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Atiyah–Singer index theorem

In differential geometry, the Atiyah–Singer index theorem, proved by Michael Atiyah and Isadore Singer (1963),[1] states that for an elliptic differential operator on a compact manifold, the analytical index (related to the dimension of the space of solutions) is equal to the topological index (defined in terms of some topological data). It includes many other theorems, such as the Chern–Gauss–Bonnet theorem and Riemann–Roch theorem, as special cases, and has applications to theoretical physics.[2][3]

History edit

The index problem for elliptic differential operators was posed by Israel Gel'fand.[4] He noticed the homotopy invariance of the index, and asked for a formula for it by means of topological invariants. Some of the motivating examples included the Riemann–Roch theorem and its generalization the Hirzebruch–Riemann–Roch theorem, and the Hirzebruch signature theorem. Friedrich Hirzebruch and Armand Borel had proved the integrality of the  genus of a spin manifold, and Atiyah suggested that this integrality could be explained if it were the index of the Dirac operator (which was rediscovered by Atiyah and Singer in 1961).

The Atiyah–Singer theorem was announced in 1963.[1] The proof sketched in this announcement was never published by them, though it appears in Palais's book.[5] It appears also in the "Séminaire Cartan-Schwartz 1963/64"[6] that was held in Paris simultaneously with the seminar led by Richard Palais at Princeton University. The last talk in Paris was by Atiyah on manifolds with boundary. Their first published proof[7] replaced the cobordism theory of the first proof with K-theory, and they used this to give proofs of various generalizations in another sequence of papers.[8]

  • 1965: Sergey P. Novikov published his results on the topological invariance of the rational Pontryagin classes on smooth manifolds.[9]
  • Robion Kirby and Laurent C. Siebenmann's results,[10] combined with René Thom's paper[11] proved the existence of rational Pontryagin classes on topological manifolds. The rational Pontryagin classes are essential ingredients of the index theorem on smooth and topological manifolds.
  • 1969: Michael Atiyah defines abstract elliptic operators on arbitrary metric spaces. Abstract elliptic operators became protagonists in Kasparov's theory and Connes's noncommutative differential geometry.[12]
  • 1971: Isadore Singer proposes a comprehensive program for future extensions of index theory.[13]
  • 1972: Gennadi G. Kasparov publishes his work on the realization of K-homology by abstract elliptic operators.[14]
  • 1973: Atiyah, Raoul Bott, and Vijay Patodi gave a new proof of the index theorem[15] using the heat equation, described in a paper by Melrose.[16]
  • 1977: Dennis Sullivan establishes his theorem on the existence and uniqueness of Lipschitz and quasiconformal structures on topological manifolds of dimension different from 4.[17]
  • 1983: Ezra Getzler[18] motivated by ideas of Edward Witten[19] and Luis Alvarez-Gaume, gave a short proof of the local index theorem for operators that are locally Dirac operators; this covers many of the useful cases.
  • 1983: Nicolae Teleman proves that the analytical indices of signature operators with values in vector bundles are topological invariants.[20]
  • 1984: Teleman establishes the index theorem on topological manifolds.[21]
  • 1986: Alain Connes publishes his fundamental paper on noncommutative geometry.[22]
  • 1989: Simon K. Donaldson and Sullivan study Yang–Mills theory on quasiconformal manifolds of dimension 4. They introduce the signature operator S defined on differential forms of degree two.[23]
  • 1990: Connes and Henri Moscovici prove the local index formula in the context of non-commutative geometry.[24]
  • 1994: Connes, Sullivan, and Teleman prove the index theorem for signature operators on quasiconformal manifolds.[25]

Notation edit

  • X is a compact smooth manifold (without boundary).
  • E and F are smooth vector bundles over X.
  • D is an elliptic differential operator from E to F. So in local coordinates it acts as a differential operator, taking smooth sections of E to smooth sections of F.

Symbol of a differential operator edit

If D is a differential operator on a Euclidean space of order n in k variables  , then its symbol is the function of 2k variables  , given by dropping all terms of order less than n and replacing   by  . So the symbol is homogeneous in the variables y, of degree n. The symbol is well defined even though   does not commute with   because we keep only the highest order terms and differential operators commute "up to lower-order terms". The operator is called elliptic if the symbol is nonzero whenever at least one y is nonzero.

Example: The Laplace operator in k variables has symbol  , and so is elliptic as this is nonzero whenever any of the  's are nonzero. The wave operator has symbol  , which is not elliptic if  , as the symbol vanishes for some non-zero values of the ys.

The symbol of a differential operator of order n on a smooth manifold X is defined in much the same way using local coordinate charts, and is a function on the cotangent bundle of X, homogeneous of degree n on each cotangent space. (In general, differential operators transform in a rather complicated way under coordinate transforms (see jet bundle); however, the highest order terms transform like tensors so we get well defined homogeneous functions on the cotangent spaces that are independent of the choice of local charts.) More generally, the symbol of a differential operator between two vector bundles E and F is a section of the pullback of the bundle Hom(E, F) to the cotangent space of X. The differential operator is called elliptic if the element of Hom(Ex, Fx) is invertible for all non-zero cotangent vectors at any point x of X.

A key property of elliptic operators is that they are almost invertible; this is closely related to the fact that their symbols are almost invertible. More precisely, an elliptic operator D on a compact manifold has a (non-unique) parametrix (or pseudoinverse) D′ such that DD′ -1 and D′D -1 are both compact operators. An important consequence is that the kernel of D is finite-dimensional, because all eigenspaces of compact operators, other than the kernel, are finite-dimensional. (The pseudoinverse of an elliptic differential operator is almost never a differential operator. However, it is an elliptic pseudodifferential operator.)

Analytical index edit

As the elliptic differential operator D has a pseudoinverse, it is a Fredholm operator. Any Fredholm operator has an index, defined as the difference between the (finite) dimension of the kernel of D (solutions of Df = 0), and the (finite) dimension of the cokernel of D (the constraints on the right-hand-side of an inhomogeneous equation like Df = g, or equivalently the kernel of the adjoint operator). In other words,

Index(D) = dim Ker(D) − dim Coker(D) = dim Ker(D) − dim Ker(D*).

This is sometimes called the analytical index of D.

Example: Suppose that the manifold is the circle (thought of as R/Z), and D is the operator d/dx − λ for some complex constant λ. (This is the simplest example of an elliptic operator.) Then the kernel is the space of multiples of exp(λx) if λ is an integral multiple of 2πi and is 0 otherwise, and the kernel of the adjoint is a similar space with λ replaced by its complex conjugate. So D has index 0. This example shows that the kernel and cokernel of elliptic operators can jump discontinuously as the elliptic operator varies, so there is no nice formula for their dimensions in terms of continuous topological data. However the jumps in the dimensions of the kernel and cokernel are the same, so the index, given by the difference of their dimensions, does indeed vary continuously, and can be given in terms of topological data by the index theorem.

