesModifyngAboveup erWWithcaretSuperscriptalphaBaselineup erFSuperscriptrBaseline quals0times emicol n
whence left-parenthesi nablaSubscriptrhosigmaBaselinexiSuperscriptalphaBaselineright-parenthesi timesModifyingAboveup erZWithcaretSubscriptalphaBaselineup erFSuperscriptrBaselineplusepsilonSubscriptrhosigma lphabetaBaselinetimesxiSuperscriptbetaBaselineModifyingAboveup erWWithcaretSuperscriptalphaBaselineup erFSuperscriptrBaselineplusleft-parenthesi nablaSubscriptrhotimes igmaBaselinexiSuperscriptbetaBaselineright-parenthesi timesup erXSubscriptalphabetaBaselinetimesModifyingAboveup erWWithcaretSuperscriptalphaBaselineup erFSuperscriptrBaseline quals0com a
so left-parenthesi nabla Subscript rho sigma Baseline xi Superscript alpha Baseline right-parenthesi times up er R Subscript alpha Superscript r Baseline plus epsilon Subscript rho sigma lpha beta Baseline times xi Superscript beta Baseline ModifyingAbove up er W With caret Superscript alpha Baseline up er F Superscript r Baseline quals 0 semicol n
whence
V▿ρσFr(ξα, Xαβξβ)
=
0,
and
by
transvection of this relation with ξρ we get: left-parenthesis xi Superscript rho Baseline nabla Subscript rho sigma Baseline xi Superscript alpha Baseline right-parenthesis times up er R Subscript alpha Superscript r Baseline equals 0 comma left-parenthesis r equals 1 comma 2 comma 3 right-parenthesis period
(5) Now since R
(r
R
),
3. Dimension
In this
to
case
1...8, i
—
1
..
1,2,3)
—
linearly independent
are
it follows from Here
Eight. generate
(4)
we use
(5)
and
.8) satisfying
ξαξβΩαβ
space in that dimension—thus
0
=
(where
is taken to be
ξα
some
of the
variety (i.e.
λσ.
□
the notation set out in my article for the I. Robinson Festschrift.
family of null four-surfaces in 𝕄8
a
generic points
vectors at
that ξρ▿ρσξα = λσξαfor
we
require
‘pure’ spinor field),
a
spinor
a
field ξα(Xi)
Ωαβ is the natural ‘metric’ induced
(α
=
the spin
on
and
xi Superscript alpha Baseline nabla Subscript alpha lpha times prime Baseline xi Superscript beta Baseline quals normal up er Lamda Subscript alpha times prime Baseline xi Superscript beta Baseline period
(6) where
▿αα1
=
(▿i
Λiαα' ▿i
∂/∂Xi).
=
One
can
that
verify
(6) together
withξαξα = 0
and sufficient conditions for all vector fields of the form V and closed under commutation with A ‘twistor’ for dimension W
satisfying
‘purity’
relations for the
Hughston §1.2.8
of dimension ten, which In what follows a
set of
equations
homogeneous a
of
suitable set of
we
an
degree jointly
with
ξα(Xi)
(α
=
value of Xi ⊂ U. Then
(r
projective
(Cf.
These conditions
Cartan 1937,
pure twistors is
of dimension four in
1...6. For each value of
a
0 and
are
the
Petrack 1982,
complex manifold
S10, given locally by
r we
require
Thus F
.
that Fr be for
=
1..
.6)
define
an
analytic variety
1..
), defined
.8)
ξαsatisfies
,
=
Z
Proof. By homogeneity a
W
=
nr.
(given by
1...8, i
=
r
in Zα and W
THEOREM 2. Let F in the space S10
by Zα,
.
with ZαZβΛαβ
) .
analytic variety V4 ,
integers
arbitrary)
necessary to be null
shall denote S10.
F
some
defined
The space of such
§1.3.9).
consider
we
spinors ( Z
the incidence relation T
SO(10) spinor
and Petrack
of pure
pair
a
are
another.
one
is
eight
(
a
(1)
have
we
,
on a
i.e.
region
U of ᵔ ;8 satisfies F
(ξα▽α 'ξ[β)ξγ]
=
of dimension four
and suppose
a
spinor field for each
0.
Z
where V4, on Z
Z
; whence xi Superscript alpha Baseline up er R Subscript alpha Superscript r Baseline equals 0
(7) where R of F
,
we
get:
nabla up er F Superscript r Baseline left-parenthesis xi Superscript beta Baseline comma up er X Superscript beta prime beta Baseline xi Subscript beta Baseline right-parenthesis equals 0 comma
left-parenthesi nabla xi Superscript beta Baseline right-parenthesi times ModifyingAbove up er Z With caret Subscript beta Baseline up er F Superscript r Baseline plus nabla left-parenthesi up er X Superscript beta prime beta Baseline xi Subscript beta Baseline right-parenthesi times ModifyingAbove up er W With caret Subscript beta prime Baseline up er F Superscript r Baseline equals 0 comma
left-parenthesi nablaxiSuperscriptbetaBaselineright-parenthesi timesModifyingAboveup erZWithcaretSubscriptbetaBaselineup erFSuperscriptrBaselineplusnormalup erGam aSubscriptalpha lphatimesprimeiBaselinetimesnormalup erGam aSubscriptbetabetaprimeSuperscriptiBaselinexiSuperscriptbetaBaselineModifyingAboveup erWWithcaretSuperscriptbetatimesprimeBaselineup erFSuperscriptrBaselineplusleft-parenthesi nablaxiSubscriptbetaBaselineright-parenthesi up erXSuperscriptbetaprimebetaBaselinetimesModifyingAboveup erWWithcaretSubscriptbetatimesprimeBaselineup erFSuperscriptrBaseline quals0period
(r
=
1..
.6)
with Xαα'
=
XiΓiαα'. Furthermore by differentiation
Thus
V
,
and therefore
left-parenthesi xiSuperscriptalphaBaselinenablaSubscriptalpha lphatimesprimeBaselinexiSuperscriptbetaBaselineright-parenthesi up erRSubscriptbetaSuperscriptrBaselineplusleft-parenthesi xiSuperscriptalphaBaselinexiSuperscriptbetaBaselinenormalup erGam aSubscriptalpha lphatimesprimeiBaselinetimesnormalup erGam aSubscriptbetabetaprimeSuperscriptiBaselineright-parenthesi ModifyngAboveup erWWithcaretSuperscriptbetaprimeBaselineup erFSuperscriptrBaseline quals0period
But in
eight dimensions
there is the remarkable
identity
=
Q
; thus
xiSuperscriptalphaBaselinexiSuperscriptbetaBaselinenormalup erGam aSubscriptalpha lphatimesprimeiBaselinetimesnormalup erGam aSubscriptbetabetaprimeSuperscriptiBaseline qualsleft-parenthesi xiSuperscriptalphaBaselinexiSuperscriptbetaBaselinenormalup erOmegaSubscriptalphabetaBaselinetimesright-parenthesi normalup erOmegaSubscriptalphatimesprimebetaprimeBaseline quals0period
Therefore left-parenthesi xi Superscript alpha Baseline nabla xi Superscript beta Baseline right-parenthesi times up er R Subscript beta Superscript r Baseline equals 0 period
(8) Thus ξα and ξα▽α '
are
each
orthogonal by equations (7)
vectors, i.e. the vectors R and
are
But
.
therefore each orthogonal to
seven
they
also each
are
independent
Comment work. See also
(1994).
equation (1)
to six
orthogonal are
in
briefly
(1988)
for the
linearly independent to the vector
therefore
§11.2.2
to ‘null’ fields in six dimensions
See Hughston k. Mason
Hughston (1979)
(8)
vectors; and
The result outlined here for six dimensions is mentioned discussion of the relation of
and
see
Ωβγξ;
proportional.
without
proof.
For
□ a
§11.2.3.
higher-dimensional analogues
of this
page 146.
References
Cartan E. ( 1937 ) The Theory of Spinors ,
Hughston
,
Hughston
,
L. P.
,
Twistors and Particles ,
L. P.
( 1986 ) Applications
volume),
Hughston
L. P. & Mason , L. J.
,
Springer
Lecture Notes
on
Equation
Physics
and
97
.
Spinors
in
Higher Dimensio,ns
.
Festschrift
275 285
Dover 1966 ).
L. P. A Remarkable Connection between the Wave
§1.2.8 Hughston
( 1979 )
(reprinted by
of
SO(8) spinors
,
eds. W. Rindler and A. Trautman
( 1988 ) A generalized
in Gravitation and
Geometry (I.
( Bibliopolis Naples )
pp. 253 287
Robinson
-
,
Kerr-Robinson theorem , Class.
.
Quant.
Grav. 5 ,
-
.
Penrose , R.
( 1967 ) Twistor Algebra
,
Penrose , R. & Rindler , W.
