Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Lie bialgebroid

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit

A Lie bialgebroid is a mathematical structure in the area of non-Riemannian differential geometry. In brief a Lie bialgebroid are two compatible Lie algebroids defined on dual vector bundles. They form the vector bundle version of a Lie bialgebra.

Contents

Preliminary notions

Remember that a Lie algebroid is defined as a skew-symmetric operation [.,.] on the sections Γ(A) of a vector bundle A→M over a smooth manifold M together with a vector bundle morphism ρ: A→TM subject to the Leibniz rule

[ ϕ , f ψ ] = ρ ( ϕ ) [ f ] ψ + f [ ϕ , ψ ] ,

and Jacobi identity

[ ϕ , [ ψ 1 , ψ 2 ] ] = [ [ ϕ , ψ 1 ] , ψ 2 ] + [ ψ 1 , [ ϕ , ψ 2 ] ]

where Φ, ψk are sections of A and f is a smooth function on M.

The Lie bracket [.,.]A can be extended to multivector fields Γ(⋀A) graded symmetric via the Leibniz rule

[ Φ Ψ , X ] A = Φ [ Ψ , X ] A + ( 1 ) | Ψ | ( | X | 1 ) [ Φ , X ] A Ψ

for homogeneous multivector fields Φ, Ψ, Χ.

The Lie algebroid differential is an R-linear operator dA on the A-forms ΩA(M) = Γ(⋀A*) of degree 1 subject to the Leibniz-rule

d A ( α β ) = ( d A α ) β + ( 1 ) | α | α d A β

for A-forms α and β. It is uniquely characterized by the conditions

( d A f ) ( ϕ ) = ρ ( ϕ ) [ f ]

and

( d A α ) [ ϕ , ψ ] = ρ ( ϕ ) [ α ( ψ ) ] ρ ( ψ ) [ α ( ϕ ) ] α [ ϕ , ψ ]

for functions f on M, A-1-forms α∈Γ(A*) and Φ, ψ sections of A.

The definition

A Lie bialgebroid are two Lie algebroids (AA,[.,.]A) and (A**,[.,.]*) on dual vector bundles A→M and A*M subject to the compatibility

d [ ϕ , ψ ] A = [ d ϕ , ψ ] A + [ ϕ , d ψ ] A

for all sections Φ, ψ of A. Here d* denotes the Lie algebroid differential of A* which also operates on the multivector fields Γ(∧A).

Symmetry of the definition

It can be shown that the definition is symmetric in A and A*, i.e. (A,A*) is a Lie bialgebroid iff (A*,A) is.

Examples

1. A Lie bialgebra are two Lie algebras (g,[.,.]g) and (g*,[.,.]*) on dual vector spaces g and g* such that the Chevalley–Eilenberg differential δ* is a derivation of the g-bracket.

2. A Poisson manifold (M,π) gives naturally rise to a Lie bialgebroid on TM (with the commutator bracket of tangent vector fields) and T*M with the Lie bracket induced by the Poisson structure. The T*M-differential is d*= [π, .] and the compatibility follows then from the Jacobi-identity of the Schouten bracket.

Infinitesimal version of a Poisson groupoid

It is well known that the infinitesimal version of a Lie groupoid is a Lie algebroid. (As a special case the infinitesimal version of a Lie group is a Lie algebra.) Therefore, one can ask which structures need to be differentiated in order to obtain a Lie bialgebroid.

Definition of Poisson groupoid

A Poisson groupoid is a Lie groupoid (GM) together with a Poisson structure π on G such that the multiplication graph mG×G×(G,−π) is coisotropic. An example of a Poisson Lie groupoid is a Poisson Lie group (where M=pt, just a point). Another example is a symplectic groupoid (where the Poisson structure is non-degenerate on TG).

Differentiation of the structure

Remember the construction of a Lie algebroid from a Lie groupoid. We take the t-tangent fibers (or equivalently the s-tangent fibers) and consider their vector bundle pulled back to the base manifold M. A section of this vector bundle can be identified with a G-invariant t-vector field on G which form a Lie algebra with respect to the commutator bracket on TG.

We thus take the Lie algebroid A→M of the Poisson groupoid. It can be shown that the Poisson structure induces a fiber-linear Poisson structure on A. Analogous to the construction of the cotangent Lie algebroid of a Poisson manifold there is a Lie algebroid structure on A* induced by this Poisson structure. Analogous to the Poisson manifold case one can show that A and A* form a Lie bialgebroid.

Double of a Lie bialgebroid and superlanguage of Lie bialgebroids

For Lie bialgebroids (g,g*) there is the notion of Manin triples, i.e. c=g+g* can be endowed with the structure of a Lie algebra such that g and g* are subalgebras and c contains the representation of g on g*, vice versa. The sum structure is just

[ X + α , Y + β ] = [ X , Y ] g + a d α Y a d β X + [ α , β ] + a d X β a d Y α .

Courant algebroids

It turns out that the naive generalization to Lie algebroids does not give a Lie algebroid any more. Instead one has to modify either the Jacobi identity or violate the skew-symmetry and is thus lead to Courant algebroids.

Superlanguage

The appropriate superlanguage of a Lie algebroid A is ΠA, the supermanifold whose space of (super)functions are the A-forms. On this space the Lie algebroid can be encoded via its Lie algebroid differential, which is just an odd vector field.

As a first guess the super-realization of a Lie bialgebroid (A,A*) should be ΠA+ΠA*. But unfortunately dA +d*|ΠA+ΠA* is not a differential, basically because A+A* is not a Lie algebroid. Instead using the larger N-graded manifold T*[2]A[1] = T*[2]A*[1] to which we can lift dA and d* as odd Hamiltonian vector fields, then their sum squares to 0 iff (A,A*) is a Lie bialgebroid.

References

Lie bialgebroid Wikipedia