Topological index edit

The topological index of an elliptic differential operator   between smooth vector bundles   and   on an  -dimensional compact manifold   is given by

 

in other words the value of the top dimensional component of the mixed cohomology class   on the fundamental homology class of the manifold   up to a difference of sign. Here,

  •   is the Todd class of the complexified tangent bundle of  .
  •   is equal to  , where
    •   is the Thom isomorphism for the sphere bundle  
    •   is the Chern character
    •   is the "difference element" in   associated to two vector bundles   and   on   and an isomorphism   between them on the subspace  .
    •   is the symbol of  

In some situations, it is possible to simplify the above formula for computational purposes. In particular, if   is a  -dimensional orientable (compact) manifold with non-zero Euler class  , then applying the Thom isomorphism and dividing by the Euler class,[26][27] the topological index may be expressed as

 

where division makes sense by pulling   back from the cohomology ring of the classifying space  .

One can also define the topological index using only K-theory (and this alternative definition is compatible in a certain sense with the Chern-character construction above). If X is a compact submanifold of a manifold Y then there is a pushforward (or "shriek") map from K(TX) to K(TY). The topological index of an element of K(TX) is defined to be the image of this operation with Y some Euclidean space, for which K(TY) can be naturally identified with the integers Z (as a consequence of Bott-periodicity). This map is independent of the embedding of X in Euclidean space. Now a differential operator as above naturally defines an element of K(TX), and the image in Z under this map "is" the topological index.

As usual, D is an elliptic differential operator between vector bundles E and F over a compact manifold X.

The index problem is the following: compute the (analytical) index of D using only the symbol s and topological data derived from the manifold and the vector bundle. The Atiyah–Singer index theorem solves this problem, and states:

The analytical index of D is equal to its topological index.

In spite of its formidable definition, the topological index is usually straightforward to evaluate explicitly. So this makes it possible to evaluate the analytical index. (The cokernel and kernel of an elliptic operator are in general extremely hard to evaluate individually; the index theorem shows that we can usually at least evaluate their difference.) Many important invariants of a manifold (such as the signature) can be given as the index of suitable differential operators, so the index theorem allows us to evaluate these invariants in terms of topological data.

Although the analytical index is usually hard to evaluate directly, it is at least obviously an integer. The topological index is by definition a rational number, but it is usually not at all obvious from the definition that it is also integral. So the Atiyah–Singer index theorem implies some deep integrality properties, as it implies that the topological index is integral.

The index of an elliptic differential operator obviously vanishes if the operator is self adjoint. It also vanishes if the manifold X has odd dimension, though there are pseudodifferential elliptic operators whose index does not vanish in odd dimensions.

Relation to Grothendieck–Riemann–Roch edit

The Grothendieck–Riemann–Roch theorem was one of the main motivations behind the index theorem because the index theorem is the counterpart of this theorem in the setting of real manifolds. Now, if there's a map   of compact stably almost complex manifolds, then there is a commutative diagram[28]

 

if   is a point, then we recover the statement above. Here   is the Grothendieck group of complex vector bundles. This commutative diagram is formally very similar to the GRR theorem because the cohomology groups on the right are replaced by the Chow ring of a smooth variety, and the Grothendieck group on the left is given by the Grothendieck group of algebraic vector bundles.

Extensions of the Atiyah–Singer index theorem edit

Teleman index theorem edit

Due to (Teleman 1983), (Teleman 1984):

For any abstract elliptic operator (Atiyah 1970) on a closed, oriented, topological manifold, the analytical index equals the topological index.

The proof of this result goes through specific considerations, including the extension of Hodge theory on combinatorial and Lipschitz manifolds (Teleman 1980), (Teleman 1983), the extension of Atiyah–Singer's signature operator to Lipschitz manifolds (Teleman 1983), Kasparov's K-homology (Kasparov 1972) and topological cobordism (Kirby & Siebenmann 1977).

This result shows that the index theorem is not merely a differentiability statement, but rather a topological statement.

Connes–Donaldson–Sullivan–Teleman index theorem edit

Due to (Donaldson & Sullivan 1989), (Connes, Sullivan & Teleman 1994):

For any quasiconformal manifold there exists a local construction of the Hirzebruch–Thom characteristic classes.

This theory is based on a signature operator S, defined on middle degree differential forms on even-dimensional quasiconformal manifolds (compare (Donaldson & Sullivan 1989)).

Using topological cobordism and K-homology one may provide a full statement of an index theorem on quasiconformal manifolds (see page 678 of (Connes, Sullivan & Teleman 1994)). The work (Connes, Sullivan & Teleman 1994) "provides local constructions for characteristic classes based on higher dimensional relatives of the measurable Riemann mapping in dimension two and the Yang–Mills theory in dimension four."

These results constitute significant advances along the lines of Singer's program Prospects in Mathematics (Singer 1971). At the same time, they provide, also, an effective construction of the rational Pontrjagin classes on topological manifolds. The paper (Teleman 1985) provides a link between Thom's original construction of the rational Pontrjagin classes (Thom 1956) and index theory.

It is important to mention that the index formula is a topological statement. The obstruction theories due to Milnor, Kervaire, Kirby, Siebenmann, Sullivan, Donaldson show that only a minority of topological manifolds possess differentiable structures and these are not necessarily unique. Sullivan's result on Lipschitz and quasiconformal structures (Sullivan 1979) shows that any topological manifold in dimension different from 4 possesses such a structure which is unique (up to isotopy close to identity).

The quasiconformal structures (Connes, Sullivan & Teleman 1994) and more generally the Lp-structures, p > n(n+1)/2, introduced by M. Hilsum (Hilsum 1999), are the weakest analytical structures on topological manifolds of dimension n for which the index theorem is known to hold.

Other extensions edit

  • The Atiyah–Singer theorem applies to elliptic pseudodifferential operators in much the same way as for elliptic differential operators. In fact, for technical reasons most of the early proofs worked with pseudodifferential rather than differential operators: their extra flexibility made some steps of the proofs easier.
  • Instead of working with an elliptic operator between two vector bundles, it is sometimes more convenient to work with an elliptic complex
     