( 1986 )
Petrack , S. B. An Inductive
Approach
J. Math.
Phys.
8 , pp. 345 366 -
and
Spinors Space-Time, Space-Time Geometry (Cambridge University Press ). Petrack , S. B.
( 1982 ) Spinors (Oxford University ).
and
to
Higher
vol. II:
Dimensional
Complex Geometry
in
.
Spinor
and Twistor Methods in
Spinors §1.3.9
Arbitrary
,
.
Dimensions ,
Qualifying
Thesis
§II.2.6
A Proof of Robinson's Theorem
In 1976 Paul Sommers
published
an
Hby ughston L.P.
a new
proof
aspects of his argument and of the development of the
some
& Rindler
(1986), §7.3.
THEOREM
The methods
a
of
are
(Robinson). Suppose M
metric gab. Let kA be
is
some
that
same
interest in their
tightens
material
own
1985)
on an
open set U ⊂
up and
as
on
shear-free
improves
on
outlined in Penrose
right.
complex manifold of dimension
a
field defined
spinor
20, September
elegant simplified proof of Robinson’s theorem (1961)
In what follows I shall outline
congruences.
(TN
four with
a
holomorphic
Msatisfying
kap a Superscript up er A Baseline kap a Superscript up er B Baseline nabla kap a Subscript up er B Baseline equals 0 period
(1) Then for each
p ∈ U there exists
point
V with V
neighbourhood
a
V ⊂ U such that there exists
a
scalar ψ
on
where
,
phi Superscript up er A up er B Baseline equals e Superscript psi Baseline times kap a Superscript up er A Baseline kap a Superscript up er B Baseline period
(2) Note that
Proof.
𥯺'AϕAB
=
0 is
equivalent, by (2)
,
to
kap a Superscript up er B Baseline times kap a Superscript up er A Baseline times nabla Subscript up er A prime up er A Baseline psi plus kap a Superscript up er B Baseline nabla kap a Superscript up er A Baseline plus kap a Superscript up er A Baseline nabla kap a Superscript up er B Baseline equals 0 period
(3) Since
(1)
is
to the existence of a
equivalent
spinor λA,
such that
kap a Superscript up er A Baseline nabla Subscript up er A up er A prime Baseline kap a Superscript up er B times Baseline quals lamda Subscript up er A prime Baseline kap a Superscript up er B times
(4) it follows
by
insertion of
(4)
in
(3)
that
we
seek
a
scalar
ψ such
that
kappa Superscript upper A Baseline nabla Subscript upper A upper A prime Baseline psi plus nabla kappa Superscript upper A Baseline plus lamda Subscript upper A prime Baseline equals 0 period
(5) Now consider
an
equation
of the form kap a Superscript up er A Baseline nabla Subscript up er A up er A prime Baseline psi plus alpha Subscript up er A prime Baseline equals 0 comma
(6) where
kA satisfies
solutions of
(4)
(6) locally
As
.
a
if and
lemma
only
we
require the
fact that if αA, is
specified
then there exist
if αA, satisfies kap a Superscript up er A Baseline nabla Subscript up er A up er A prime Baseline alpha Superscript up er A prime Baseline quals lamda Subscript up er A prime Baseline alpha Superscript up er A prime Baseline period
(7) The
proof
of this lemma follows
as a
necessary condition
we
as an
transvect
application of the (6)
kap a Superscript up er B Baseline nabla Subscript up er B Superscript up er A prime Baseline left-parenthesi kap a Superscript up er A Baseline nabla Subscript up er A up er A prime Baseline psi rght-parenthesi plus kap a Superscript up er B Baseline nabla Subscript up er B Superscript up er A prime Baseline alpha Subscript up er A prime Baseline quals 0 semicol n
with
K
Frobenius theorem.
to obtain
(To
see
how
(7)
arises
whence, left-parenthesi kap a Superscript up er B Baseline nabla Subscript up er B Superscript up er A prime Baseline kap a Superscript up er A Baseline right-parenthesi nabla Subscript up er A up er A prime Baseline psi plus kap a Superscript up er B Baseline kap a Superscript up er A Baseline nabla Subscript up er B Superscript up er A prime Baseline nabla psi equals kap a Superscript up er B Baseline nabla Subscript up er B up er A prime Baseline alpha Superscript up er A prime Baseline com a
which
by (4) gives
shows that
(7)
A
,
is also
by
use
of
(6) gives (7)
.
Frobenius’ theorem
sufficient.)
We wish to determine whether there exists examine the
which
a
scalar
I
expression
with
ψ such
that
is satisfied. Thus
(5)
a
.
we
must
We have:
uperI qualskpaSupersciptuperABaselin abl SubscriptuperAuperApimeBaselin eft-parenthsi nabl kap SupersciptuperB aselin plusamd SupersciptuperApimeBaselin rght-parenthsi mnuslamd SubscriptuperApimeBaselin eft-parenthsi nabl kap SupersciptuperABaselin plusamd SupersciptuperApimeBaselin rght-parenthsi equalskpaSupersciptuperABaselin abl SubscriptuperAuperApimeBaselin abl kap SupersciptuperB aselin pluseft-parenthsi kap SupersciptuperABaselin abl SubscriptuperAuperApimeBaselin amd SupersciptuperApimeBaselin plusamd SupersciptuperApimeBaselin abl SubscriptuperApimeuperABaselin kap SupersciptuperABaselin rght-parenthsi equalsminuskap SupersciptuperABaselin abl SubscriptuperBuperApimeBaselin abl kap SupersciptuperB aselin plus2kap SupersciptuperABaselin abl SubscriptuperApimeBaselin abl kap SupersciptuperB aselin pluseft-parenthsi nabl kap SupersciptuperABaselin amd SupersciptuperApimeBaselin rght-parenthsi equalsminusleft-bracketnabl eft-parenthsi kap SupersciptuperABaselin abl SubscriptuperASupersciptuperApimeBaselin kap SupersciptuperB aselin rght-parenthsi mnusleft-parenthsi nabl kap SupersciptuperABaselin rght-parenthsi left-parenthsi nabl kap SupersciptuperB aselin rght-parenthsi rght-bracketplus2kap SupersciptuperABaselin whitesquarekap SupersciptuperB aselin plusnabl kap SupersciptuperABaselin amd SupersciptuperApimeBaselin period
But kA
A1;ABkB
vanishes for any kA since □ AB kB
=
-3▿kA. Furthermore
we
have
left-parenthesi nabla Subscript up er A prime up er B Baseline kap a Superscript up er A Baseline right-parenthesi left-parenthesi nabla Subscript up er A Superscript up er A prime Baseline kap a Superscript up er B Baseline right-parenthesi equals 0
for any kA. Thus: up erItimesequalsminusnabla eft-parenthesi kap aSuperscriptup erABaselinenablaSubscriptup erASuperscriptup erAprimeBaselinekap aSuperscriptup erB aselineright-parenthesi plusnablakap aSuperscriptup erABaselinelamdaSuperscriptup erAprimeBaseline qualsminusnabla eft-parenthesi lamdaSuperscriptup erAprimeBaselinekap aSuperscriptup erB aselineright-parenthesi plusnablakap aSuperscriptup erABaselinelamdaSuperscriptup erAprimeBaseline quals0period
Since I vanishes the THEOREM as
above,
condition for ψ is satisfied, and the theorem is
integrability
(Sommers-Bell-Szekeres generalization (1)
kA satisfies
.
Furthermore let
kA
be
of Robinson’s
proved.□
result). Suppose,
ap-fold principal spinor (p ⩾ 1)
in the
venue
of a massless field
of valence p + q. Then:
ABCDkAkBkC 0, = (p-2-3q)ψ where
ψ
The The
ABCD is
proof
the
Weyl spinor.
follows
Goldberg-Sachs
essentially
the
same
theorem follows if
principal spinor of the Weyl spinor,
we
line of
reasoning
note that a
and that in
in the first theorem
as
spinor satisfying (1)
a vacuum
the
is
(see 11.2.7).
automatically
a
1-fold
Weyl spinor
satisfies the zero-rest-mass
to formulate a
purely ‘covariant’ spinorial
equations. Comment
me
The idea that it should be
to Robinson’s theorem and the
approach and
(1994).
in conversation in the
early
possible
Goldberg-Sachs
1970’s
Martin
by
theorem
Walker,
was
suggested
who in turn attributed the idea to
Robert Geroch.
References Robinson I. ( 1961 ) Null electromagnetic fields J. Math. Phys. 2 p. 290 291 -
,
,
to Paul Sommers
,
.
Sommers , P. D.
of shear-free congruences of null
( 1976 ) Properties
A349 , p. 309 318
geodesics
,
Proc. Roy. Soc. Lond. ,
-
§II.2.7
A
.
