| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Merit Products: Catalog: Manifolds & Stopcocks: Merit® Manifolds merit.com | exercise video instructors: Kathy Kaehler videofitness.com | Kathy Kaehler Total Body Workout: 6 Ten Minute Workouts fitnessfly.com | Kathy Kaehler Fitness kathykaehlerfitness.com |
In mathematics, a Kähler manifold is a manifold with unitary structure (a U(n)-structure) satisfying an integrability condition. In particular, it is a Riemannian manifold, a complex manifold, and a symplectic manifold, with these three structures all mutually compatible. This threefold structure corresponds to the presentation of the unitary group as an intersection: Without any integrability conditions, the analogous notion is an almost Hermitian manifold. If the Sp-structure is integrable (but the complex structure need not be), the notion is an almost Kähler manifold; if the complex structure is integrable (but the Sp-structure need not be), the notion is a Hermitian manifold. Kähler manifolds are named after the mathematician Erich Kähler and are important in algebraic geometry: they are a differential geometric generalization of complex algebraic varieties.
[edit] DefinitionA manifold with a Hermitian metric is an almost Hermitian manifold; a Kähler manifold is a manifold with a Hermitian metric that satisfies an integrability condition, which has several equivalent formulations. Kähler manifolds can be characterized in many ways: they are often defined as a complex manifold with an additional structure (or a symplectic manifold with an additional structure, or a Riemannian manifold with an additional structure). One can summarize the connection between the three structures via h = g + iω, where h is the Hermitian form, g is the Riemannian metric, i is the almost complex structure, and ω is the almost symplectic structure. A Kähler metric on a complex manifold M is a hermitian metric on the tangent bundle TM satisfying a condition that has several equivalent characterizations (the most geometric being that parallel transport induced by the metric gives rise to complex-linear mappings on the tangent spaces). In terms of local coordinates it is specified in this way: if is the hermitian metric, then the associated Kähler form defined (up to a factor of i/2) by is closed: that is, dω = 0. If M carries such a metric it is called a Kähler manifold. The metric on a Kähler manifold locally satisfies for some function K, called the Kähler potential. A Kähler manifold, the associated Kähler form and metric are called Kähler-Einstein (or sometimes Einstein-Kähler) iff its Ricci tensor is proportional to the metric tensor, R = λg, for some constant λ. This name is a reminder of Einstein's considerations about the cosmological constant. See the article on Einstein manifolds for more details. [edit] Examples
An important subclass of Kähler manifolds are Calabi–Yau manifolds. [edit] Properties(Deligne et al. 1975) showed that all Massey products vanish on a Kähler manifold. Manifolds with such vanishing are formal: their real homotopy type follows ("formally") from their real cohomology ring. [edit] See also
[edit] References
|
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |