Courant algebroid

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In a field of mathematics known as differential geometry, a Courant algebroid is a combination of a Lie algebroid and a quadratic Lie algebra. It was originally introduced in 1997 by Zhang-Ju Liu, Alan Weinstein and Ping Xu to describe the double of a Lie bialgebroid.

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[edit] Definition

A Courant algebroid consists of the data a vector bundle E->M with a bracket [.,.]:ΓE x ΓE -> ΓE, a non degenerate inner product \langle.,.\rangle: E\times E\to \R, and a bundle map ρ:E-> TM subject to the following axioms:

[φ,[χ,ψ]] = [[φ,χ],ψ] + [χ,[φ,ψ]]
[φ,fψ] = ρ(φ)fψ + f[φ,ψ]
[\phi,\phi]= \frac12 D\langle \phi,\phi\rangle
\rho(\phi)\langle \psi,\psi\rangle= 2\langle [\phi,\psi],\psi\rangle

where φ,ψ are sections into E and f is a smooth function on the base manifold M. D is the combination β − 1ρTd with d the de Rham differential, ρT the dual map of ρ, and β the map from E to E * induced by the metric.

[edit] Properties

The bracket is not skew-symmetric as one can see from the third axiom. Instead it fullfills a certain Jacobi-identity (first axiom) and a Leibniz rule (second axiom). From these two axioms one can derive that the anchor map ρ is a morphism of brackets:

ρ[φ,ψ] = [ρ(φ),ρ(ψ)].

The fourth rule is an invariance of the inner product under the bracket. Polarization leads to

\rho(\phi)\langle \chi,\psi\rangle= \langle [\phi,\chi],\psi\rangle +\langle \chi,[\phi,\psi]\rangle .

[edit] Examples

An example of the Courant algebroid is the Dorfman bracket on the direct sum TM\oplus T^*M, defined as:

[X+\xi, Y+\eta] = [X,Y]+(\mathcal{L}_X\eta -i(Y) d\xi +i(X)i(Y)H)

where X,Y are vector fields, ξ,η are 1-forms and H is a closed 3-form twisting the bracket. This bracket is used to describe the integrability of generalized complex structures.

A more general example arises from a Lie algebroid A whose induced differential on A * will be written as d again. Then use the same formula as for the Dorfman bracket with H an A-3-form closed under d.

Another example of a Courant algebroid is a quadratic Lie algebra, i.e. a Lie algebra with an invariant scalar product. Here the base manifold is just a point and thus the anchor map (and D) are trivial.

[edit] Skew Symmetric bracket

Instead of the definition above one can introduce a skew symmetric bracket as [[\phi,\psi]]= \frac12\big([\phi,\psi]-[\psi,\phi]\big). This fulfills a homotopic Jacobi-identity.

[φ,[ψ,χ]] + cycl. = DT(φ,ψ,χ)

where T is T(\phi,\psi,\chi)=\frac13\langle [\phi,\psi],\chi\rangle +\mathrm{cycl.}.

The Leibniz rule and the invariance of the scalar product become modified by the relation [[\phi,\psi]] = [\phi,\psi] -\frac12 D\langle \phi,\psi\rangle and the violation of skew symmetry gets replaced by the axiom

\rho\circ D = 0

The skew symmetric bracket together with the derivation D and the Jacobiator T form a strongly homotopic Lie algebra.

[edit] References