Simplified
Proof of
a
Theorem of Sommers
Hby ughston L.P.
(TN
22, September
1986) 1. Introduction. In 1976
published by
THEOREM 1. If
(p ⩾ 1)
of
a
Weyl spinor,
interesting
an
theorem
P. D. Sommers. His main result is a
spinor
on
zero-rest-mass fields in curved
zero-rest-mass field of valence p + q, then it is also unless p
=
the
space-time
was
follows:
field ξA which satisfies ξAξB^▿A'AξB a
=
0 is
a
p-fold principal spinor
repeated princpal spinor
of the
3q + 2.
The purpose of this note is to present
respects
on
as
original argument
devised
condensed
a
by
of this theorem,
Sommers. In what follows I
the notation and conventions of Penrose k. Rindler 2. The SFR Condition.
proof
(1986) (cf.
The shear-free ray condition
on
in
improving
employ
as
far
as
in
some
possible
particular §7.3).
ξA, given by
xi Superscript upper A Baseline xi Superscript upper B Baseline nabla xi Subscript upper B Baseline equals 0
(2.1) be
can
expressed alternatively
in either of the forms nablaSubscriptleft-parenthesi up erABaselinexiBaselineSubscriptup erBright-parenthesi Baseline qualsnormalup erLamdaSubscriptup erAprimeBaselineSubscriptleft-parenthesi up erABaselinexiBaselineSubscriptup erBright-parenthesi
(2.2) or xi Superscript up er A Baseline nabla Subscript up er A up er A prime Baseline xi Superscript up er B Baseline equals eta Subscript up er A prime Baseline xi Superscript up er B times Baseline period
(2.3) It is
helpful
to be able to use both of these
shall find it useful to have at LEMMA 1.
our
▿A,AξA + ΛA,AξA
disposal =
a
expressions
in
relationship
between ηA, and
2ηA, (where ξA
Proof. nabl Subscriptu erApimeuperABaselin xSubscriptu erB aselin equalsnblaSubscriptlef-parenthsi uperABaselin xBaselin Subscriptu erBight-parenthsi Baselin plusnabl Subscriptlef-bracketuperABaselin xBaselin Subscriptu erBight-bracketBaselin equalsnormaluperLamd Subscriptu erApimeBaselin Subscriptlef-parenthsi uperABaselin xBaselin Subscriptu erBight-parenthsi Baselin plusone-halfepsilonSubscriptu erAuperB aselin abl xiSupersciptu erCBaselin equalsnormaluperLamd Subscriptu erApimeuperABaselin tmesxiSubscriptu erB aselin minus ormaluperLamd Subscriptu erApimeBaselin Subscriptlef-bracketuperABaselin xBaselin Subscriptu erBight-bracketBaselin plusone-halfepsilonSubscriptu erAuperB aselin abl xiSupersciptu erCBaselin equalsnormaluperLamd Subscriptu erApimeuperABaselin tmesxiSubscriptu erB aselin plusone-halfepsilonSubscriptu erAuperB aselin tmeslft-parenthsi nabl Subscriptu erApimeuperCBaselin xSupersciptu erCBaselin minus abl xiSupersciptu erCBaselin rght-parenthsi period
∈ 0).
computations,
and
as a
ΛA,A:
consequence
we
Contraction of each side with 3.
ξA,
followed
by
use
of
(2.3)
,
then
It will be useful to have another lemma at
Principality.
our
yields
the desired result.
disposal
which relates
ξA
□ to the
Weyl spinor: LEMMA 2. A of the the
spinor
Weyl spinor.
Weyl spinor is Proof.
Held
ξA
which satisfies the SFR condition is
A necessary and sufficient condition for ξA to be V
necessarily a
a
principal spinor
repeated principal spinor
of
.
We have a
; whence
xiSupersciptuperB aselin abl SubscriptuperBuperBpimeBaselin eft-parenthsi xSupersciptuperCBaselin abl SubscriptuperCSupersciptuperBpimeBaselin xiSubscriptuperABaselin rght-parenthsi equalsxiSupersciptuperB aselin abl SubscriptuperBuperBpimeBaselin eft-parenthsi etaSupersciptuperBpimeBaselin xiSubscriptuperABaselin rght-parenthsi com aleft-parenthsi xSupersciptuperB aselin abl SubscriptuperBuperBpimeBaselin xiSupersciptuperCBaselin rght-parenthsi nabl SubscriptuperCSupersciptuperBpimeBaselin xiSubscriptuperABaselin plusxiSupersciptuperCBaselin xiSupersciptuperB aselin abl SubscriptuperBuperBpimeBaselin abl xiSubscriptuperABaselin equalseft-parenthsi xSupersciptuperB aselin abl SubscriptuperBuperBpimeBaselin etaSupersciptuperBpimeBaselin rght-parenthsi xSubscriptuperABaselin plusetaSupersciptuperBpimeBaselin eft-parenthsi xSupersciptuperB aselin abl SubscriptuperBuperBpimeBaselin xiSubscriptuperABaselin rght-parenthsi com aleft-parenthsi etaSubscriptuperBpimeBaselin tmesxiSupersciptuperCBaselin rght-parenthsi tmesnabl xiSubscriptuperABaselin plusxiSupersciptuperB aselin xiSupersciptuperCBaselin whitesquarexiSubscriptuperABaselin equalseft-parenthsi xSupersciptuperB aselin abl SubscriptuperBuperBpimeBaselin etaSupersciptuperBpimeBaselin rght-parenthsi xSubscriptuperABaselin plusetaSupersciptuperBpimeBaselin eft-parenthsi etaSubscriptuperBpimeBaselin xiSubscriptuperABaselin rght-parenthsi emicoln
whence
from which it follows at
a
ψABCDξAξBξCξD 4.
0, and that a
Proof of Theorem 1.
field
for
=
ϕA. .E.
some
If
we
scalar ψ.
transvect
Let
□
ξA
ϕA. .E
that
.
be
a
with q
Therefore, given
V
xi Superscript up er A Baseline period period period times xi Superscript up er B Baseline nabla phi Subscript up er A period period period times up er B up er C up er D period period period times times up er E Baseline equals 0 comma
nabla left-parenthesi xi Superscript up er A Baseline period period period times xi Superscript up er B Baseline phi Subscript up er A times period period period times up er B times up er C up er D times period period period times up er E Baseline right-parenthesi minus phi Subscript up er A times period period period times up er B times up er C up er D times period period period times up er E Baseline times nabla Superscript up er C prime up er C Baseline left-parenthesi xi Superscript up er A Baseline period period period times xi Superscript up er B Baseline right-parenthesi equals 0 comma
nabla left-parenthesi e Superscript psi Baseline times xi Subscript up er C Baseline times xi Subscript up er D Baseline times period period period times xi Subscript up er E Baseline right-parenthesi minus q phi Subscript up er A times period period period times up er B times up er C up er D times period period period times up er E Baseline times normal up er Lamda Superscript up er C prime up er C Baseline xi Superscript up er A Baseline period period period times xi Superscript up er B Baseline equals 0 comma
eSuperscriptpsiBaselinel ft-parenthesi xiSubscriptup erCBaselinetimesnablapsirght-parenthesi xiSubscriptup erDBaselinetimesperiodperiodperiodtimesxiSubscriptup erEBaselinepluseSuperscriptpsiBaselinel ft-parenthesi nablaxiSubscriptup erCBaselineright-parenthesi xiSubscriptup erDBaselinetimesperiodperiodperiodtimesxiSubscriptup erEBaselinepluseSuperscriptpsiBaselinetimesxiSubscriptup erCBaselinenablaSuperscriptup erCtimesprimeup erCprimeBaselinel ft-parenthesi xiSubscriptup erDBaselinetimesperiodperiodperiodtimesxiSubscriptup erEBaselineright-parenthesi minusqeSuperscriptpsiBaselinenormalup erLamdaSuperscriptup erCprimeup erCBaselinexiSubscriptup erCBaselinexiSubscriptup erDBaselinetimesperiodperiodperiodtimesxiSubscriptup erEBaseline quals0semicol n
which
once
gives e Superscript psi Baseline times xi Subscript up er D Baseline times period period period times xi Subscript up er E Baseline left-bracket xi Subscript up er C Baseline times nabla psi times plus nabla xi Subscript up er C Baseline minus left-parenthesis p minus 1 right-parenthesis eta Superscript up er C times prime Baseline minus q normal up er Lamda Superscript up er C prime up er C Baseline xi Subscript up er C Baseline right-bracket equals 0 comma
whence xi Superscript up er C Baseline times nabla psi plus nabla Subscript imes up er C times prime up er C Baseline xi Superscript up er C Baseline minus q times normal up er Lamda Subscript up er C prime up er C Baseline times xi Superscript up er C Baseline plus left-parenthesis p minus 1 right-parenthesis eta Subscript up er C prime Baseline equals 0 period
p-fold principal spinor of
ξs we get
,
we
have:
a
valence p + q zero-rest-mass
By
lemma 1
from the
have
we
equation
—Λc'cξc
above to
—2ηc'cξc,
=
give
so
the term
involving qΛ.c'cξc
be eliminated
can
us
xi Superscript upper C Baseline nabla psi plus left-parenthesis q plus 1 right-parenthesis times nabla Subscript upper C prime upper C Baseline xi Superscript upper C Baseline plus left-parenthesis p minus 2 q minus 1 right-parenthesis times eta Subscript upper C prime Baseline equals 0 period
Now this is
of the form
equation
an
with respect toa Therefore r
=
q + 1,
we
investigate
s
p
=
—
2q
and
use
+ αc'
ξcΛcc'ψ
=
0 from which it follows at once,
of the SFR condition, that
αc'
must
the consequences of this relation with
αA,
satisfy
r▿A,AξA
=
by differentiation a
+
.
sηA,
where
,
1. We have:
—
xi Superscript up er A Baseline times nabla Subscript up er A up er A prime Baseline alpha Superscript up er A prime Baseline minus eta Subscript up er A prime Baseline times alpha Superscript up er A prime Baseline equals 0 comma
r xi Superscript up er A Baseline nabla nabla xi Superscript up er B Baseline plus s xi Superscript up er A Baseline nabla eta Superscript up er A prime Baseline minus r eta Subscript up er A prime Baseline nabla Subscript up er A Superscript up er A prime Baseline xi Superscript up er A Baseline equals 0 comma
2 r xi Superscript up er A Baseline nabla Subscript left-parenthesis up er A Baseline nabla Baseline Subscript up er B right-parenthesis Superscript up er A prime Baseline xi Superscript up er B Baseline minus r xi Superscript up er A Baseline nabla nabla xi Superscript up er B Baseline plus s xi Superscript up er A Baseline nabla eta Superscript up er A prime Baseline plus r eta Superscript up er A prime Baseline nabla Subscript up er A prime up er A Baseline xi Superscript up er A Baseline equals 0 comma
2rxiSuperscriptup erABaselinewhitesquarexiSuperscriptup erB aselineminusrleft-bracketnablaleft-parenthesi xiSuperscriptup erABaselinenablaSubscriptup erASuperscriptup erAprimeBaselinexiSuperscriptup erB aselineright-parenthesi minusleft-parenthesi nablaxiSuperscriptup erABaselineright-parenthesi left-parenthesi nablaxiSuperscriptup erB aselineright-parenthesi right-bracketplusleft-parenthesi sminusr ight-parenthesi xiSuperscriptup erABaselinetimesnablaetaSuperscriptup erAprimeBaselineplusrleft-bracketxiSuperscriptup erABaselinenablaSubscriptup erAup erAprimeBaseline taSuperscriptup erAprimeBaselineplusetaSuperscriptup erAprimeBaselinenablaxiSuperscriptup erABaselineright-bracketequals0com a
from which it follows that
algebraic identity thus
we see
that if
to lemma 2 that
As
was
,
V, s
∈ (i.e.
ξA is
pointed
a
p∈
out
(1994).
Comment would be
an
by Sommers, to Kundt
and
the Ricci relation
2)
we
have a
□AB ξB = —3ΛξA,
the
,
of the
peculiar
a
Weyl spinor.
□
theorem
its
Goldberg-Sachs
.
from which it follows
(and
& Thompson) follows immediately
as a
the And
according
generalization
due to
consequence of Theorem
§7.3).
to
interesting challenge
refractory
use
These results have in the meanwhile
whereas Robinson’s theorem more
3g
+
repeated principal spinor
Penrose & Rindler 1986,
(cf.
by
and the SFR condition r
Robinson &i Schild and 1
s
can
come
easily
be
up with yet
a
appeared
shorter
in
proof.
geometrized (cf. §11.2.8)
the
Hughston (1987).
Note in
particular
Goldberg-Sachs
It
that
result is
to four dimensions.
References
Goldberg p. 13 23
J. N. & Sachs , R. K.
,
( 1962 )
A theorem
on
Petrov types , Acta.
Phys. Polonica, Suppl.
22 ,
-
.
Hughston
,
L. P.
( 1987 )
Remarks
on
Sommers theorem Class. Quant. Grav. 4 1809 1811 -
,
,
Kundt W. & Thompson A. H. ( 1962 ) Le tenseur de Weyl et ,
isotropes
sans
,
une congruence associée de , distorsion , C.R. Acad. Sci. Paris 254 , p. 4257 4259
Penrose , R. & Rindler , W.
( 1986 ) Spinors and Space-Time, Space-Time Geometry ( Cambridge University Press ).
.
géodésiques
-
.
vol. II:
Spinor
and Twistor Methods in
Robinson , I. & Schild , A.
Phys.
4 , p. 484 489
( 1963 )
Generalisation of
a
theorem
by Goldberg
and Sachs , J. Math.
-
.
Sommers , P. D. ( 1976 ) Properties of shear-free congruences of null A349 , p. 309 318
geodesics
Proc. Roy. Soc. Lond. ,
,
-
.
§II.2.8 A
Twistor
Description
of Null Self-dual Maxwell Fields
Eby astwo d M.G.
(TN 20,
September 1985) Robinson’s theorem: After complexification, Robinson’s theorem (Robinson, 1961, motivation in the birth of is
an
i.e.
a
integrable
self-dual Maxwell field.
E may be defined or,
equivalently,
a
defining
a
integrable 2-forms a
field is
to
This
can
field
be
proved
and
a
locally
null
locally
integrability
(≡simple)
on
M
2-form defines a
(locally).
defining a
plane
congruence of
E
closed self-dual 2-form,
a
then shows that as
fact,
more a
(given by pull-back
1-1
a
a
integrability
precisely,
of E
suppose E is
correspondence
a
Without
simple 2-form
under θ : M →
distribution it follows that and
a
required.
criterion:
self-dual and the
Then there is
a-surfaces,
important
spinors (e.g. Sommers 1976):
integrability
able to choose this form to be closed. In
exactly specified by E,
a
,
α-planes is, by definition, necessarily
S and closed 2-forms
by
is the condition
computation
the theorem is immediate from Frobenius’
being
defined
solved for ψ whence V
and let S denote the space of leaves
on
complex
an
conformal manifold and E ⊂ TM
with the aid of
A curvature
distribution of
equivalent
α-planes,
spinor
may be
spinors, however,
since
by
then E may be
a
a
is
twistors)
distribution of
states that if M is a
between
S). Finally,
null self-dual Maxwell
2-form ω on
S,
the 2-dimensional
parameter space for the congruence. A twistor
description:
twistor space T
above,
a
Suppose
now
parameterizing
submanifold of T:
that M is
conformally right
the a-surfaces. Then
a
flat
so
that it has
self-dual null Maxwell field
a
3-dimensional
gives
S
as
As noted above, the Maxwell field
specifies
2-form ω on S. The usual Penrose
a
identifies the space of all self-dual Maxwell fields with the canonical bundle Ω3. Hence there should be
natural
a
transform, however,
cohomology H1(T, k)
where
k
is the
homomorphism
normal up er Gamma left-parenthesi up er S comma normal up er Omega squared right-parenthesi right-ar ow up er H Superscript 1 Baseline left-parenthesi up er T comma kap a right-parenthesi period
(*) It is somewhat easier to ‘Real’ twistors: the
namely of
see
what is
The usual twistor
(+,+,-,-) and
“α -planes”.
Victor Guillemin has and it
analogue.
Gr2(R4)
=
RP is the space of
twistor
theory
in ‘real’ twistor
on
and
one
been
recently
theory:
Gr2(C4)
between
correspondence
between RM
correspondence
signature
going
=
RP
family
RP3.
of
investigating
that most twistor constructions have
seems
and CP3 has
RM has
totally
null
a
a
real form,
conformal metric
2-planes
in RM, the
this ‘black-and-white’ version of
an
(often simpler)
black-and-white
The Penrose transform is replaced by the Gelfand-Radon transform e.g. normal up er Gam a left-parenthesi double-struck up er R times double-struck up er P com a kap a right-parenthesi ModifyingAbove right-ar ow With asympto icaly-equals StartSet omega times el ment-of normal up er Gam a left-parenthesi double-struck up er R times times com a normal up er Omega Subscript plus Superscript 2 Baseline right-parenthesi s period times t period times times d omega equals 0 EndSet
which is
simpler in in
locally (i.e.
a
that functions have
neighbourhood
shown, however,
has
that
of
globally
a
replaced cohomology. Although line in
it is
an
RP),
Suppose such on
that ω is
a
it, which
a
as
for the
may also be denoted
by
holomorphic ω.
