Mirror symmetry conjecture

In mathematics, mirror symmetry is a conjectural relationship between certain Calabi–Yau manifolds and a constructed "mirror manifold". The conjecture allows one to relate the number of rational curves on a Calabi-Yau manifold (encoded as Gromov–Witten invariants) to integrals from a family of varieties (encoded as period integrals on a variation of Hodge structures). In short, this means there is a relation between the number of genus algebraic curves of degree on a Calabi-Yau variety and integrals on a dual variety . These relations were original discovered by Candelas, de la Ossa, Green, and Parkes[1] in a paper studying a generic quintic threefold in as the variety and a construction[2] from the quintic Dwork family giving . Shortly after, Sheldon Katz wrote a summary paper[3] outlining part of their construction and conjectures what the rigorous mathematical interpretation could be.

Constructing the mirror of a quintic threefold edit

Originally, the construction of mirror manifolds was discovered through an ad-hoc procedure. Essentially, to a generic quintic threefold   there should be associated a one-parameter family of Calabi-Yau manifolds   which has multiple singularities. After blowing up these singularities, they are resolved and a new Calabi-Yau manifold   was constructed. which had a flipped Hodge diamond. In particular, there are isomorphisms

 
but most importantly, there is an isomorphism
 
where the string theory (the A-model of  ) for states in   is interchanged with the string theory (the B-model of  ) having states in  . The string theory in the A-model only depended upon the Kahler or symplectic structure on   while the B-model only depends upon the complex structure on  . Here we outline the original construction of mirror manifolds, and consider the string-theoretic background and conjecture with the mirror manifolds in a later section of this article.

Complex moduli edit

Recall that a generic quintic threefold[2][4]   in   is defined by a homogeneous polynomial of degree  . This polynomial is equivalently described as a global section of the line bundle  .[1][5] Notice the vector space of global sections has dimension

 
but there are two equivalences of these polynomials. First, polynomials under scaling by the algebraic torus  [6] (non-zero scalers of the base field) given equivalent spaces. Second, projective equivalence is given by the automorphism group of  ,   which is   dimensional. This gives a   dimensional parameter space
 
since  , which can be constructed using Geometric invariant theory. The set   corresponds to the equivalence classes of polynomials which define smooth Calabi-Yau quintic threefolds in  , giving a moduli space of Calabi-Yau quintics.[7] Now, using Serre duality and the fact each Calabi-Yau manifold has trivial canonical bundle  , the space of deformations has an isomorphism
 
with the   part of the Hodge structure on  . Using the Lefschetz hyperplane theorem the only non-trivial cohomology group is   since the others are isomorphic to  . Using the Euler characteristic and the Euler class, which is the top Chern class, the dimension of this group is  . This is because
 
Using the Hodge structure we can find the dimensions of each of the components. First, because   is Calabi-Yau,   so
 
giving the Hodge numbers  , hence
 
giving the dimension of the moduli space of Calabi-Yau manifolds. Because of the Bogomolev-Tian-Todorov theorem, all such deformations are unobstructed, so the smooth space   is in fact the moduli space of quintic threefolds. The whole point of this construction is to show how the complex parameters in this moduli space are converted into Kähler parameters of the mirror manifold.

Mirror manifold edit

There is a distinguished family of Calabi-Yau manifolds   called the Dwork family. It is the projective family

 
over the complex plane  . Now, notice there is only a single dimension of complex deformations of this family, coming from   having varying values. This is important because the Hodge diamond of the mirror manifold   has
 
Anyway, the family   has symmetry group
 
acting by
 
Notice the projectivity of   is the reason for the condition
 
The associated quotient variety   has a crepant resolution given[2][5] by blowing up the   singularities
 
giving a new Calabi-Yau manifold   with   parameters in  . This is the mirror manifold and has   where each Hodge number is  .

Ideas from string theory edit

In string theory there is a class of models called non-linear sigma models which study families of maps   where   is a genus   algebraic curve and   is Calabi-Yau. These curves   are called world-sheets and represent the birth and death of a particle as a closed string. Since a string could split over time into two strings, or more, and eventually these strings will come together and collapse at the end of the lifetime of the particle, an algebraic curve mathematically represents this string lifetime. For simplicity, only genus 0 curves were considered originally, and many of the results popularized in mathematics focused only on this case.

Also, in physics terminology, these theories are   heterotic string theories because they have   supersymmetry that comes in a pair, so really there are four supersymmetries. This is important because it implies there is a pair of operators

 
acting on the Hilbert space of states, but only defined up to a sign. This ambiguity is what originally suggested to physicists there should exist a pair of Calabi-Yau manifolds which have dual string theories, one's that exchange this ambiguity between one another.

The space   has a complex structure, which is an integrable almost-complex structure  , and because it is a Kähler manifold it necessarily has a symplectic structure   called the Kähler form which can be complexified to a complexified Kähler form

 
which is a closed  -form, hence its cohomology class is in
 
The main idea behind the Mirror Symmetry conjectures is to study the deformations, or moduli, of the complex structure   and the complexified symplectic structure   in a way that makes these two dual to each other. In particular, from a physics perspective,[8]: 1–2  the super conformal field theory of a Calabi-Yau manifold   should be equivalent to the dual super conformal field theory of the mirror manifold  . Here conformal means conformal equivalence which is the same as and equivalence class of complex structures on the curve  .

