Metaplectic structure

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In differential geometry, a metaplectic structure is the symplectic analog of spin structure on orientable Riemannian manifolds. A metaplectic structure on a symplectic manifold allows one to define the symplectic spinor bundle, which is the Hilbert space bundle associated to the metaplectic structure via the metaplectic representation, giving rise to the notion of a symplectic spinor field in differential geometry.

Symplectic spin structures have wide applications to mathematical physics, in particular to quantum field theory where they are an essential ingredient in establishing the idea that symplectic spin geometry and symplectic Dirac operators may give valuable tools in symplectic geometry and symplectic topology. They are also of purely mathematical interest in differential geometry, algebraic topology, and K theory. They form the foundation for symplectic spin geometry.

Formal definition

A metaplectic structure [1] on a symplectic manifold (M,ω) is an equivariant lift of the symplectic frame bundle π𝐑:𝐑M with respect to the double covering ρ:Mp(n,ℝ)Sp(n,ℝ). In other words, a pair (𝐏,F𝐏) is a metaplectic structure on the principal bundle π𝐑:𝐑M when

a) π𝐏:𝐏M is a principal Mp(n,ℝ)-bundle over M,
b) F𝐏:𝐏𝐑 is an equivariant 2-fold covering map such that
π𝐑F𝐏=π𝐏 and F𝐏(𝐩q)=F𝐏(𝐩)ρ(q) for all 𝐩𝐏 and qMp(n,ℝ).

The principal bundle π𝐏:𝐏M is also called the bundle of metaplectic frames over M.

Two metaplectic structures (𝐏1,F𝐏1) and (𝐏2,F𝐏2) on the same symplectic manifold (M,ω) are called equivalent if there exists a Mp(n,ℝ)-equivariant map f:𝐏1𝐏2 such that

F𝐏2f=F𝐏1 and f(𝐩q)=f(𝐩)q for all 𝐩𝐏1 and qMp(n,ℝ).

Of course, in this case F𝐏1 and F𝐏2 are two equivalent double coverings of the symplectic frame Sp(n,ℝ)-bundle π𝐑:𝐑M of the given symplectic manifold (M,ω).

Obstruction

Since every symplectic manifold M is necessarily of even dimension and orientable, one can prove that the topological obstruction to the existence of metaplectic structures is precisely the same as in Riemannian spin geometry.[2] In other words, a symplectic manifold (M,ω) admits a metaplectic structures if and only if the second Stiefel-Whitney class w2(M)H2(M,β„€2) of M vanishes. In fact, the modulo 2 reduction of the first Chern class c1(M)H2(M,β„€) is the second Stiefel-Whitney class w2(M). Hence, (M,ω) admits metaplectic structures if and only if c1(M) is even, i.e., if and only if w2(M) is zero.

If this is the case, the isomorphy classes of metaplectic structures on (M,ω) are classified by the first cohomology group H1(M,β„€2) of M with β„€2-coefficients.

As the manifold M is assumed to be oriented, the first Stiefel-Whitney class w1(M)H1(M,β„€2) of M vanishes too.

Examples

Manifolds admitting a metaplectic structure

  • Phase spaces (TN,θ), N any orientable manifold.
  • Complex projective spaces β„™2k+1β„‚, kβ„•0. Since β„™2k+1β„‚ is simply connected, such a structure has to be unique.
  • Grassmannian Gr(2,4), etc.

See also

Notes

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References