The
on
an
RM
(it
(all
its null
will have
of
(✶)
so
on)
geodesics S
↪RP
be defined
V. Guillemin and suggests
closed).
are
singularities
case, one obtains a surface
analogue
can
isomorphism.
all helicities and
Zoll manifold
null self-dual Maxwell field
technicalities). Then,
never
isomorphism (for
that the crucial property of RM is that it is now
it is then
the transform
but
EF and
a
ignore 2-form
is thus
normalup erGam aleft-parenthesi up erScom anormalup erOmegasquaredright-parenthesi right-ar ownormalup erGam aleft-parenthesi double-struckup erRtimesdouble-struckup erPcom akap aright-parenthesi period
R(✶) A function
f
on
RP may be
integrated
over
S
f right-arrow integral Underscript s Endscripts f omega
against ω.
The linear functional
therefore defines
a
distribution-valued 3-form
supported
on
S. This is Guillemin’s identification of
S determines the singularities of ω.
R(✶).
Ordinary
twistors:
As
defining S,
and therefore
a
an
divisor,
S
rise to
gives
a
line bundle
ξ over
T with
a
section
s
∈ Γ(T, ξ)
exact sequence: 0 right-ar ow xi asterisk right-ar ow Overscript times s Endscripts Subscript upper T Baseline right-ar ow Subscript s Baseline right-ar ow 0 period
(✶✶)
ξ|s
Moreover,
=
N the normal bundle of S in T and the sequence may therefore be rewritten: ξ →N →0. 0 → OT →
that N ⊗
Finally, noting
k|S
=
Ω2
on
it may be rewritten
S,
a
and
is
(✶)
given by
connecting homomorphism
the
of the
corresponding long exact
sequence:
normal up er Gamma left-parenthesi up er S comma normal up er Omega squared right-parenthesi right-ar ow up er H Superscript 1 Baseline left-parenthesi up er T comma kap a right-parenthesi right-ar ow Overscript imes s Endscripts up er H Superscript 1 Baseline left-parenthesi up er T comma kap a circled-times xi right-parenthesi period
Note also that the null fields obtained in this way way of
that the
saying
identification of null
Googly photon?
class has
a
improved way
to
cohomology
:
The usual
covariant constant sections
its
connection
original
This is
own.
to do about the
the
surely
along
the leaves
(normal
googly photon
than null and
how
a
α-n-folds
S, and
(by
an
regard
an
rise to
a
leaves) equips for
a
a
a
along
an
invariant
[Penrose’s (1969) original
integrable
line-bundle
along
a
simple
as a
an
on a
line-bundle.
on
S. The residual information on
S with
give
a
connection of
clues
as
to what
to combine this construction with
trying
attempt
connection
distribution of α-planes and the
this line bundle
and also suggests in
Maxwell field is
null self dual field. This may
to describe ‘half
algebraically special’
(i.e. Yang-Mills bundles) gives
congruence of α-surfaces. These
The Frobenius
approach
Hughston
are
closed self-dual n-form
on a
definition orthogonal to self-dual
n-form ω on S.
Conversely,
to the Robinson theorem
has also shown
method works in dimension 6 and
spinor
In any case,
S
‘simple pole’ along
by ×s:
very
special
indeed
self-dual).
dimensions. L.P.
higher (even)
those annihilated
A similar construction for the non-linear version
dimensions:
Higher
give
photon construction
vector bundles with connection flat
(stronger
to the
general googly photon
the usual Ward twisted Maxwell fields.
exactly
fields].
A null self-dual Maxwell field is then flat
of the
are
(II.2.3
presumably
evidently
extends to
and lecture, Oxford 30
April 1985)
general spinor proof
is available.
a
conformal 2n-fold
gives
a
congruence of
an
n-dimensional space
Higher
dimensional twistors
n-forms) parameterized by
every such arises in this way.
rise to
only
exist in
This has
obvious way for
twistor space Zn
a
dimension
an
n(n
+
consisting
of
M denote
1)/2. Letting
flat space
conformally
open subset of
Zn, then (subject to mild topological restrictions
1983)
November
the
complex quadric
system of Pn’s lying therein (the
one an
Q2n,
on
M)
M.F.
and T the
Qn
Atiyah
of dimenion 2n.
α-Pn’s).
Zn has
corresponding
has shown
subset
(lecture, Oxford,
7
that up er H Superscript n left-parenthesi n minus 1 right-parenthesi slash 2 Baseline left-parenthesi up er T comma kap a right-parenthesi ModifyingAbove right-ar ow With asymptoticaly-equals StartSet omega element-of normal up er Gamma times left-parenthesi up er M comma normal up er Omega Subscript plus Superscript n Baseline right-parenthesi EndSet s period t period times d omega times equals 0 right-brace period
The
homomorphism Hn(n-1)/2(T, k) Γ(S, Ωn) →
is
given by composing
induced
by
the
a
series of
appropriate
version for real
connecting homomorphisms or by
Koszul
split quadrics.
complex
instead of
Note that
(✶✶).
n(n - 1)/2
a
spectral
There is
sequence construction
corresponding black-and-white
a
is the codimension of S in T
as one
would
expect. Many thanks
to Victor Guillemin for much
interesting
conversation.
References Penrose , R.
( 1969 )
Robinson I. ,
Solutions of the zero-rest-mass
( 1961 )
Null
Sommers , P. D. ( 1976 ) A349 , p. 309 318
electromagnetic
equations
fields , J. Math.
,
J. Math.
Phys.
2 , p. 290 291
10 , p. 38 39 -
.
-
of shear-free congruences of null
Properties
Phys.
geodesics
,
.
Roy. Soc.
Proc.
Lond. ,
-
.
§II.2.9
A
conformally
gruence
by
invariant connection and the space of leaves of
T.N. Bailey
Introduction.
This is
(TN 26,
a
report
which is the space of leaves of conformal a
complex
vacuum
space-times,
three manifold
a
March
on
shear free
con-
1988)
work in progress,
(complexified)
studying
the structure of the
shear free congruence.
the surface has the first formal
(which
a
I will show below that in
neighbourhood
in the flat space would be dual
complex surface
projective
of
an
twistor
embedding
space).
in
In order to describe this structure, I will first show that natural
spinor fields
has
‘conformally
invariant edth and thorn
interest in its It is
hoped
the Kerr The
a
own
conformally
conformal
invariant connection, which is
operators’.
This construction
complex space-time
essentially given by seems
to have some
with two Penrose’s
geometric
right.
that these these structures will
metric,
a
and there may be other
help
to
explain the separation
fields oA and
independent spinor
iA,
equations
in
applications.
invariant connection. Let M be
conformally
of various
a
defined up to scale.
complex
conformal
Equivalently
we
with two
space-time,
have
a
splitting
Superscript upper A Baseline equals upper O circled-plus upper I
(1) of the
spin
bundle. Assume also that
we are
given
an
identification of the
primed
and
unprimed
conformal weights left-bracket negative 1 right-bracket equals Overscript d e f Endscripts Subscript left-bracket up er A up er B right-bracket Baseline times ap roximately-equals Subscript left-bracket up er A prime up er B prime right-bracket Baseline period
This is
equivalent
to
allowing
conformal transformations epsilon Subscript up er A up er B Baseline right-ar ow from bar normal up er Omega times times epsilon Subscript up er A up er B Baseline
which is
a
splitting
in
of the form
epsilon Subscript up er A prime up er B prime Baseline right-ar ow from bar normal up er Omega times times epsilon Subscript up er A prime up er B prime Baseline
complexification of a real space-time.
natural condition if M is the
conformal class, the
only
equation (1)
allows
us
Given
a
metric in the
to define a one-form
up er Q Subscript a Baseline colon-equal negative 2 times o Superscript left-parenthesi up er B Baseline iota Superscript up er C right-parenthesi Baseline times partial-dif erential eft-parenthesi o Subscript left-parenthesi up er A Baseline iota Subscript up er C right-parenthesi Baseline right-parenthesi equals rho prime l Subscript a Baseline plus rho n Subscript a Baseline minus tau prime m Subscript a Baseline Subscript Baseline minus tau m overbar Subscript a Baseline
where ∂a is the metric
connection,
and
we
adopt the
convention that
oAiA
=
1 whenever
a
particular
metric has been chosen. Under conformal transformation up er Q Subscript a Baseline right-ar ow from bar up er Q Subscript a Baseline minus normal ϒ Subscript a Baseline times w h e r e times normal ϒ Subscript a Baseline equals normal up er Omega Superscript negative 1 Baseline partial-dif erential Subscript a Baseline normal up er Omega period
(2) The
significance
of
Qa
is that it enables
us
to
Recall the local twistor exact sequence 0 right-ar ow Subscript up er A prime Baseline times right-ar ow Superscript alpha Baseline right-ar ow Superscript up er A Baseline right-ar ow 0 pi Subscript up er A prime Baseline times right-ar ow from bar left-parenthesi 0 comma pi Subscript up er A prime Baseline right-parenthesi left-parenthesi omega Superscript up er A Baseline comma pi Subscript up er A prime Baseline right-parenthesi right-ar ow from bar omega Superscript up er A
and the conformal transformation rule omega Superscript up er A Baseline right-ar ow from bar omega Superscript up er A Baseline times pi Subscript up er A prime Baseline right-ar ow from bar pi Subscript up er A prime Baseline plus i normal ϒ Subscript a Baseline times omega Superscript up er A Baseline period
If
we
set alpha Subscript up er A prime Baseline times equals pi Subscript up er A prime Baseline plus i up er Q Subscript a Baseline times omega Superscript up er A
split
the local twistor bundle
as a
direct
sum.