There are two variants of the non-linear sigma models called the A-model and the B-model which consider the pairs   and   and their moduli.[9]: ch 38 pg 729 

A-model edit

Correlation functions from String theory edit

Given a Calabi-Yau manifold   with complexified Kähler class   the nonlinear sigma model of the string theory should contain the three generations of particles, plus the electromagnetic, weak, and strong forces.[10]: 27  In order to understand how these forces interact, a three-point function called the Yukawa coupling is introduced which acts as the correlation function for states in  . Note this space is the eigenspace of an operator   on the Hilbert space of states for the string theory.[8]: 3–5  This three point function is "computed" as

 
using Feynman path-integral techniques where the   are the naive number of rational curves with homology class  , and  . Defining these instanton numbers   is the subject matter of Gromov–Witten theory. Note that in the definition of this correlation function, it only depends on the Kahler class. This inspired some mathematicians to study hypothetical moduli spaces of Kahler structures on a manifold.

Mathematical interpretation of A-model correlation functions edit

In the A-model the corresponding moduli space are the moduli of pseudoholomorphic curves[11]: 153 

 
or the Kontsevich moduli spaces[12]
 
These moduli spaces can be equipped with a virtual fundamental class
 
or
 
which is represented as the vanishing locus of a section   of a sheaf called the Obstruction sheaf   over the moduli space. This section comes from the differential equation
 
which can be viewed as a perturbation of the map  . It can also be viewed as the Poincaré dual of the Euler class of   if it is a Vector bundle.

With the original construction, the A-model considered was on a generic quintic threefold in  .[9]

B-model edit

Correlation functions from String theory edit

For the same Calabi-Yau manifold   in the A-model subsection, there is a dual superconformal field theory which has states in the eigenspace   of the operator  . Its three-point correlation function is defined as

 
where   is a holomorphic 3-form on   and for an infinitesimal deformation   (since   is the tangent space of the moduli space of Calabi-Yau manifolds containing  , by the Kodaira–Spencer map and the Bogomolev-Tian-Todorov theorem) there is the Gauss-Manin connection   taking a   class to a   class, hence
 
can be integrated on  . Note that this correlation function only depends on the complex structure of  .
Another formulation of Gauss-Manin connection edit

The action of the cohomology classes   on the   can also be understood as a cohomological variant of the interior product. Locally, the class   corresponds to a Cech cocycle   for some nice enough cover   giving a section  . Then, the insertion product gives an element

 
which can be glued back into an element   of  . This is because on the overlaps
 
 
giving
 
hence it defines a 1-cocycle. Repeating this process gives a 3-cocycle
 
which is equal to  . This is because locally the Gauss-Manin connection acts as the interior product.

Mathematical interpretation of B-model correlation functions edit

Mathematically, the B-model is a variation of hodge structures which was originally given by the construction from the Dwork family.

Mirror conjecture edit

Relating these two models of string theory by resolving the ambiguity of sign for the operators   led physicists to the following conjecture:[8]: 22  for a Calabi-Yau manifold   there should exist a mirror Calabi-Yau manifold   such that there exists a mirror isomorphism

 
giving the compatibility of the associated A-model and B-model. This means given   and   such that   under the mirror map, there is the equality of correlation functions
 
This is significant because it relates the number of degree   genus   curves on a quintic threefold   in   (so  ) to integrals in a variation of Hodge structures. Moreover, these integrals are actually computable!

See also edit

External links edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Candelas, Philip; De La Ossa, Xenia C.; Green, Paul S.; Parkes, Linda (1991-07-29). "A pair of Calabi-Yau manifolds as an exactly soluble superconformal theory". Nuclear Physics B. 359 (1): 21–74. Bibcode:1991NuPhB.359...21C. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(91)90292-6. ISSN 0550-3213.
  2. ^ a b c Auroux, Dennis. "The Quintic 3-fold and Its Mirror" (PDF).
  3. ^ Katz, Sheldon (1993-12-29). "Rational curves on Calabi-Yau threefolds". arXiv:alg-geom/9312009.
  4. ^ for example, as a set, a Calabi-Yau manifold is the subset of complex projective space 
  5. ^ a b Morrison, David R. (1993). "Mirror symmetry and rational curves on quintic threefolds: a guide for mathematicians". J. Amer. Math. Soc. 6: 223–247. arXiv:alg-geom/9202004. doi:10.1090/S0894-0347-1993-1179538-2. S2CID 9228037.
  6. ^ Which can be thought of as the  -action on   constructing the complex projective space  
  7. ^ More generally, such moduli spaces are constructed using projective equivalence of schemes in a fixed projective space on a fixed Hilbert scheme
  8. ^ a b c Cox, David A.; Katz, Sheldon (1999). Mirror symmetry and algebraic geometry. American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0-8218-2127-5. OCLC 903477225.
  9. ^ a b Pandharipande, Rahul; Hori, Kentaro (2003). Mirror symmetry. Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society. ISBN 0-8218-2955-6. OCLC 52374327.
  10. ^ Hamilton, M. J. D. (2020-07-24). "The Higgs boson for mathematicians. Lecture notes on gauge theory and symmetry breaking". arXiv:1512.02632 [math.DG].
  11. ^ McDuff, Dusa (2012). J-holomorphic curves and symplectic topology. Salamon, D. (Dietmar) (2nd ed.). Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0-8218-8746-2. OCLC 794640223.
  12. ^ Kontsevich, M.; Manin, Yu (1994). "Gromov-Witten classes, quantum cohomology, and enumerative geometry". Communications in Mathematical Physics. 164 (3): 525–562. arXiv:hep-th/9402147. Bibcode:1994CMaPh.164..525K. doi:10.1007/BF02101490. ISSN 0010-3616. S2CID 18626455.

Books/Notes edit

First proofs edit

Derived geometry in Mirror symmetry edit

Research edit

Homological mirror symmetry edit