    of vector bundles. The difference is that the symbols now form an exact sequence (off the zero section). In the case when there are just two non-zero bundles in the complex this implies that the symbol is an isomorphism off the zero section, so an elliptic complex with 2 terms is essentially the same as an elliptic operator between two vector bundles. Conversely the index theorem for an elliptic complex can easily be reduced to the case of an elliptic operator: the two vector bundles are given by the sums of the even or odd terms of the complex, and the elliptic operator is the sum of the operators of the elliptic complex and their adjoints, restricted to the sum of the even bundles.
  • If the manifold is allowed to have boundary, then some restrictions must be put on the domain of the elliptic operator in order to ensure a finite index. These conditions can be local (like demanding that the sections in the domain vanish at the boundary) or more complicated global conditions (like requiring that the sections in the domain solve some differential equation). The local case was worked out by Atiyah and Bott, but they showed that many interesting operators (e.g., the signature operator) do not admit local boundary conditions. To handle these operators, Atiyah, Patodi and Singer introduced global boundary conditions equivalent to attaching a cylinder to the manifold along the boundary and then restricting the domain to those sections that are square integrable along the cylinder. This point of view is adopted in the proof of Melrose (1993) of the Atiyah–Patodi–Singer index theorem.
  • Instead of just one elliptic operator, one can consider a family of elliptic operators parameterized by some space Y. In this case the index is an element of the K-theory of Y, rather than an integer. If the operators in the family are real, then the index lies in the real K-theory of Y. This gives a little extra information, as the map from the real K-theory of Y to the complex K-theory is not always injective.
  • If there is a group action of a group G on the compact manifold X, commuting with the elliptic operator, then one replaces ordinary K-theory with equivariant K-theory. Moreover, one gets generalizations of the Lefschetz fixed-point theorem, with terms coming from fixed-point submanifolds of the group G. See also: equivariant index theorem.
  • Atiyah (1976) showed how to extend the index theorem to some non-compact manifolds, acted on by a discrete group with compact quotient. The kernel of the elliptic operator is in general infinite dimensional in this case, but it is possible to get a finite index using the dimension of a module over a von Neumann algebra; this index is in general real rather than integer valued. This version is called the L2 index theorem, and was used by Atiyah & Schmid (1977) to rederive properties of the discrete series representations of semisimple Lie groups.
  • The Callias index theorem is an index theorem for a Dirac operator on a noncompact odd-dimensional space. The Atiyah–Singer index is only defined on compact spaces, and vanishes when their dimension is odd. In 1978 Constantine Callias, at the suggestion of his Ph.D. advisor Roman Jackiw, used the axial anomaly to derive this index theorem on spaces equipped with a Hermitian matrix called the Higgs field.[29] The index of the Dirac operator is a topological invariant which measures the winding of the Higgs field on a sphere at infinity. If U is the unit matrix in the direction of the Higgs field, then the index is proportional to the integral of U(dU)n−1 over the (n−1)-sphere at infinity. If n is even, it is always zero.

Examples edit

Chern-Gauss-Bonnet theorem edit

Suppose that   is a compact oriented manifold of dimension  . If we take   to be the sum of the even exterior powers of the cotangent bundle, and   to be the sum of the odd powers, define  , considered as a map from   to  . Then the analytical index of   is the Euler characteristic   of the Hodge cohomology of  , and the topological index is the integral of the Euler class over the manifold. The index formula for this operator yields the Chern–Gauss–Bonnet theorem.

The concrete computation goes as follows: according to one variation of the splitting principle, if   is a real vector bundle of dimension  , in order to prove assertions involving characteristic classes, we may suppose that there are complex line bundles   such that  . Therefore, we can consider the Chern roots  ,  ,  .

Using Chern roots as above and the standard properties of the Euler class, we have that  . As for the Chern character and the Todd class,[31]

 

Applying the index theorem,

 

which is the "topological" version of the Chern-Gauss-Bonnet theorem (the geometric one being obtained by applying the Chern-Weil homomorphism).

Hirzebruch–Riemann–Roch theorem edit

Take X to be a complex manifold of (complex) dimension n with a holomorphic vector bundle V. We let the vector bundles E and F be the sums of the bundles of differential forms with coefficients in V of type (0, i) with i even or odd, and we let the differential operator D be the sum

 

restricted to E.

This derivation of the Hirzebruch–Riemann–Roch theorem is more natural if we use the index theorem for elliptic complexes rather than elliptic operators. We can take the complex to be

 

with the differential given by  . Then the i'th cohomology group is just the coherent cohomology group Hi(X, V), so the analytical index of this complex is the holomorphic Euler characteristic of V:

 

Since we are dealing with complex bundles, the computation of the topological index is simpler. Using Chern roots and doing similar computations as in the previous example, the Euler class is given by   and

 

Applying the index theorem, we obtain the Hirzebruch-Riemann-Roch theorem:

 

In fact we get a generalization of it to all complex manifolds: Hirzebruch's proof only worked for projective complex manifolds X.

Hirzebruch signature theorem edit

The Hirzebruch signature theorem states that the signature of a compact oriented manifold X of dimension 4k is given by the L genus of the manifold. This follows from the Atiyah–Singer index theorem applied to the following signature operator.

The bundles E and F are given by the +1 and −1 eigenspaces of the operator on the bundle of differential forms of X, that acts on k-forms as   times the Hodge star operator. The operator D is the Hodge Laplacian

 

restricted to E, where d is the Cartan exterior derivative and d* is its adjoint.

The analytic index of D is the signature of the manifold X, and its topological index is the L genus of X, so these are equal.

 genus and Rochlin's theorem edit

The  genus is a rational number defined for any manifold, but is in general not an integer. Borel and Hirzebruch showed that it is integral for spin manifolds, and an even integer if in addition the dimension is 4 mod 8. This can be deduced from the index theorem, which implies that the  genus for spin manifolds is the index of a Dirac operator. The extra factor of 2 in dimensions 4 mod 8 comes from the fact that in this case the kernel and cokernel of the Dirac operator have a quaternionic structure, so as complex vector spaces they have even dimensions, so the index is even.

In dimension 4 this result implies Rochlin's theorem that the signature of a 4-dimensional spin manifold is divisible by 16: this follows because in dimension 4 the  genus is minus one eighth of the signature.

Proof techniques edit

Pseudodifferential operators edit

Pseudodifferential operators can be explained easily in the case of constant coefficient operators on Euclidean space. In this case, constant coefficient differential operators are just the Fourier transforms of multiplication by polynomials, and constant coefficient pseudodifferential operators are just the Fourier transforms of multiplication by more general functions.

Many proofs of the index theorem use pseudodifferential operators rather than differential operators. The reason for this is that for many purposes there are not enough differential operators. For example, a pseudoinverse of an elliptic differential operator of positive order is not a differential operator, but is a pseudodifferential operator. Also, there is a direct correspondence between data representing elements of K(B(X), S(X)) (clutching functions) and symbols of elliptic pseudodifferential operators.

Pseudodifferential operators have an order, which can be any real number or even −∞, and have symbols (which are no longer polynomials on the cotangent space), and elliptic differential operators are those whose symbols are invertible for sufficiently large cotangent vectors. Most versions of the index theorem can be extended from elliptic differential operators to elliptic pseudodifferential operators.

Cobordism edit

The initial proof was based on that of the Hirzebruch–Riemann–Roch theorem (1954), and involved cobordism theory and pseudodifferential operators.