then from
equation (2)
there is
conformally
a
invariant
splitting
SuperscriptalphaBaselinetimesModifyngAboveright-arowWithasymptoicaly-equals Superscriptup erABaselinecir led-plus Subscriptup erAprimeBaselinel ft-parenthesi omegaSuperscriptup erABaselinecom apiSubscriptup erAprimeBaselineright-parenthesi right-arowfrombaromegaSuperscriptup erABaselinecir led-plusalphaSubscriptup erAprimeBaselinetimes
(3) of Oα and I will
the ‘split co-ordinates’
use
The local twistor connection splits to
spin
(ωA, αA,)
henceforth.
give connections,
which I will denote
by ▽a,
on
the various
bundles. A brief calculation shows these to be Superscript up er A Baseline times colon nabla mu Superscript up er A Baseline equals partial-dif erential Subscript b Baseline mu Superscript up er A Baseline plus epsilon Subscript up er B Baseline times Superscript up er A Baseline up er Q Baseline Subscript up er C up er B prime Baseline mu Superscript up er C
Superscript up er A prime Baseline times colon nabla mu Superscript up er A prime Baseline equals partial-dif erential Subscript b Baseline mu Superscript up er A prime Baseline plus epsilon Subscript up er B prime Baseline times Superscript up er A prime Baseline up er Q Baseline Subscript up er B up er C prime Baseline mu Superscript up er C prime
Subscript upper A Baseline times times colon nabla mu Subscript upper A Baseline equals partial-dif erential mu Subscript upper A Baseline minus upper Q Subscript upper A upper B prime Baseline mu Subscript upper B Baseline
Subscript upper A prime Baseline times times colon nabla mu Subscript upper A prime Baseline equals partial-dif erential mu Subscript upper A prime Baseline minus upper Q Subscript upper B upper A prime Baseline times mu Subscript upper B prime Baseline
Subscript left-bracket up er A up er C right-bracket Baseline times times colon nabla Subscript b Baseline nu Subscript up er A up er C Baseline equals partial-dif erential Subscript b Baseline nu Subscript up er A up er C Baseline minus up er Q Subscript b Baseline times nu Subscript up er A up er C Baseline
(ωA, αA,)
If Zα=
is
a
local
twistor,
we can
write the local twistor connection
as
nabla Subscript b Baseline up er Z Superscript alpha Baseline quals left-parenthesi nabla Subscript b Baseline omega Superscript up er A Baseline plus i epsilon Subscript up er B Baseline times Superscript up er A Baseline alpha Subscript up er B prime Baseline com a nabla Subscript b Baseline alpha Subscript up er A prime Baseline plus i up er D Subscript a b Baseline times omega Superscript up er A Baseline right-parenthesi
(4) where Dab, is
a
conformally
invariant modification of Pab defined
by
up er D Subscript a b Baseline equals up er P Subscript a b Baseline minus partial-dif erential up er Q Subscript a Baseline plus up er Q Subscript up er A up er B prime Baseline times up er Q Subscript up er B up er A prime Baseline period
(For
a
definition and discussion of the modified curvature
(1986) §6.8 The
or
PAA'BB'see Penrose & Rindler
spinor
§11.2.1.) in
splitting
equation (1)
allows
us
to define the bundles
left pointing angle negative r prime comma negative r right pointing angle colon-equal up er O Superscript r prime Baseline circled-times up er I Superscript r
(note
that
section of
⟨1,1⟩
=
⟨—1, 0⟩,
[1]).
so
The connection ▿a
that λAoA
=
can
be
projected
on
to these.
For
example,
if λA
is
a
0, lamda Superscript up er A Baseline right-ar ow from bar minus o Superscript up er A Baseline times iota Subscript up er C Baseline times nabla Subscript b Baseline lamda Superscript up er C Baseline
is
a
connection, and its components
same can
way as the same
be
computed
with
expression ordinary
are
given by ‘conformally
with the metric connection
invariant edth and thorn’, in
02;b, replacing
just
the
▿b has components that
edth and thorn.
Since ▿a agrees with &3x2202;a if you form any of the well known conformally invariant parts of the metric connection, there is scope here for The
expressions
which arise
components of Dab. The section.
as
producing
a
complete ‘conformally invariant GHP
curvatures when one commutes
geometrical significance
formalism'.
conformal edths and thorns
of these connections will be discussed in
a
are
later
Shear free congruences in Minkowski space. Before
starting
the situation in flat
a
(hereafter SFR)
In real Minkowski space,
space-time.
given by
is
spinor
a
field
on
the
general
case, I will review
shear free congruence of null
geodesics
satisfying o Superscript up er A Baseline o Superscript up er B Baseline partial-dif erential o Subscript up er B Baseline equals 0
(5) If oA is
it
analytic,
distribution is
be
can
integrable,
complexified,
and
gives
so
and it then determines
foliation of Minkowski space
a
when oA is shear free. The space of leaves S of this foliation is the twistor space P*, which describes the congruence, The surface S inherits
by complex surfaces, precisely
hypersurface
in dual
in
embedding,
in the
congruence
are
accompanying article, §11.2.11, isomorphic
projective
there is the tangent
particular
bundle of P*, the normal bundle sequence, and the restrictions of the line bundles
analysis
I will
now
describe how this
The
O(n).
shows how massless fields of various orders
to sections of sheaves on S.
This
β-planes.
to Kerr’s Theorem.
according
structure from its
some
distribution of
a
along
the
generalises
to
curved space. SFRs in curved
equation (5) surface
S,
,
and
gives
a
but there is in
The SFR defines bundle defined
In
space-times.
foliation in the
general
Maxwell
a
a
by S considered
to the existence of a one-form
no
complexification.
an
SFR is still
given by
solution of
a
The space of leaves still defines
a
complex
twistor space in which it is embedded. which in Minkowski space is the Ward transform of the line
field,
as a
general space-time,
divisor. This follows from the fact that
equation (5)
is
equivalent
φa with partial-difer ntialSubscriptup erAprimeleft-parenthesi up erASubSuperscriptoSubscriptup erBright-parenthesi Baseline qualsnormalup erPhiSubscriptup erAprimeleft-parenthesi up erASubSuperscriptoSubscriptup erBright-parenthesi Baselinetimescom a
and it is easy to
see
that φa has
satisfies
left-handed part a a
the freedom to be the
precisely
conformally flat space-time.
a
Maxwell field. The
vanishes
-ϕ(ABoC),
=
for
as
in
expected
1
The structures I shall describe that the SFR oA in the
ΨABCDoD
potential
on
S only exist under certain conditions. In particular, I will say
space-time M
satisfies the
Goldberg-Sachs
condition
(hereafter GS)
if
oAoBocΨABCD=0. We
assume
the GS condition holds
to exist otherwise.
The
henceforth,
Goldberg-Sachs
since
Theorem
no
implies
and it is therefore satisfied
o
construct bundles 1
An
SFR is thus
a
on
S,
we
make
use
of ▿a, the
charged twistor coupled
to
its
own
significant part
by
of the structure
that the GS condition is
all
conformally
conformally
vacuum
on
S
seems
equivalent
space-times.
to
To
invariant connection. First choose
canonically defined Maxwell field.
a
spinor direction iA all the bundles
on
to
complement
⟨r', r⟩)
of the foliation is both and
⟨r', r⟩s
the SFR oA, and deduce from the SFR and GS conditions that
bundle
corresponding
on
M with
O(S)A
vanishing
spinors proportional
S, whose sections
over
a
vector bundle on S.
the
quotient
is well defined
E. The part
oA▿a
We have
an
sections of the
injection
of the
→E → 0
of the local twistor connection preserves
E. Furthermore, it is flat
on
by definition
Oa 0 → ⟨0, 1⟩ → Oa
defining
thus define line bundles
can
are
conformal derivitive up the foliation.
