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Calogero-Moser system on an elliptic curve Marsden- Weinstein - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Classical integrability Calogero-Moser system on an elliptic curve Marsden- Weinstein reduction Reduction for the elliptic case Timo Kluck Mathematisch Instituut, Universiteit Utrecht December 17, 2012 1 Classical integrability


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Classical integrability Marsden- Weinstein reduction Reduction for the elliptic case

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Calogero-Moser system on an elliptic curve

Timo Kluck

Mathematisch Instituut, Universiteit Utrecht

December 17, 2012

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Main point

We will see a complicated system of interacting particles that can be solved because it corresponds to a simple motion in the space of holomorphic principal SL(N)-bundles over an elliptic curve.

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Outline

Classical integrability Marsden-Weinstein reduction Reduction for the elliptic case

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Phase space

Definition

A phase space or a symplectic manifold is a manifold M together with a non-degenerate, closed 2-form ω.

Definition

For any function f ∈ C ∞(M) on a symplectic manifold, there is an associated vector field vf given by ω−1(df ) where we regard ω as a bundle map TM → T ∨M. We also write f , · for this vector field.

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Phase space (ctd)

Example

Any cotangent bundle M = T ∨X is a symplectic manifold.

◮ q1, · · · , qn and p1, · · · , pn coordinates representing a point

  • pidqi, q
  • ◮ Symplectic form:

{qi, ·} = − ∂ ∂pi {pi, ·} = ∂ ∂qi

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Liouville integrability

Definition

A dynamical system is a phase space together with a distinguished function H ∈ C ∞(M) called the Hamiltonian. The solutions to the dynamical system are the flow lines of {H, ·}.

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Liouville integrability

Definition

A dynamical system is a phase space together with a distinguished function H ∈ C ∞(M) called the Hamiltonian. The solutions to the dynamical system are the flow lines of {H, ·}.

Definition

Let dim M = 2N. A dynamical system on M is (Liouville) integrable if there are functions H1, · · · , HN such that

◮ {Hi, Hj} = 0 (they are in involution) ◮ On a dense open subset: dH1 ∧ · · · ∧ dHN 0 ◮ H = f (H1, · · · , HN)

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Liouville integrability (ctd)

The Hi are called Hamiltonians. Their flows are symmetries of the dynamical system.

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Planetary motion

Example

M = T ∨ R3 × R3 , with coordinates x, y ∈ R3 and cotangent coordinates p, r. We interpret x, y as planet positions and p, r as momenta. ω = dpi ∧ dxi + dri ∧ dyi H = 1 2

  • p2 + q2

+ 1 |x − y| This is integrable with Hk = pk + rk k = 1, 2, 3 H4 = ((p − r) × (x − y))1 H5 =

  • (p − r) × (x − y)
  • 2

H6 = H

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Outline

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Rational Calogero-Moser system

Example

M ⊆ T ∨RN, interpreted as positions and momenta of N particles in 1 dimension with center-of-mass set to 0. H = 1 2

N

  • i=1

p2

i −

  • i<j

ϵ2 (qi − qj)2

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Rational Calogero-Moser system

Example

M ⊆ T ∨RN, interpreted as positions and momenta of N particles in 1 dimension with center-of-mass set to 0. H = 1 2

N

  • i=1

p2

i −

  • i<j

ϵ2 (qi − qj)2

Theorem (Calogero)

This is an 2(N − 1)-dimensional integrable system, with Hamiltonians given by Hk = Tr Lk, where L is the traceless matrix L =              p1

ϵ qi −qj

...

ϵ qi −qj

pN             

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Rational Calogero-Moser system (ctd)

So some of these Hamiltonians are: H1 =

N

  • i=1

pi = 0 H2 =

N

  • i=1

p2

i −

  • ij

ϵ2 (qi − qj)2 (= 2H) H3 =

N

  • i=1

p3

i −

  • ij

pi ϵ2 (qi − qj)2 +

  • i ,j,k distinct

ϵ3 (qi − qj)(qj − qk)(qk − qi)

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Rational Calogero-Moser system (ctd)

Question

Where do all these symmetries / conserved quantities come from?

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Rational Calogero-Moser system (ctd)

Question

Where do all these symmetries / conserved quantities come from?