The idea of this first proof is roughly as follows. Consider the ring generated by pairs (X, V) where V is a smooth vector bundle on the compact smooth oriented manifold X, with relations that the sum and product of the ring on these generators are given by disjoint union and product of manifolds (with the obvious operations on the vector bundles), and any boundary of a manifold with vector bundle is 0. This is similar to the cobordism ring of oriented manifolds, except that the manifolds also have a vector bundle. The topological and analytical indices are both reinterpreted as functions from this ring to the integers. Then one checks that these two functions are in fact both ring homomorphisms. In order to prove they are the same, it is then only necessary to check they are the same on a set of generators of this ring. Thom's cobordism theory gives a set of generators; for example, complex vector spaces with the trivial bundle together with certain bundles over even dimensional spheres. So the index theorem can be proved by checking it on these particularly simple cases.

K-theory edit

Atiyah and Singer's first published proof used K-theory rather than cobordism. If i is any inclusion of compact manifolds from X to Y, they defined a 'pushforward' operation i! on elliptic operators of X to elliptic operators of Y that preserves the index. By taking Y to be some sphere that X embeds in, this reduces the index theorem to the case of spheres. If Y is a sphere and X is some point embedded in Y, then any elliptic operator on Y is the image under i! of some elliptic operator on the point. This reduces the index theorem to the case of a point, where it is trivial.

Heat equation edit

Atiyah, Bott, and Patodi (1973) gave a new proof of the index theorem using the heat equation, see e.g. Berline, Getzler & Vergne (1992). The proof is also published in (Melrose 1993) and (Gilkey 1994).

If D is a differential operator with adjoint D*, then D*D and DD* are self adjoint operators whose non-zero eigenvalues have the same multiplicities. However their zero eigenspaces may have different multiplicities, as these multiplicities are the dimensions of the kernels of D and D*. Therefore, the index of D is given by

 

for any positive t. The right hand side is given by the trace of the difference of the kernels of two heat operators. These have an asymptotic expansion for small positive t, which can be used to evaluate the limit as t tends to 0, giving a proof of the Atiyah–Singer index theorem. The asymptotic expansions for small t appear very complicated, but invariant theory shows that there are huge cancellations between the terms, which makes it possible to find the leading terms explicitly. These cancellations were later explained using supersymmetry.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Atiyah & Singer 1963.
  2. ^ Kayani 2020.
  3. ^ Hamilton 2020, p. 11.
  4. ^ Gel'fand 1960.
  5. ^ Palais 1965.
  6. ^ Cartan-Schwartz 1965.
  7. ^ Atiyah & Singer 1968a.
  8. ^ Atiyah & Singer (1968a); Atiyah & Singer (1968b); Atiyah & Singer (1971a); Atiyah & Singer (1971b).
  9. ^ Novikov 1965.
  10. ^ Kirby & Siebenmann 1969.
  11. ^ Thom 1956.
  12. ^ Atiyah 1970.
  13. ^ Singer 1971.
  14. ^ Kasparov 1972.
  15. ^ Atiyah, Bott & Patodi 1973.
  16. ^ Melrose 1993.
  17. ^ Sullivan 1979.
  18. ^ Getzler 1983.
  19. ^ Witten 1982.
  20. ^ Teleman 1983.
  21. ^ Teleman 1984.
  22. ^ Connes 1986.
  23. ^ Donaldson & Sullivan 1989.
  24. ^ Connes & Moscovici 1990.
  25. ^ Connes, Sullivan & Teleman 1994.
  26. ^ Shanahan, P. (1978), The Atiyah–Singer index theorem: an introduction, Lecture Notes in Mathematics, vol. 638, Springer, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.193.9222, doi:10.1007/BFb0068264, ISBN 978-0-387-08660-6
  27. ^ Lawson, H. Blane; Michelsohn, Marie-Louise (1989), Spin Geometry, Princeton University Press, ISBN 0-691-08542-0
  28. ^ "algebraic topology - How to understand the Todd class?". Mathematics Stack Exchange. Retrieved 2021-02-05.
  29. ^ Index Theorems on Open Spaces
  30. ^ Some Remarks on the Paper of Callias
  31. ^ Nakahara, Mikio (2003), Geometry, topology and physics, Institute of Physics Publishing, ISBN 0-7503-0606-8

References edit

The papers by Atiyah are reprinted in volumes 3 and 4 of his collected works, (Atiyah 1988a, 1988b)