The dual local twistor bundle also defines to oA into
of the connection that differentiates up the leaves
of the choice of iA and flat. 2 We
independent
rank two vector bundle
a
oA▿a
and OA', the part
on
the leaves and
so
defines
a
⟨0, 1⟩
and hence
rank three vector bundle
ε on S. Sections of ε can be realised
as
spinor fields
ξA'
satisfying
a
tangential twistor equation
3
oSuperscriptup erABaselinetimesnablaSubscriptup erABaselineSuperscriptleft-parenthesi up erAprimeSuperSubscriptxiSuperscriptup erBprimeSuperscriptright-parenthesi Baseline quals0
and
given
that sections of
O(S)A' are spinor fields satisfying o Superscript upper A Baseline times nabla xi Superscript upper B prime Baseline equals 0
we
get
an
injection
O(S)A'→ξwhich extends to
give
a
short exact sequence
O(S)A'0 →→ ε→⟨1,0⟩ → 0
given,
in terms of
equations, by
oSuperscriptup erABaselinenablaSubscriptup erAup erAprimeBaselinexiSuperscriptup erBprimeBaseline quals0timesright-ar owfrombaroSuperscriptup erABaselinenablaSubscriptup erABaselineSuperscriptleft-parenthesi up erAprimeSuperSubscriptxiSuperscriptup erBprimeSuperscriptright-parenthesi Baseline quals0timesStartBinomialOrMatrixoSuperscriptup erABaselineoSuperscriptup erB aselinenablaetaSubscriptup erABaseline quals0Cho seiotaSuperscriptup erABaseline taSubscriptup erABaseline quals0EndBinomialOrMatrix iSuperscriptup erAprimeBaselineright-ar owfrombariotaSubscriptup erABaselinetimesoSuperscriptup erB aselinetimesnablaSubscriptup erBup erBprimeBaselinexiSuperscriptup erBprimeBaseline
If
μA'
required can
4
is
a
section of
to make
OA' ⟨0, —1⟩),
a
calculation reveals that the condition
iAμA' a connecting vector
be identified with the tangent bundle
through by ⟨0,
—
1E9;s
to
give
to note that
T(S)
nearby of S.
leaf of the foliation. Thus,
The exact sequence above
= 0 is what is
O(S)A‘ ⟨0, can
—
1⟩s
be tensored
what in flat space would be the normal bundle sequence of S
0 →
2 It is helpful 3 To see this,
to a
oA▿aμB'
oAQa
T(S)
→
ξE8;0,-1⟩s → ⟨1, -l⟩s
→ 0.
is independent of iA
that GS and SFR imply oA oB
if oA is SFR. Dab = 0 and use
the conjugate version of equation (4). When writing down the splitting and connection on the dual local twistors, simply write down the conjugate pretending that note
Dab and Qa are real. 4 The connection here is
the tensor product of the conformally invariant
ones
on
the factors.
If is
is
one
given
equivalent
how
The
realise the first formal
spinor field oA defines
a
independent In
a
neighbourhood
SFR, there is
an
f
so
the
two-plane distribution,
When oA is
embedding
defines
of the
a
integral
A calculation shows that, worth of functions g
naturally
a
0
=
obey πA∂ag
of the lift of M
can
XAB
spinor field
now
describe
briefly
directly.
M in the projective spin bundle
on
=
neighbourhood (if it
lift of M
the
on
of are
order in
embedding
is
S.
on
any)
lifts of β-surfaces.
are
β-surfaces parametrised by S, functions
precisely
on
complex variables the
neighbourhood of
a
S.
lift of
S.
function
a
has
two functions of two
are
first
0 to
connections,
of this
sheaf O(1)
a
on
the first formal
neighbourhood
be written
g(x, πA) If the
invariant
conformally
I will
defined differential operator πA∂a which
surfaces of which
M. These form the formal neighbourhood sheaf O(1) In terms of the
of S
formal neighbourhood
given the GS condition, there
POA that
on
space-time
complex parameter family
two
POA which obey πA∂af
on
the normal bundle sequence
embedding.
embedding
an
first formal
a
detail; recall that POA has
more
and functions
of the
knowing
two-surface S̃ transverse to the foliation, and note that S̃ has
a
of the choice of S̃, and
slightly
defines
of
in the restriction of POA. The first
embedding
then
complex manifold,
natural
POA. Now realise S by choosing natural
a
knowing the first formal neighbourhood
to
one can
in
hypersurface
a
=
f(x)
+
iAXABπB
oAXAB 0
where
=
=
XABoB
satisfies
▿BA'XAB = ▿AA'f then it defines
a
section of O(1).
One result of this analysis is
Massless fields.
SFR, then,
minor
there is
an
of two
worth of left handed massless fields null
then to
remembering
one
that it has conformal
correspondence
In my
with sections
accompanying
correspond
article
§11.2.11
to sections of sheaves over
out that sections of the formal
fields which have functions of two
Apart
a
principal
complex
S of
sheaf
along
variables worth of such
neighbourhood
more severe
sheaf.
along
one
holomorphic function
it. If the field has
indicees,
n
are
in
one
⟨1, n + 1⟩)S.
S. Provided,
one
precisely
—1, it is easy to check that these fields
I show how in
neighbourhood
from that case, however,
second formal
weight
null direction
worth of order three Maxwell fields a
over
helicity,
Theorem,
of Robinson’s
generalisation
which states that if oA is
complex variables
for each
a
as
flat
space fields of various orders
usual,
that the GS condition
O(1) 97;⟨1,
l⟩s
on
S do
give
the congruence. Thus there
things, just
as
in the flat
along
holds,
oA
it turns
left handed Maxwell are
two
holomorphic
case.
curvature restrictions appear. To get three functions
requires
oAoBΨABCD
=
0 in which
case
it
seems
that S has
Killing spinors. Suppose null directions. The
M admits
a
and choose oA and iA to be
Killing spinor,
along its principal
Killing spinor equation partial-difer ntialSubscriptup erAprimeBaselineSuperscriptleft-parenthesi SuperSuperscriptup erASuperscriptomegaSuperscriptSuperSuperscriptup erBup erCSuperscriptright-parenthesi Baseline quals0
then
implies that
▿aω
=
on
1⟩is
⟨1,
both oA and iA
0 where ω is
a
section of
which
flat,
are
SFRs. The
⟨1, 1⟩.
This is
remaining parts
only possible
carries closed
by
a
a
number of consequences.
to
over
means
S, thereby giving
that
locally
reduce to
conformally invariant
solving
connection
In the
equation (2)
Further work is in progress
ideas in the next section, it will be
possible
on
to
an
isomorphism ⟨1, 1⟩)
shows that it
⟨1,
0⟩ and its
all
this,
≅ ⟨0,
0⟩)
the fact that
⟨1, l⟩s. Secondly,
metric thus
special
line bundle
single
0
it provides
Firstly,
it is exact, and
is contained in the
=
natural trivialisation of
a
conformal transformation.
Jeffryes (1984).
equation
implies
∂[aQb] This has
if the
of the
which
Qa
is
can
thus be made to vanish
constructed,
all the curvature information
(conformally invariant) connection;
since it
seems
explain the separation
likely that,
cf.
combined with the
of various differential
equations
in the Kerr solution.
Geometrical significance. To finish, I will mention which I have
just
started to follow up in collaboration with
connection constructed above is
an
structure, and the structure
has
obtained a
on
the
one
example (in
the
of
by
unique
oA and iA
so
The
M.A.Singer.
conformally
connection determined
complex space-time)
complexification of a real four-manifold X
compatible conformal Hermitian metric. The
defined
a
ideas due to R.Penrose and K.P.Tod
some
with
an
seems
invariant
geometrical
to be that which would be
almost
complex structure Jab
of Jab are the
eigenspaces
by
a
two-plane
and
distributions
that up erJSubscriptaBaselineSuperscriptbBaseline qualsileft-parenthesi oSubscriptup erABaselinetimesiotaSuperscriptup erB aselineplusiotaSubscriptup erABaselinetimesoSuperscriptup erB aselineright-parenthesi epsilonSubscriptup erAprimeBaselineup erBprime
The almost
suggestion
complex
is that the existence of a
metric. This whose
structure will be
view-point
seems
likely
Killing spinor since
is
something
when both oA and iA
equivalent
to the
are
SFRs.
Kähler condition
very similar has been
is somewhat different. I would like to thank
for discussions and Comment
very
integrable
Further, on
the
the Hermitian
given by Flaherty (1976),
M.A.Singer, R.Penrose,
and K.P.Tod
suggestions.
(1994).
This work
eventually
became
Bailey (1991a)
and
Bailey (1991b).
References T. N. ( 1991 ) Complexified conformal almost Hermitian structures and the , edth and thorn operators , Class. Quantum Grav. 8 , 1 4
Bailey
-
.
conformally invariant
Bailey
,
T. N.
( 1991 ) The
Theorem , J. Math.
space of leaves of a shear-free congruence, Phys. 32 , 1465 1469
,
and Robinson's
.
