Fundamental vector field

In the study of mathematics and especially differential geometry, fundamental vector fields are an instrument that describes the infinitesimal behaviour of a smooth Lie group action on a smooth manifold. Such vector fields find important applications in the study of Lie theory, symplectic geometry, and the study of Hamiltonian group actions.

Motivation edit

Important to applications in mathematics and physics[1] is the notion of a flow on a manifold. In particular, if   is a smooth manifold and   is a smooth vector field, one is interested in finding integral curves to  . More precisely, given   one is interested in curves   such that:

 

for which local solutions are guaranteed by the Existence and Uniqueness Theorem of Ordinary Differential Equations. If   is furthermore a complete vector field, then the flow of  , defined as the collection of all integral curves for  , is a diffeomorphism of  . The flow   given by   is in fact an action of the additive Lie group   on  .

Conversely, every smooth action   defines a complete vector field   via the equation:

 

It is then a simple result[2] that there is a bijective correspondence between   actions on   and complete vector fields on  .

In the language of flow theory, the vector field   is called the infinitesimal generator.[3] Intuitively, the behaviour of the flow at each point corresponds to the "direction" indicated by the vector field. It is a natural question to ask whether one may establish a similar correspondence between vector fields and more arbitrary Lie group actions on  .

Definition edit

Let   be a Lie group with corresponding Lie algebra  . Furthermore, let   be a smooth manifold endowed with a smooth action  . Denote the map   such that  , called the orbit map of   corresponding to  .[4] For  , the fundamental vector field   corresponding to   is any of the following equivalent definitions:[2][4][5]

  •  
  •  
  •  

where   is the differential of a smooth map and   is the zero vector in the vector space  .

The map   can then be shown to be a Lie algebra homomorphism.[5]

Applications edit

Lie groups edit

The Lie algebra of a Lie group   may be identified with either the left- or right-invariant vector fields on  . It is a well-known result[3] that such vector fields are isomorphic to  , the tangent space at identity. In fact, if we let   act on itself via right-multiplication, the corresponding fundamental vector fields are precisely the left-invariant vector fields.

Hamiltonian group actions edit

In the motivation, it was shown that there is a bijective correspondence between smooth   actions and complete vector fields. Similarly, there is a bijective correspondence between symplectic actions (the induced diffeomorphisms are all symplectomorphisms) and complete symplectic vector fields.

A closely related idea is that of Hamiltonian vector fields. Given a symplectic manifold  , we say that   is a Hamiltonian vector field if there exists a smooth function   satisfying:

 

where the map   is the interior product. This motivatives the definition of a Hamiltonian group action as follows: If   is a Lie group with Lie algebra   and   is a group action of   on a smooth manifold  , then we say that   is a Hamiltonian group action if there exists a moment map   such that for each:  ,

 

where   and   is the fundamental vector field of  

References edit

  1. ^ Hou, Bo-Yu (1997), Differential Geometry for Physicists, World Scientific Publishing Company, ISBN 978-9810231057
  2. ^ a b Ana Cannas da Silva (2008). Lectures on Symplectic Geometry. Springer. ISBN 978-3540421955.
  3. ^ a b Lee, John (2003). Introduction to Smooth Manifolds. Springer. ISBN 0-387-95448-1.
  4. ^ a b Audin, Michèle (2004). Torus Actions on Symplectic manifolds. Birkhäuser. ISBN 3-7643-2176-8.
  5. ^ a b Libermann, Paulette; Marle, Charles-Michel (1987). Symplectic Geometry and Analytical Mechanics. Springer. ISBN 978-9027724380.