“Answer”

They exist because the motion is very simple (linear) in the matrix space.

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Linear motion in a matrix space

◮ G = SL(N), g = sl(N) ◮ Phase space M = T ∨g = g × g using Killing pairing ◮ Hamiltonian H(P, Q) = 1

2 P, P

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Linear motion in a matrix space

◮ G = SL(N), g = sl(N) ◮ Phase space M = T ∨g = g × g using Killing pairing ◮ Hamiltonian H(P, Q) = 1

2 P, P

◮ Solution for given initial value (P0, Q0):

P(t) = P0 Q(t) = Q0 + tP0

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Linear motion in a matrix space (ctd)

◮ Symmetric under adjoint action of G on g:

  • H and ω invariant under conjugation

P, Q → gPg −1, gQg −1

  • Time evolution commutes with G-action

◮ Conserved quantities in involution:

Hk = Tr Pk

◮ Also invariant under conjugation ◮ But too few: dim M = 2

  • n2 − 1
  • > 2n
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Marsden-Weinstein reduction

Idea

◮ Since everything is G-invariant, we can quotient out by it. ◮ Hopefully, this reduces the dimension sufficiently to end up

with an integrable system.

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Marsden-Weinstein reduction

Idea

◮ Since everything is G-invariant, we can quotient out by it. ◮ Hopefully, this reduces the dimension sufficiently to end up

with an integrable system.

◮ But we also need to keep a non-degenerate symplectic form:

  • If we quotient out a tangent vector ξ ∈ TM, then we

should also quotient out its image ω(ξ ) ∈ T ∨M. Dually, that means restricting to a submanifold.

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Marsden-Weinstein reduction (ctd)

Definition

A group action of G on M is Hamiltonian if its infinitesimal vector fields vξ for ξ ∈ g are of the form vξ = {fξ , ·}

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Marsden-Weinstein reduction (ctd)

Definition

A group action of G on M is Hamiltonian if its infinitesimal vector fields vξ for ξ ∈ g are of the form vξ = {fξ , ·}

Definition

A Hamiltonian group action is generated by a moment map µ : M → g∨ if fξ = µ, ξ and if µ is G-equivariant.

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Marsden-Weinstein reduction (ctd)

Theorem (Marsden, Weinstein)

If µ0 ∈ g∨ is a regular value of µ, then the space µ−1(µ0)/Gµ0 is a symplectic manifold.

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Reduction of linear motion

Fact

µ(P, Q) = [P, Q] ∈ g g∨ is a moment map for the conjugation action.

Theorem

Pick the following regular value µ0 ∈ g g∨: µ0 = −ϵ            1 · · · 1 . . . ... . . . 1 · · · 1            + ϵ            1 ... 1            Then p, q parametrize the Gµ0-equivalence classes in µ−1(µ0) by P(p, q), Q(p, q) =              p1

ϵ qi −qj

...

ϵ qi −qj

pN              ,            q1 ... qN            and they are canonical coordinates on µ−1(µ0)/Gµ0.

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Recap

◮ Linear motion

t → P0, Q0 + tP0 has N − 1 conserved quantities in an 2(N2 − 1) dimensional phase space.

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Recap

◮ Linear motion

t → P0, Q0 + tP0 has N − 1 conserved quantities in an 2(N2 − 1) dimensional phase space.

◮ Is is also symmetric under conjugation

P, Q → gPg −1, gQg −1

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Recap

◮ Linear motion

t → P0, Q0 + tP0 has N − 1 conserved quantities in an 2(N2 − 1) dimensional phase space.

◮ Is is also symmetric under conjugation

P, Q → gPg −1, gQg −1

◮ Quotienting out and restricting yields a 2(N − 1)

dimensional space: the Calogero-Moser integrable system

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Outline

Classical integrability Marsden-Weinstein reduction Reduction for the elliptic case

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Particles on an elliptic curve

◮ (Σ, p) elliptic curve with Weierstrass function ℘: Σ → CP1 ◮ q = (q1, · · · , qN) ∈ ΣN positions of N particles on the curve ◮ Complex phase space T ∨ΣN with coordinates p, q. ◮ Hamiltonian:

H(p, q) = 1 2

N

  • i=1

p2

i − ϵ2 i<j

℘(qi − qj)

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Large phase space

◮ G = SL(N, C); g = sl(N, C) ◮ G Σ = C ∞(Σ, G), gΣ = C ∞(Σ, g) ◮ Complex phase space T ∨gΣ

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Large phase space

◮ G = SL(N, C); g = sl(N, C) ◮ G Σ = C ∞(Σ, G), gΣ = C ∞(Σ, g) ◮ Complex phase space T ∨gΣ ◮ Pick universal cover C → Σ with coordinate z ∈ C such

that 0 → p

◮ G Σ-action:

Q(z, ¯ z) → g(z, ¯ z)Q(z, ¯ z)g −1(z, ¯ z) − ∂¯

zgg −1

P(z, ¯ z) → g(z, ¯ z)P(z, ¯ z)g(z, ¯ z)−1 (centrally extended co-adjoint action on Q, or gauge transformations on Q)

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Large phase space

◮ G = SL(N, C); g = sl(N, C) ◮ G Σ = C ∞(Σ, G), gΣ = C ∞(Σ, g) ◮ Complex phase space T ∨gΣ ◮ Pick universal cover C → Σ with coordinate z ∈ C such

that 0 → p

◮ G Σ-action:

Q(z, ¯ z) → g(z, ¯ z)Q(z, ¯ z)g −1(z, ¯ z) − ∂¯

zgg −1

P(z, ¯ z) → g(z, ¯ z)P(z, ¯ z)g(z, ¯ z)−1 (centrally extended co-adjoint action on Q, or gauge transformations on Q)

◮ Hamiltonian action with moment map:

µ(Q, P) = [Q, P] − ∂¯

zP

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Reduction

◮ Conserved quantities:

Hk = ˆ

Σ

Tr Pkdzd¯ z H = 1 2H2

◮ Pick the following value µ0 ∈

  • gΣ∨:

µ0 =            ϵ            1 · · · 1 . . . ... . . . 1 · · · 1            − ϵ            1 ... 1                       δ(z, ¯ z) =: τ0δ(z, ¯ z)

◮ Then µ−1(µ0)/Gµ0 is a symplectic manifold

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Solving moment map constraint

◮ Want to parametrize equivalence classes in µ−1(µ0)/Gµ0:

µ(Q, P) = µ0 ⇐⇒ [Q, P] − ∂¯

zP

= τ0δ(z, ¯ z)

  • 1. Diagonalize Q by a gauge transformation to a constant

diagonal matrix: Q = g diag(q1, · · · , qN)g −1 − ∂¯

zgg −1

= diag(q1, · · · , qN)g

  • 2. g is unique if we require g(z = 0) ∈ Gτ0
  • 3. Then we find

(∂¯

z − (qi − qj)) Pg ij = − (τ0)ij δ(z, ¯

z) which has a unique solution for Pg

ij .

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Intermezzo

Line bundles on an elliptic curve

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Intermezzo

Line bundles on an elliptic curve Solution to (∂¯

z + s) Φ = τδ(z, ¯

z) given in terms of Weierstrass σ and ζ function by Φ(z, s) = τ σ(z − νs) σ(z)σ(νs) exp(αsz − s¯ z) ν = 2 πi(ω1 ¯ ω2 − ¯ ω1ω2) α = 1 ω1 ( ¯ ω1 + νζ (ω1)) . where ω1 and ω2 are defined by ker (C → Σ) = 2ω1Z + 2ω2Z

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Diagonalizing by gauge transformations

◮ Similarly: sheaf of solutions to

¯ ∂ + ξ (z, ¯ z)

  • h = 0

(h ∈ G) forms a principal G-bundle Pξ

◮ Isomorphic iff there exists g ∈ G Σ

g ¯ ∂ + ξ (z, ¯ z)

  • g −1 = ¯

∂ + η(z, ¯ z) which is the gauge transformation action on ξ

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Diagonalizing by gauge transformations

◮ Similarly: sheaf of solutions to

¯ ∂ + ξ (z, ¯ z)

  • h = 0

(h ∈ G) forms a principal G-bundle Pξ

◮ Isomorphic iff there exists g ∈ G Σ

g ¯ ∂ + ξ (z, ¯ z)