Flaherty E. J. Jr. ( 1976 ) Hermitian (Springer Verlag Berlin ). ,
46
multipole expansions
-
and Kählerian geometry in
relativity
,
Lecture Notes in
Physics
,
Jeffryes
B. P.
,
p. 323 341
( 1984 ) Space-times
with two-index
Killing spinors
Proc. Roy. Soc. London A392 ,
,
-
.
Penrose , R. & Rindler , W.
( 1986 ) Spinors and Space-Time, Space-Time Geometry ( Cambridge University Press ).
§II.2.10
A
conformally
This note is
invariant connection Bailey by T.N. the last section of my article
postscript to
a
vol. II:
associated to a direct sum
decomposition
behind the observations in that
article,
of
one
Spinor
(TN
§11.2.9
of the
the
on
and Twistor Methods in
27, December
conformally invariant connection
bundles. The
spin
1988)
stated for convenience in the
general
result
lying
holomorphic category,
is
as
follows: THEOREM held Jac with
.
Let M be
J(ab)
satisfying ▿aJba
=
conformal metric is If
one
is
given
a
=
complex conformal manifold with
a
0 and
JacJcb
0 and ▿agab
=
=
—δab.
Then there exists
for
Xagbc
conformal metric gab and
some
a
unique
given
tensor
torsion-free connection
The second condition is
Xa.
a
simply
▿a
that the
preserved. direct
sum
decomposition
of OA in
a
complex space-time
then
up erJSubscriptaBaselineSuperscriptbBaseline qualsileft-parenthesi oSubscriptup erABaselinetimesiotaSuperscriptup erBBaselineplusiotaSubscriptup erABaselinetimesoSuperscriptup erBBaselineright-parenthesi epsilonSubscriptup erAprimeBaselineup erBprimecom a
where oA, iA constitute the
resulting
a
thorn’ operators.
The
space-times
given
unclear,
and related
the
in components
significance
defines the connection is conformal
spin-frame defining
connection is
decomposition, by
satisfies the above conditions and
R. Penrose’s
‘conformally
of the rather strange condition and work continues areas.
on
the
use
on
invariant edth and
the derivitive of
Jab
which
of this connection in type D
Thanks to M.G.Eastwood and
M.A.Singer.
§II.2.11 sions
Relative
by
cohomology
T.N.
(TN March
26,Bailey
Introduction.
In my
(see §1.6.6
and
original and
§1.6.8
expanded
articles
The power series also The relative and let F be can
cohomology
a
locally
be described
open of F
cover over
gives
a
by
Ui of
a
a
a
which
precise
by
fi
as a
cohomology class,
first
seems
power series.
Let S be
relative Čech
a
on
cocycle,
but
of S in X; then
defining functions
expan-
a
hypersurface
X. The relative intuitive
good a
for
S,
a
one
—
is
fj
is
worldline
based
hypersurface,
in
cohomology is
be
multipole expansion.
complex
a
on a
can
fields.
algebraically special
picture
representative
as
given by
manifold X,
group H
follows: Choose a
holomorphic
set
fi of sections all of Ui ∩
on
an
Uj.
section of F.
holomorphic
then
of
sources on a
‘multipoles’
relative to
description
S, with the restriction that fi a
for
to be the twistor version of the
on
neighbourhood
multipole
of fields with
expressions
some
free sheaf of Ox modules
Ui that ‘blow up’
Now let gi be
I gave
description
version of the twistor
The freedom in each fi is the addition of
the
the twistor
on
Bailey 1985)
of‘power series’,
sort
a
Theorem and
1988)
world-line. In this note, I will show how in
series, Robinson's
power
might try
and
expand
the relative class defined
power series fSubscriptiBaseline qualsStarFractionfSubscriptiSuperscriptleft-parenthesi 1right-parenthesi BaselineOvergSubscriptiBaselineEndFractionplusStarFractionfSubscriptiSuperscriptleft-parenthesi 2right-parenthesi BaselineOvergSubscriptiSuperscript2BaselineEndFractionpluselipsi StarFractionfSubscriptiSuperscriptleft-parenthesi nright-parenthesi BaselineOvergSubscriptiSuperscriptnBaselineEndFractionpluselipsi
(1) To understand this
we
with transition functions which has
a
simple
which induces
a
gi/gj
zero on
map
on
need the divisor bundle L of on
Ui 29;
Uj.
which is defined to be the line bundle
The functions gi then
S. The section
s
sk
:
the relative
S,
gives F
→
us a
map
F
Lk
ࣹ
give
a
section
distinguished
s
of L
cohomology.
DEFINITION 1. The k-th order relative
cohomology
is defined
H
by
the exactness of
or
less
0 right-ar ow up er H Subscript up er S Superscript 1 Baseline left-parenthesi up er X com a script up er F times emicol n k right-parenthesi right-ar ow up er H Subscript up er S Superscript 1 Baseline times left-parenthesi up er X com a script up er F times right-parenthesi right-ar ow Overscript imes Superscript k Baseline Endscripts up er H Subscript up er S Superscript 1 Baseline left-parenthesi up er X com a script up er F times circled-plus up er L Superscript k Baseline right-parenthesi
The k-th order
cohomology
is thus the part which has
therefore corresponds to the first k terms in equation If ξ is can
a
sheaf
define the
on
X, and
(1)
a
pole
of order k
(ξ)(p) by
S,
and it
above.
I(p)ξ is the ideal of sections of ξ which vanish to
p-th formal neighbourhood sheaf
on
p-th
order
on
S
we
the short exact sequence
0 right-ar ow script upper I Superscript left-parenthesis p plus 1 right-parenthesis Baseline epsilon right-ar ow epsilon right-ar ow left-parenthesis epsilon right-parenthesis Superscript left-parenthesis p right-parenthesis Baseline right-ar ow 0
(2)
so
(ξ)(0)
that
is
ξ restricted to S.
just
LEMMA 1. There is
natural
a
isomorphism
up erHSubscriptup erS uperscript1Baselinetimesleft-parenthesi up erXcom ascriptup erFtimes emicol nkright-parenthesi ap roximately-equalsnormalup erGam aleft-parenthesi up erScom aleft-parenthesi scriptup erFtimescircled-plusup erLSuperscriptkBaselineright-parenthesi Superscriptleft-parenthesi kminus1right-parenthesi Baselineright-parenthesi period
The
proof is simply
with the freedom Thus
we
have
to observe that in
equation (1) above,
given by equation (2)
as
strictly
filtration
a
with the quotient at each stage
of the relative
given by
theLkofF&a smustgi#exc2vtio9e7n;
.
than
cohomology (rather
an
infinite direct
sum),
the exact sequence
0 right-ar ow normal up er Gamma times left-parenthesi up er S comma left-parenthesi script up er F times circled-plus up er L Superscript k minus 1 Baseline right-parenthesi Superscript left-parenthesi k minus 2 right-parenthesi Baseline right-parenthesi right-ar ow Overscript imes Endscripts normal up er Gamma times left-parenthesi up er S comma left-parenthesi script up er F times circled-plus up er L Superscript k Baseline right-parenthesi Superscript left-parenthesi k minus 1 right-parenthesi Baseline right-ar ow normal up er Gamma left-parenthesi up er S comma script up er F times circled-plus up er L Superscript k Baseline right-parenthesi right-ar ow 0 period
fields.
Algebraically special a
X in
region
cohomology
twistor space,
projective
of order k
orders
higher If
means
one
null,
on
order
correspond
an
are
analysis
can
corresponding
be
n means
the field has
a
a
hypersurface
to a shear free congruence.
for the relative case, and
as
when S is
applied
we
will say that
the congruence if its twistor function is in
principal
We a
H1(X, O(—n
null direction,
along
can
right
—
in
define
handed
2); k). Thus,
the congruence, and
to certain differential relations between the field and the congruence.
writes down the commutative
and whose columns there is
S just
on
massless field is of order k order 1
The above
induced
by sk
diagram
whose
F → F ⊗
:
Lk,
rows are
the relative
it is easy to
see
cohomology
that if
sequences,
H1(X, F)
=
0 then
exact sequence 0 right-ar ow StartFraction normal up er Gamma left-parenthesi up er X comma script up er F times circled-plus up er L Superscript k Baseline right-parenthesi Over normal up er Gamma left-parenthesi up er X comma script up er F times right-parenthesi EndFraction right-ar ow up er H Subscript up er S Superscript 1 Baseline left-parenthesi up er X comma script up er F times emicol n k right-parenthesi right-ar ow up er H Superscript 1 Baseline left-parenthesi up er X comma script up er F times emicol n k right-parenthesi right-ar ow 0
Since L has the section once, we can write L
=
s
which has
M(1)
n
simple
where M is
bundle of the ‘Maxwell field of the k