Nijenhuis-Richardson bracket

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mathematics, the algebraic bracket or Nijenhuis-Richardson bracket is a graded Lie algebra structure on the space of alternating multilinear forms of a vector space to itself, introduced by A. Nijenhuis and R. Richardson (1966, 1967). It is related to but not the same as the Frölicher-Nijenhuis bracket and the Schouten-Nijenhuis bracket.

[edit] Definition

The primary motivation for introducing the bracket was to develop a uniform framework for discussing all possible Lie algebra structures on a vector space, and subsequently the deformations of these structures. If V is a vector space and p ≥ -1 is an integer, let

Alt^p(V) = (\wedge^{p+1} V^*)\otimes V

be the space of all skew-symmetric (p+1)-multilinear mappings of V to itself. The direct sum Alt(V) is a graded vector space. A Lie algebra structure on V is determined by a skew-symmetric bilinear map μ : V × VV. That is to say, μ is an element of Alt1(V). Furthermore, μ must obey the Jacobi identity. The Nijenhuis-Richardson bracket supplies a systematic manner for expressing this identity in the form [μ,μ]=0.

In detail, the bracket is a bilinear bracket operation defined on Alt(V) as follows. On homogeneous elements P ∈ Altp(V) and Q ∈ Altq(V), the Nijenhuis-Richardson bracket [P,Q] ∈ Altp+q(V) is given by

[P,Q]^\and = i_P Q - (-1)^{pq}i_Q P.\,

Here the interior product iP is defined by

(i_P Q)(X_0,X_1,\ldots,X_{p+q}) = \sum_{\sigma\in Sh_{p,q}}\mathrm{sgn}(\sigma) P(Q(X_0,X_1,\ldots,X_q),X_{q+1},\ldots,X_{q+p})

where the sum is over all (p,q) shuffles of the indices. On non-homogeneous elements, the bracket is extended by bilinearity.

[edit] Derivations of the ring of forms

The Nijenhuis-Richardson bracket can be defined on the vector valued forms Ω*(M, T(M)) on a smooth manifold M in a similar way. Vector valued forms act as derivations on the supercommutative ring Ω*(M) of forms on M by taking K to the derivation iK, and the Nijenhuis-Richardson bracket then corresponds to the commutator of two derivations. This identifies Ω*(M, T(M)) with the algebra of derivations that vanish on smooth functions. Not all derivations are of this form; for the structure of the full ring of all derivations see the article Frölicher-Nijenhuis bracket.

The Nijenhuis-Richardson bracket and the Frölicher-Nijenhuis bracket both make Ω*(M, T(M)) into a graded superalgebra, but have different degrees.

[edit] References

  • Pierre Lecomte, Peter W. Michor, Hubert Schicketanz, The multigraded Nijenhuis–Richardson algebra, its universal property and application J. Pure Appl. Algebra, 77 (1992) 87–102
  • P. W. Michor (2001), “Frölicher–Nijenhuis bracket”, in Hazewinkel, Michiel, Encyclopaedia of Mathematics, Kluwer Academic Publishers, ISBN 978-1556080104 
  • P. W. Michor, H. Schicketanz, A cohomology for vector valued differential forms Ann. Global Anal. Geom. 7 (1989), 163-169
  • A. Nijenhuis, R. Richardson, Cohomology and deformations in graded Lie algebras Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. , 72 (1966) pp. 1–29
  • A. Nijenhuis, R. Richardson, Deformation of Lie algebra structures, J. Math. Mech. 17 (1967), 89–105.