  • Atiyah, M. F. (1970), "Global Theory of Elliptic Operators", Proc. Int. Conf. on Functional Analysis and Related Topics (Tokyo, 1969), University of Tokio, Zbl 0193.43601
  • Atiyah, M. F. (1976), "Elliptic operators, discrete groups and von Neumann algebras", Colloque "Analyse et Topologie" en l'Honneur de Henri Cartan (Orsay, 1974), Asterisque, vol. 32–33, Soc. Math. France, Paris, pp. 43–72, MR 0420729
  • Atiyah, M. F.; Segal, G. B. (1968), "The Index of Elliptic Operators: II", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 87 (3): 531–545, doi:10.2307/1970716, JSTOR 1970716 This reformulates the result as a sort of Lefschetz fixed-point theorem, using equivariant K-theory.
  • Atiyah, Michael F.; Singer, Isadore M. (1963), "The Index of Elliptic Operators on Compact Manifolds", Bull. Amer. Math. Soc., 69 (3): 422–433, doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1963-10957-X An announcement of the index theorem.
  • Atiyah, Michael F.; Singer, Isadore M. (1968a), "The Index of Elliptic Operators I", Annals of Mathematics, 87 (3): 484–530, doi:10.2307/1970715, JSTOR 1970715 This gives a proof using K-theory instead of cohomology.
  • Atiyah, Michael F.; Singer, Isadore M. (1968b), "The Index of Elliptic Operators III", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 87 (3): 546–604, doi:10.2307/1970717, JSTOR 1970717 This paper shows how to convert from the K-theory version to a version using cohomology.
  • Atiyah, Michael F.; Singer, Isadore M. (1971a), "The Index of Elliptic Operators IV", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 93 (1): 119–138, doi:10.2307/1970756, JSTOR 1970756 This paper studies families of elliptic operators, where the index is now an element of the K-theory of the space parametrizing the family.
  • Atiyah, Michael F.; Singer, Isadore M. (1971b), "The Index of Elliptic Operators V", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 93 (1): 139–149, doi:10.2307/1970757, JSTOR 1970757. This studies families of real (rather than complex) elliptic operators, when one can sometimes squeeze out a little extra information.
  • Atiyah, M. F.; Bott, R. (1966), "A Lefschetz Fixed Point Formula for Elliptic Differential Operators", Bull. Am. Math. Soc., 72 (2): 245–50, doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1966-11483-0. This states a theorem calculating the Lefschetz number of an endomorphism of an elliptic complex.
  • Atiyah, M. F.; Bott, R. (1967), "A Lefschetz Fixed Point Formula for Elliptic Complexes: I", Annals of Mathematics, Second series, 86 (2): 374–407, doi:10.2307/1970694, JSTOR 1970694 and Atiyah, M. F.; Bott, R. (1968), "A Lefschetz Fixed Point Formula for Elliptic Complexes: II. Applications", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 88 (3): 451–491, doi:10.2307/1970721, JSTOR 1970721 These give the proofs and some applications of the results announced in the previous paper.
  • Atiyah, M.; Bott, R.; Patodi, V. K. (1973), "On the heat equation and the index theorem", Invent. Math., 19 (4): 279–330, Bibcode:1973InMat..19..279A, doi:10.1007/BF01425417, MR 0650828, S2CID 115700319. Atiyah, M.; Bott, R.; Patodi, V. K. (1975), "Errata", Invent. Math., 28 (3): 277–280, Bibcode:1975InMat..28..277A, doi:10.1007/BF01425562, MR 0650829
  • Atiyah, Michael; Schmid, Wilfried (1977), "A geometric construction of the discrete series for semisimple Lie groups", Invent. Math., 42: 1–62, Bibcode:1977InMat..42....1A, doi:10.1007/BF01389783, MR 0463358, S2CID 189831012, Atiyah, Michael; Schmid, Wilfried (1979), "Erratum", Invent. Math., 54 (2): 189–192, Bibcode:1979InMat..54..189A, doi:10.1007/BF01408936, MR 0550183
  • Atiyah, Michael (1988a), Collected works. Vol. 3. Index theory: 1, Oxford Science Publications, New York: The Clarendon Press, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-853277-4, MR 0951894
  • Atiyah, Michael (1988b), Collected works. Vol. 4. Index theory: 2, Oxford Science Publications, New York: The Clarendon Press, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-853278-1, MR 0951895
  • Baum, P.; Fulton, W.; Macpherson, R. (1979), "Riemann-Roch for singular varieties", Acta Mathematica, 143: 155–191, doi:10.1007/BF02684299, S2CID 83458307, Zbl 0332.14003
  • Berline, Nicole; Getzler, Ezra; Vergne, Michèle (1992), Heat Kernels and Dirac Operators, Berlin: Springer, ISBN 978-3-540-53340-5 This gives an elementary proof of the index theorem for the Dirac operator, using the heat equation and supersymmetry.
  • Bismut, Jean-Michel (1984), "The Atiyah–Singer Theorems: A Probabilistic Approach. I. The index theorem", J. Funct. Analysis, 57: 56–99, doi:10.1016/0022-1236(84)90101-0 Bismut proves the theorem for elliptic complexes using probabilistic methods, rather than heat equation methods.
  • Cartan-Schwartz (1965), Séminaire Henri Cartan. Théoreme d'Atiyah-Singer sur l'indice d'un opérateur différentiel elliptique. 16 annee: 1963/64 dirigee par Henri Cartan et Laurent Schwartz. Fasc. 1; Fasc. 2. (French), École Normale Supérieure, Secrétariat mathématique, Paris, Zbl 0149.41102
  • Connes, A. (1986), "Non-commutative differential geometry", Publications Mathématiques de l'Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques, 62: 257–360, doi:10.1007/BF02698807, S2CID 122740195, Zbl 0592.46056
  • Connes, A. (1994), Noncommutative Geometry, San Diego: Academic Press, ISBN 978-0-12-185860-5, Zbl 0818.46076
