Kuranishi structure
In mathematics, especially in topology, a Kuranishi structure is a smooth analogue of scheme structure. If a topological space is endowed with a Kuranishi structure, then locally it can be identified with the zero set of a smooth map Kuranishi structure was introduced by Japanese mathematicians Kenji Fukaya and Kaoru Ono in the study of Gromov–Witten invariants in symplectic geometry.[1]
Definition
Let be a compact metrizable topological space. Let
be a point. A Kuranishi neighborhood of
(of dimension
) is a 5-tuple
where
-
is a smooth orbifold;
-
is a smooth orbifold vector bundle;
-
is a smooth section;
-
is a continuous map and is homeomorphic onto its image
.
They should satisfy that .
If and
,
are their Kuranishi neighborhoods respectively, then a coordinate change from
to
is a triple
where
-
is an open sub-orbifold;
-
is an orbifold embedding;
-
is an orbifold vector bundle embedding which covers
.
In addition, they must satisfy the compatibility condition:
-
;
-
.
A Kuranishi structure on of dimension
is a collection
where
-
is a Kuranishi neighborhood of
of dimension
;
-
is a coordinate change from
to
.
In addition, the coordinate changes must satisfy the cocycle condition, namely, whenever , we require that
over the regions where both sides are defined.
History
In Gromov–Witten theory, one needs to define integration over the moduli space of stable maps (see for example [2]). They are maps
from a nodal Riemann surface with genus
and
marked points into a symplectic manifold
, such that each component satisfies the Cauchy–Riemann equation
-
.
-
If the moduli space is a smooth, compact, oriented manifold or orbifold, then the integration (or a fundamental class) can be defined. When the symplectic manifold is semi-positive, this is indeed the case (except for codimension 2 boundaries of the moduli space) if the almost complex structure
is perturbed generically. However, when
is not semi-positive, the moduli space may contain configurations for which one component is a multiple cover of a holomorphic sphere
whose intersection with the first Chern class of
is negative. Such configurations make the moduli space very singular so a fundamental class cannot be defined in the usual way.
The notion of Kuranishi structure was a way of defining a virtual fundamental cycle, which plays the same role as a fundamental cycle when the moduli space is cut out transversely. It was first used by Fukaya and Ono in defining the Gromov–Witten invariants and Floer homology, and was further developed when Fukaya, Oh, Ohta, Ono studied the Lagrangian intersection Floer theory.[3]
References
- ↑ Fukaya, K. and Ono, K., "Arnold Conjecture and Gromov–Witten Invariant", Topology 38 (1999), no. 5, 933–1048
- ↑ McDuff, D and Salamon, D. "J-holomorphic curves and symplectic topology", American Mathematical Society Colloquium Publications, 52. American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI, 2004, ISBN 0-8218-3485-1
- ↑ Fukaya, K., Oh, Y.-G., Ohta, H. and Ono, K., "Lagrangian intersection Floer theory: anomaly and obstruction, Part I and Part II", AMS/IP Studies in Advanced Mathematics, 46, American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI; International Press, Somerville, MA, 2009. ISBN 978-0-8218-4836-4