Hyperkaehler Geometry with Applications

Lead Research Organisation: University of Oxford
Department Name: Mathematical Institute

Abstract

What is common in (1) the existence of a magnet with a single pole (2) the reliability of computer networks and (3) code theory and code breaking? The proposed research provides an answer: these scientific problems can all be attacked using quaternionic geometry. Quaternions are four dimensional analogues of complex numbers. For problem (1) one can study magnetic monopoles using quaternionic equations. The possible existence of these and similar elementary particles could lead to new energy sources. For (2) the proposed research shows that the number of holes on a certain quaternionic surface attached to a graph agrees with the reliability polynomial of a computer network based on the graph. Qualitative properties of this reliability polynomial, obtained from the study of the geometry of quaternionic surfaces, help explain how to make computer networks, like the internet, more reliable. In (3) arithmetic study of certain quaternionic surfaces sheds light on the representation theory of finite groups of Lie type, which are used in various schemes in code theory. Information emerging from the geometry of these quaternionic surfaces, could help devise better codes. In short, the proposed research is two-folded, first it studies fundamental problems in quaternionic geometry, and second it breaths life into these investigations by applying the results to other fields in mathematics and physics. This yields a colourful palette of various fields in mathematics and physics all related in one way or another to quaternionic geometry.This proposal therefore aims to understand the global analysis, geometry, topology and arithmetic of complete hyperkaehler manifolds of non-compact type and find exciting applications in other fields of mathematics and physics, where these manifolds naturally appear. The proposed research has two main aspects: studying fundamental questions for non-compact hyperkaehler manifolds, such as Hodge theory and the Atiyah-Singer index theorem, and applying these methods in other fields. The hyperkaehler spaces appearing in this proposal include: moduli spaces of Yang-Mills instantons on asymptotically locally Euclidean gravitational instantons; more generally Nakajima's quiver varieties; toric hyperkaehler varieties; moduli spaces of magnetic monopoles on R^3; moduli spaces of Higgs bundles on a Riemann surface; and more generally hyperkaehler spaces appearing in the non-Abelian Hodge theory of a curve (like moduli of flat GL(n,C)-connections and character varieties) and in the Geometric Langlands Program. The fields of applications include: combinatorics, representation theory, finite group theory, low dimensional topology, number theory, mathematical physics and string theory.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Several exiting projects in pure mathematics, at the interface of geometry, number theory and theoretical physics, have been concluded with support from this grant.

Dr Hausel and his team established further links between number theoretic results related to the Langlands programme, and the geometry of the moduli space of Higgs bundles. The Langlands programme is a vast set of conjectures in number theory, generalizing Wiles' results which he established as part of his proof of Fermat's Last Theorem. The Higgs bundle moduli spaces, as set of hyperkahler structures, were introduced by Nigel Hitchin in 1987, motivated by equations in mathematical physics similar to ones describing the now famous Higgs particle.

Dr Mozgovoy, partly in collaboration with Dr Szendroi, has written a series of papers on refined Donaldson-Thomas invariants, an algebraic version of invariants originally arising in string theory, understanding their structure in a set of geometrically and algebraically motivated examples.

Using the same framework, and building also on his earlier work on a set of hyperkahler manifolds called Nakajima quicer varieties, Dr Hausel solved a 30 year old conjecture of Kac in the representation theory of oriented graphs.

Dr Szendroi's work established a firm connection between the geometry of instanton moduli spaces, a particular case of Nakajima's quiver varieties, to a cohomological version of Donaldson-Thomas invariants.
Exploitation Route The research will motivate further research in these directions in pure mathematics.
Sectors Education

 
Description The research performed is research in fundamental pure mathematics. The papers written have formed the basis of further work by the Investigators and others, as evidenced by the references the papers have already attracted.
 
Description EPSRC Grant Topological mirror symmetry
Amount £156,985 (GBP)
Funding ID EP/I020519/1 
Organisation Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2011 
End 09/2013
 
Description EPSRC Programme Grant Motivic invariants and categorification
Amount £1,859,687 (GBP)
Funding ID EP/I033343/1 
Organisation Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2011 
End 09/2017
 
Description ERC grant Arithmetic and physics of Higgs moduli spaces
Amount £1,099,512 (GBP)
Funding ID AriPhyHiMo 
Organisation European Research Council (ERC) 
Sector Public
Country Belgium
Start 10/2013 
End 09/2018