  • Connes, A.; Moscovici, H. (1990), "Cyclic cohomology, the Novikov conjecture and hyperbolic groups" (PDF), Topology, 29 (3): 345–388, doi:10.1016/0040-9383(90)90003-3, Zbl 0759.58047
  • Connes, A.; Sullivan, D.; Teleman, N. (1994), "Quasiconformal mappings, operators on Hilbert space and local formulae for characteristic classes", Topology, 33 (4): 663–681, doi:10.1016/0040-9383(94)90003-5, Zbl 0840.57013
  • Donaldson, S.K.; Sullivan, D. (1989), "Quasiconformal 4-manifolds", Acta Mathematica, 163: 181–252, doi:10.1007/BF02392736, Zbl 0704.57008
  • Gel'fand, I. M. (1960), "On elliptic equations", Russ. Math. Surv., 15 (3): 113–123, Bibcode:1960RuMaS..15..113G, doi:10.1070/rm1960v015n03ABEH004094 reprinted in volume 1 of his collected works, p. 65–75, ISBN 0-387-13619-3. On page 120 Gel'fand suggests that the index of an elliptic operator should be expressible in terms of topological data.
  • Getzler, E. (1983), "Pseudodifferential operators on supermanifolds and the Atiyah–Singer index theorem", Commun. Math. Phys., 92 (2): 163–178, Bibcode:1983CMaPh..92..163G, doi:10.1007/BF01210843, S2CID 55438589
  • Getzler, E. (1988), "A short proof of the local Atiyah–Singer index theorem", Topology, 25: 111–117, doi:10.1016/0040-9383(86)90008-X
  • Gilkey, Peter B. (1994), Invariance Theory, the Heat Equation, and the Atiyah–Singer Theorem, CRC Press, ISBN 978-0-8493-7874-4 Free online textbook that proves the Atiyah–Singer theorem with a heat equation approach
  • Hamilton, M. J. D. (2020). "The Higgs boson for mathematicians. Lecture notes on gauge theory and symmetry breaking". arXiv:1512.02632 [math.DG].
  • Kayani, U. (2020). "Dynamical supersymmetry enhancement of black hole horizons". arXiv:1910.01080 [hep-th].
  • Higson, Nigel; Roe, John (2000), Analytic K-homology, Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780191589201
  • Hilsum, M. (1999), "Structures riemaniennes Lp et K-homologie", Annals of Mathematics, 149 (3): 1007–1022, arXiv:math/9905210, doi:10.2307/121079, JSTOR 121079, S2CID 119708566
  • Kasparov, G.G. (1972), "Topological invariance of elliptic operators, I: K-homology", Math. USSR Izvestija (Engl. Transl.), 9 (4): 751–792, Bibcode:1975IzMat...9..751K, doi:10.1070/IM1975v009n04ABEH001497
  • Kirby, R.; Siebenmann, L.C. (1969), "On the triangulation of manifolds and the Hauptvermutung", Bull. Amer. Math. Soc., 75 (4): 742–749, doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1969-12271-8
  • Kirby, R.; Siebenmann, L.C. (1977), Foundational Essays on Topological Manifolds, Smoothings and Triangulations, Annals of Mathematics Studies in Mathematics, vol. 88, Princeton: Princeton University Press and Tokio University Press
  • Lawson, H. Blane; Michelsohn, Marie-Louise (1989), Spin Geometry, Princeton University Press, ISBN 0-691-08542-0
  • Melrose, Richard B. (1993), The Atiyah–Patodi–Singer Index Theorem, Wellesley, Mass.: Peters, ISBN 978-1-56881-002-7 Free online textbook.
  • Novikov, S.P. (1965), "Topological invariance of the rational Pontrjagin classes" (PDF), Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR, 163: 298–300
  • Palais, Richard S. (1965), Seminar on the Atiyah–Singer Index Theorem, Annals of Mathematics Studies, vol. 57, S.l.: Princeton Univ Press, ISBN 978-0-691-08031-4 This describes the original proof of the theorem (Atiyah and Singer never published their original proof themselves, but only improved versions of it.)
  • Shanahan, P. (1978), The Atiyah–Singer index theorem: an introduction, Lecture Notes in Mathematics, vol. 638, Springer, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.193.9222, doi:10.1007/BFb0068264, ISBN 978-0-387-08660-6
  • Singer, I.M. (1971), "Future extensions of index theory and elliptic operators", Prospects in Mathematics, Annals of Mathematics Studies in Mathematics, vol. 70, pp. 171–185
  • Sullivan, D. (1979), "Hyperbolic geometry and homeomorphisms", J.C. Candrell, "Geometric Topology", Proc. Georgia Topology Conf. Athens, Georgia, 1977, New York: Academic Press, pp. 543–595, ISBN 978-0-12-158860-1, Zbl 0478.57007
  • Sullivan, D.; Teleman, N. (1983), "An analytic proof of Novikov's theorem on rational Pontrjagin classes", Publications Mathématiques de l'Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques, 58, Paris: 291–293, doi:10.1007/BF02953773, S2CID 8348213, Zbl 0531.58045
  • Teleman, N. (1980), "Combinatorial Hodge theory and signature operator", Inventiones Mathematicae, 61 (3): 227–249, Bibcode:1980InMat..61..227T, doi:10.1007/BF01390066, S2CID 122247909
  • Teleman, N. (1983), "The index of signature operators on Lipschitz manifolds", Publications Mathématiques de l'Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques, 58: 251–290, doi:10.1007/BF02953772, S2CID 121497293, Zbl 0531.58044
  • Teleman, N. (1984), "The index theorem on topological manifolds", Acta Mathematica, 153: 117–152, doi:10.1007/BF02392376, Zbl 0547.58036
  • Teleman, N. (1985), "Transversality and the index theorem", Integral Equations and Operator Theory, 8 (5): 693–719, doi:10.1007/BF01201710, S2CID 121137053
  • Thom, R. (1956), "Les classes caractéristiques de Pontrjagin de variétés triangulées", Symp. Int. Top. Alg. Mexico, pp. 54–67
  • Witten, Edward (1982), "Supersymmetry and Morse theory", J. Diff. Geom., 17 (4): 661–692, doi:10.4310/jdg/1214437492, MR 0683171
  • Shing-Tung Yau, ed. (2009) [First published in 2005], The Founders of Index Theory (2nd ed.), Somerville, Mass.: International Press of Boston, ISBN 978-1571461377 - Personal accounts on Atiyah, Bott, Hirzebruch and Singer.

