Spinc structure
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In spin geometry, a spinᶜ structure (or complex spin structure) is a special classifying map that can exist for orientable manifolds. Such manifolds are called spinᶜ manifolds. C stands for the complex numbers, which are denoted and appear in the definition of the underlying spinᶜ group. In four dimensions, a spinᶜ structure defines two complex plane bundles, which can be used to describe negative and positive chirality of spinors, for example in the Dirac equation of relativistic quantum field theory. Another central application is Seiberg–Witten theory, which uses them to study 4-manifolds.
Definition
[edit]Let be a -dimensional orientable manifold. Its tangent bundle is described by a classifying map into the classifying space of the special orthogonal group . It can factor over the map induced by the canonical projection on classifying spaces. In this case, the classifying map lifts to a continous map into the classifying space of the spinᶜ group , which is called spinᶜ structure.[1]
Let denote the set of spinᶜ structures on up to homotopy. The first unitary group is the second factor of the spinᶜ group and using its classifying space , which is the infinite complex projective space and a model of the Eilenberg–MacLane space , there is a bijection:[2]
Due to the canonical projection , every spinᶜ structure induces a principal -bundle or equvalently a complex line bundle.
Properties
[edit]- Every spin structure induces a canonical spinᶜ structure.[3][4] The reverse implication doesn't hold as the complex projective plane shows.
- Every spinᶜ structure induces a canonical spinʰ structure. The reverse implication doesn't hold as the Wu manifold shows.[citation needed]
- An orientable manifold has a spinᶜ structure iff its third integral Stiefel–Whitney class vanishes, hence is the image of the second ordinary Stiefel–Whitney class under the canonical map .[5]
- Every orientable smooth manifold with four or less dimensions has a spinᶜ structure.[4]
- Every almost complex manifold has a spinᶜ structure.[6][4]
The following properties hold more generally for the lift on the Lie group , with the particular case giving:
- If is a spinᶜ manifold, then and are spinᶜ manifolds.[7]
- If is a spin manifold, then is a spinᶜ manifold iff is a spinᶜ manifold.[7]
- If and are spinᶜ manifolds of same dimension, then their connected sum is a spinᶜ manifold.[8]
- The following conditions are equivalent:[9]
- is a spinᶜ manifold.
- There is a real plane bundle , so that has a spin structure or equivalently .
- can be immersed in a spin manifold with two dimensions more.
- can be embedded in a spin manifold with two dimensions more.
See also
[edit]Literature
[edit]- Blake Mellor (1995-09-18). "Spinᶜ manifolds" (PDF).
- "Stable complex and Spinᶜ-structures" (PDF).
- Liviu I. Nicolaescu. Notes on Seiberg-Witten Theory (PDF).
- Michael Albanese und Aleksandar Milivojević (2021). "Spinʰ and further generalisations of spin". Journal of Geometry and Physics. 164: 104–174. arXiv:2008.04934. doi:10.1016/j.geomphys.2022.104709.
References
[edit]- ^ Stable complex and Spinᶜ-structures, Definition D.28
- ^ Mellor 1995, Theorem 5
- ^ Mellor 1995, Theorem 2
- ^ a b c Nicolaescu, Example 1.3.16
- ^ Stable complex and Spinᶜ-structures, Proposition D.31
- ^ Mellor 1995, Theorem 3
- ^ a b Albanese & Milivojević 2021, Proposition 3.6.
- ^ Albanese & Milivojević 2021, Proposition 3.7.
- ^ Albanese & Milivojević 2021, Proposition 3.2.