  • g −1 = ¯

∂ + η(z, ¯ z) which is the gauge transformation action on ξ

◮ Assume 2ω1 = 1. Pull Pξ → Σ back to the cylinder

ˆ Pξ → C/Z. The pullback ˆ Pξ is trivial as a holomorphic bundle (G connected)

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Diagonalizing by gauge transformations

◮ Similarly: sheaf of solutions to

¯ ∂ + ξ (z, ¯ z)

  • h = 0

(h ∈ G) forms a principal G-bundle Pξ

◮ Isomorphic iff there exists g ∈ G Σ

g ¯ ∂ + ξ (z, ¯ z)

  • g −1 = ¯

∂ + η(z, ¯ z) which is the gauge transformation action on ξ

◮ Assume 2ω1 = 1. Pull Pξ → Σ back to the cylinder

ˆ Pξ → C/Z. The pullback ˆ Pξ is trivial as a holomorphic bundle (G connected)

◮ Then the holonomy along 2ω2 ∈ C/Z is almost always

conjugate to exp(2 ¯ ω2η) with η diagonal. Then Pξ Pη

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Solution to moment map constraint

Thanks to intermezzos: we can diagonalize Q and we can solve for Pij.

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Solution to moment map constraint

Thanks to intermezzos: we can diagonalize Q and we can solve for Pij. Therefore, p, q parametrize the Gµ0-equivalence classes in µ−1(µ0) by Q =            q1 ... qN            P =            p1 ϵΦ(z, qj − qi) ... ϵΦ(z, qj − qi) pN            and we can check that p, q are canonical coordinates.

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Hamiltonian

Pick coordinate z such that ν = 1. Then the Hamiltonian on the reduced space is H = 1 2 ˆ

Σ

Tr P2dzd¯ z = 1 2 ˆ

Σ

dzd¯ z

N

  • i=1

p2

i +

  • ij

ϵ2Φ(z, qj − qi)Φ(z, qi − qj) 1 2 ˆ

Σ

dzd¯ z

N

  • i=1

p2

i +

  • ij

ϵ2 (℘(z) − ℘(qj − qi)) = C ·         1 2

N

  • i=1

p2

i − ϵ2 i<j

℘(qj − qi)         + D

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Generalizations, research

◮ Can use other groups than SL(N): obtain interactions other

than pairwise

  • q → qi − qj
  • ◮ Can start with T ∨G Σ instead of T ∨gΣ. This is a

“deformation” that is often interpreted as a relativistic generalization: the Ruijsenaars-Schneider model

◮ Take other moment map values: usually leads to the

particles having internal degrees of freedom (“spin”)

◮ Other kinds of reductions: start with Poisson double instead

  • f symplectic manifold, or quasi-Hamiltonian manifold

◮ These reductions sometimes offer explanations of

Ruijsenaars dualities between different systems

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Main point

We have seen a complicated system of interacting particles that can be solved because it corresponds to a simple motion in the space of holomorphic principal SL(N)-bundles over an elliptic curve.

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References

◮ Khesin, B. and Wendt, R., The Geometry of

Infinite-Dimensional Groups, Springer (2008)

◮ Etingof, P.I., Lectures on Calogero-Moser systems, arXiv

preprint math/0606233 (2006)

◮ Etingof, P.I. and Frenkel, I.B., Central extensions of current

groups in two dimensions, Communications in Mathematical Physics 165-3 (1994)

◮ Calogero, F., Solution of the one-dimensional n-body

problems with quadratic and/or inversely quadratic pair potentials, Journal of Mathematical Physics, 12 (1971), 419–436.

◮ Marsden, J.E., Weinstein, A., Reduction of symplectic

manifolds with symmetry, Rep. Math. Phys., 5 (1974), 121–130.

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References (ctd)

◮ Fehér, L. and Klimcík, C., Self-duality of the compactified

Ruijsenaars-Schneider system from quasi-Hamiltonian reduction, arXiv preprint math-ph/1101.1759 (2011)

◮ Fehér, L. and Ayadi, V., Trigonometric Sutherland systems

and their Ruijsenaars duals from symplectic reduction, arXiv preprint math-ph/1005.4531 (2010)