External links edit

Links on the theory edit

  • Mazzeo, Rafe. (PDF). Archived from the original on June 24, 2006. Retrieved January 3, 2006.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) Pdf presentation.
  • Voitsekhovskii, M.I.; Shubin, M.A. (2001) [1994], "Index formulas", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
  • Wassermann, Antony. . Archived from the original on March 29, 2017.

Links of interviews edit

  • Raussen, Martin; Skau, Christian (2005), "Interview with Michael Atiyah and Isadore Singer" (PDF), Notices of AMS, pp. 223–231
  • R. R. Seeley and other (1999) - A partial transcript of informal post–dinner conversation during a symposium held in Roskilde, Denmark, in September 1998.

atiyah, singer, index, theorem, differential, geometry, proved, michael, atiyah, isadore, singer, 1963, states, that, elliptic, differential, operator, compact, manifold, analytical, index, related, dimension, space, solutions, equal, topological, index, defin. In differential geometry the Atiyah Singer index theorem proved by Michael Atiyah and Isadore Singer 1963 1 states that for an elliptic differential operator on a compact manifold the analytical index related to the dimension of the space of solutions is equal to the topological index defined in terms of some topological data It includes many other theorems such as the Chern Gauss Bonnet theorem and Riemann Roch theorem as special cases and has applications to theoretical physics 2 3 Atiyah Singer index theoremFieldDifferential geometryFirst proof byMichael Atiyah and Isadore SingerFirst proof in1963ConsequencesChern Gauss Bonnet theoremGrothendieck Riemann Roch theoremHirzebruch signature theoremRokhlin s theorem Contents 1 History 2 Notation 3 Symbol of a differential operator 4 Analytical index 5 Topological index 5 1 Relation to Grothendieck Riemann Roch 6 Extensions of the Atiyah Singer index theorem 6 1 Teleman index theorem 6 2 Connes Donaldson Sullivan Teleman index theorem 6 3 Other extensions 7 Examples 7 1 Chern Gauss Bonnet theorem 7 2 Hirzebruch Riemann Roch theorem 7 3 Hirzebruch signature theorem 7 4 A genus and Rochlin s theorem 8 Proof techniques 8 1 Pseudodifferential operators 8 2 Cobordism 8 3 K theory 8 4 Heat equation 9 Citations 10 References 11 External links 11 1 Links on the theory 11 2 Links of interviewsHistory editThe index problem for elliptic differential operators was posed by Israel Gel fand 4 He noticed the homotopy invariance of the index and asked for a formula for it by means of topological invariants Some of the motivating examples included the Riemann Roch theorem and its generalization the Hirzebruch Riemann Roch theorem and the Hirzebruch signature theorem Friedrich Hirzebruch and Armand Borel had proved the integrality of the A genus of a spin manifold and Atiyah suggested that this integrality could be explained if it were the index of the Dirac operator which was rediscovered by Atiyah and Singer in 1961 The Atiyah Singer theorem was announced in 1963 1 The proof sketched in this announcement was never published by them though it appears in Palais s book 5 It appears also in the Seminaire Cartan Schwartz 1963 64 6 that was held in Paris simultaneously with the seminar led by Richard Palais at Princeton University The last talk in Paris was by Atiyah on manifolds with boundary Their first published proof 7 replaced the cobordism theory of the first proof with K theory and they used this to give proofs of various generalizations in another sequence of papers 8 1965 Sergey P Novikov published his results on the topological invariance of the rational Pontryagin classes on smooth manifolds 9 Robion Kirby and Laurent C Siebenmann s results 10 combined with Rene Thom s paper 11 proved the existence of rational Pontryagin classes on topological manifolds The rational Pontryagin classes are essential ingredients of the index theorem on smooth and topological manifolds 1969 Michael Atiyah defines abstract elliptic operators on arbitrary metric spaces Abstract elliptic operators became protagonists in Kasparov s theory and Connes s noncommutative differential geometry 12 1971 Isadore Singer proposes a comprehensive program for future extensions of index theory 13 1972 Gennadi G Kasparov publishes his work on the realization of K homology by abstract elliptic operators 14 1973 Atiyah Raoul Bott and Vijay Patodi gave a new proof of the index theorem 15 using the heat equation described in a paper by Melrose 16 1977 Dennis Sullivan establishes his theorem on the existence and uniqueness of Lipschitz and quasiconformal structures on topological manifolds of dimension different from 4 17 1983 Ezra Getzler 18 motivated by ideas of Edward Witten 19 and Luis Alvarez Gaume gave a short proof of the local index theorem for operators that are locally Dirac operators this covers many of the useful cases 1983 Nicolae Teleman proves that the analytical indices of signature operators with values in vector bundles are topological invariants 20 1984 Teleman establishes the index theorem on topological manifolds 21 1986 Alain Connes publishes his fundamental paper on noncommutative geometry 22 1989 Simon K Donaldson and Sullivan study Yang Mills theory on quasiconformal manifolds of dimension 4 They introduce the signature operator S defined on differential forms of degree two 23 1990 Connes and Henri Moscovici prove the local index formula in the context of non commutative geometry 24 1994 Connes Sullivan and Teleman prove the index theorem for signature operators on quasiconformal manifolds 25 Notation editX is a compact smooth manifold without boundary E and F are smooth vector bundles over X D is an elliptic differential operator from E to F So in local coordinates it acts as a differential operator taking smooth sections of E to smooth sections of F Symbol of a differential operator editIf D is a differential operator on a Euclidean space of order n in k variables x1 xk displaystyle x 1 dots x k nbsp then its symbol is the function of 2k variables x1 xk y1 yk displaystyle x 1 dots x k y 1 dots y k nbsp given by dropping all terms of order less than n and replacing xi displaystyle partial partial x i nbsp by yi displaystyle y i nbsp So the symbol is homogeneous in the variables y of degree n The symbol is well defined even though xi displaystyle partial partial x i nbsp does not commute with xi displaystyle x i nbsp because we keep only the highest order terms and differential operators commute up to lower order terms The operator is called elliptic if the symbol is nonzero whenever at least one y is nonzero Example The Laplace operator in k variables has symbol y12 yk2 displaystyle y 1 2 cdots y k 2 nbsp and so is elliptic as this is nonzero whenever any of the yi displaystyle y i nbsp s are nonzero The wave operator has symbol y12 yk2 displaystyle y 1 2 cdots y k 2 nbsp which is not elliptic if k 2 displaystyle k geq 2 nbsp as the symbol vanishes for some non zero values of the ys The symbol of a differential operator of order n on a smooth manifold X is defined in much the same way using local coordinate charts and is a function on the cotangent bundle of X homogeneous of degree n on each cotangent space In general differential operators transform in a rather complicated way under coordinate transforms see jet bundle however the highest order terms transform like tensors so we get well defined homogeneous functions on the cotangent spaces that are independent of the choice of local charts More generally the symbol of a differential operator between two vector bundles E and F is a section of the pullback of the bundle Hom E F to the cotangent space of X The differential operator is called elliptic if the element of Hom Ex Fx is invertible for all non zero cotangent vectors at any point x of X A key property of elliptic operators is that they are almost invertible this is closely related to the fact that their symbols are almost invertible More precisely an elliptic operator D on a compact manifold has a non unique parametrix or pseudoinverse D such that DD 1and D D 1 are both compact operators An important consequence is that the kernel of D is finite dimensional because all eigenspaces of compact operators other than the kernel are finite dimensional The pseudoinverse of an elliptic differential operator is almost never a differential operator However it is an elliptic pseudodifferential operator Analytical index editAs the elliptic differential operator D has a pseudoinverse it is a Fredholm operator Any Fredholm operator has an index defined as the difference between the finite dimension of the kernel of D solutions of Df 0 and the finite dimension of the cokernel of D the constraints on the right hand side of an inhomogeneous equation like Df g or equivalently the kernel of the adjoint operator In other words Index D dim Ker D dim Coker D dim Ker D dim Ker D This is sometimes called the analytical index of D Example Suppose that the manifold is the circle thought of as R Z and D is the operator d dx l for some complex constant l This is the simplest example of an elliptic operator Then the kernel is the space of multiples of exp lx if l is an integral multiple of 2pi and is 0 otherwise and the kernel of the adjoint is a similar space with l replaced by its complex conjugate So D has index 0 This example shows that the kernel and cokernel of elliptic operators can jump discontinuously as the elliptic operator varies so there is no nice formula for their dimensions in terms of continuous topological data However the jumps in the dimensions of the kernel and cokernel are the same so the index given by the difference of their dimensions does indeed vary continuously and can be given in terms of topological data by the index theorem Topological index editThe topological index of an elliptic differential operator D displaystyle D nbsp between smooth vector bundles E displaystyle E nbsp and F displaystyle F nbsp on an n displaystyle n nbsp dimensional compact manifold X displaystyle X nbsp is given by 1 nch D Td X X 1 n Xch D Td X displaystyle 1 n operatorname ch D operatorname Td X X 1 n int X operatorname ch D operatorname Td X nbsp in other words the value of the top dimensional component of the mixed cohomology class ch D Td X displaystyle operatorname ch D operatorname Td X nbsp on the fundamental homology class of the manifold X displaystyle X nbsp up to a difference of sign Here Td X displaystyle operatorname Td X nbsp is the Todd class of the complexified tangent bundle of X displaystyle X nbsp ch D displaystyle operatorname ch D nbsp is equal to f 1 ch d p E p F s D displaystyle varphi 1 operatorname ch d p E p F sigma D nbsp where f Hk X Q Hn k B X S X Q displaystyle varphi H k X mathbb Q to H n k B X S X mathbb Q nbsp is the Thom isomorphism for the sphere bundle p B X S X X displaystyle p B X S X to X nbsp ch K X Q H X Q displaystyle operatorname ch K X otimes mathbb Q to H X mathbb Q nbsp is the Chern character d p E p F s D displaystyle d p E p F sigma D nbsp is the difference element in K B X S X displaystyle K B X S X nbsp associated to two vector bundles p E displaystyle p E nbsp and p F displaystyle p F nbsp on B X displaystyle B X nbsp and an isomorphism s D displaystyle sigma D nbsp between them on the subspace S X displaystyle S X nbsp s D displaystyle sigma D nbsp is the symbol of D displaystyle D nbsp In some situations it is possible to simplify the above formula for computational purposes In particular if X displaystyle X nbsp is a 2m displaystyle 2m nbsp dimensional orientable compact manifold with non zero Euler class e TX displaystyle e TX nbsp then applying the Thom isomorphism and dividing by the Euler class 26 27 the topological index may be expressed as 1 m Xch E ch F e TX Td X displaystyle 1 m int X frac operatorname ch E operatorname ch F e TX operatorname Td X nbsp where division makes sense by pulling e TX 1 displaystyle e TX 1 nbsp back from the cohomology ring of the classifying space BSO displaystyle BSO nbsp One can also define the topological index using only K theory and this alternative definition is compatible in a certain sense with the Chern character construction above If X is a compact submanifold of a manifold Y then there is a pushforward or shriek map from K TX to K TY The topological index of an element of K TX is defined to be the image of this operation with Y some Euclidean space for which K TY can be naturally identified with the integers Z as a consequence of Bott periodicity This map is independent of the embedding of X in Euclidean space Now a differential operator as above naturally defines an element of K TX and the image in Z under this map is the topological index As usual D is an elliptic differential operator between vector bundles E and F over a compact manifold X The index problem is the following compute the analytical index of D using only the symbol s and topological data derived from the manifold and the vector bundle The Atiyah Singer index theorem solves this problem and states The analytical index of D is equal to its topological index In spite of its formidable definition the topological index is usually straightforward to evaluate explicitly So this makes it possible to evaluate the analytical index The cokernel and kernel of an elliptic operator are in general extremely hard to evaluate individually the index theorem shows that we can usually at least evaluate their difference Many important invariants of a manifold such as the signature can be given as the index of suitable differential operators so the index theorem allows us to evaluate these invariants in terms of topological data Although the analytical index is usually hard to evaluate directly it is at least obviously an integer The topological index is by definition a rational number but it is usually not at all obvious from the definition that it is also integral So the Atiyah Singer index theorem implies some deep integrality properties as it implies that the topological index is integral The index of an elliptic differential operator obviously vanishes if the operator is self adjoint It also vanishes if the manifold X has odd dimension though there are pseudodifferential elliptic operators whose index does not vanish in odd dimensions Relation to Grothendieck Riemann Roch editThe Grothendieck Riemann Roch theorem was one of the main motivations behind the index theorem because the index theorem is the counterpart of this theorem in the setting of real manifolds Now if there s a map f X Y displaystyle f X to Y nbsp of compact stably almost complex manifolds then there is a commutative diagram 28 nbsp if Y displaystyle Y nbsp is a point then we recover the statement above Here K X displaystyle K X nbsp is the Grothendieck group of complex vector bundles This commutative diagram is formally very similar to the GRR theorem because the cohomology groups on the right are replaced by the Chow ring of a smooth variety and the Grothendieck group on the left is given by the Grothendieck group of algebraic vector bundles Extensions of the Atiyah Singer index theorem editTeleman index theorem edit Due to Teleman 1983 Teleman 1984 For any abstract elliptic operator Atiyah 1970 on a closed oriented topological manifold the analytical index equals the topological index The proof of this result goes through specific considerations including the extension of Hodge theory on combinatorial and Lipschitz manifolds Teleman 1980 Teleman 1983 the extension of Atiyah Singer s signature operator to Lipschitz manifolds Teleman 1983 Kasparov s K homology Kasparov 1972 and topological cobordism Kirby amp Siebenmann 1977 This result shows that the index theorem is not merely a differentiability statement but rather a topological statement Connes Donaldson Sullivan Teleman index theorem edit Due to Donaldson amp Sullivan 1989 Connes Sullivan amp Teleman 1994 For any quasiconformal manifold there exists a local construction of the Hirzebruch Thom characteristic classes This theory is based on a signature operator S defined on middle degree differential forms on even dimensional quasiconformal manifolds compare Donaldson amp Sullivan 1989 Using topological cobordism and K homology one may provide a full statement of an index theorem on quasiconformal manifolds see page 678 of Connes Sullivan amp Teleman 1994 The work Connes Sullivan amp Teleman 1994 provides local constructions for characteristic classes based on higher dimensional relatives of the measurable Riemann mapping in dimension two and the Yang Mills theory in dimension four These results constitute significant advances along the lines of Singer s program Prospects in Mathematics Singer 1971 At the same time they provide also an effective construction of the rational Pontrjagin classes on topological manifolds The paper Teleman 1985 provides a link between Thom s original construction of the rational Pontrjagin classes Thom 1956 and index theory It is important to mention that the index formula is a topological statement The obstruction theories due to Milnor Kervaire Kirby Siebenmann Sullivan Donaldson show that only a minority of topological manifolds possess differentiable structures and these are not necessarily unique Sullivan s result on Lipschitz and quasiconformal structures Sullivan 1979 shows that any topological manifold in dimension different from 4 possesses such a structure which is unique up to isotopy close to identity The quasiconformal structures Connes Sullivan amp Teleman 1994 and more generally the Lp structures p gt n n 1 2 introduced by M Hilsum Hilsum 1999 are the weakest analytical structures on topological manifolds of dimension n for which the index theorem is known to hold Other extensions edit The Atiyah Singer theorem applies to elliptic pseudodifferential operators in much the same way as for elliptic differential operators In fact for technical reasons most of the early proofs worked with pseudodifferential rather than differential operators their extra flexibility made some steps of the proofs easier Instead of working with an elliptic operator between two vector bundles it is sometimes more convenient to work with an elliptic complex 0 E0 E1 E2 Em 0 displaystyle 0 rightarrow E 0 rightarrow E 1 rightarrow E 2 rightarrow dotsm rightarrow E m rightarrow 0 nbsp of vector bundles The difference is that the symbols now form an exact sequence off the zero section In the case when there are just two non zero bundles in the complex this implies that the symbol is an isomorphism off the zero section so an elliptic complex with 2 terms is essentially the same as an elliptic operator between two vector bundles Conversely the index theorem for an elliptic complex can easily be reduced to the case of an elliptic operator the two vector bundles are given by the sums of the even or odd terms of the complex and the elliptic operator is the sum of the operators of the elliptic complex and their adjoints restricted to the sum of the even bundles If the manifold is allowed to have boundary then some restrictions must be put on the domain of the elliptic operator in order to ensure a finite index These conditions can be local like demanding that the sections in the domain vanish at the boundary or more complicated global conditions like requiring that the sections in the domain solve some differential equation The local case was worked out by Atiyah and Bott but they showed that many interesting operators e g the signature operator do not admit local boundary conditions To handle these operators Atiyah Patodi and Singer introduced global boundary conditions equivalent to attaching a cylinder to the manifold along the boundary and then restricting the domain to those sections that are square integrable along the cylinder This point of view is adopted in the proof of Melrose 1993 of the Atiyah Patodi Singer index theorem Instead of just one elliptic operator one can consider a family of elliptic operators parameterized by some space Y In this case the index is an element of the K theory of Y rather than an integer If the operators in the family are real then the index lies in the real K theory of Y This gives a little extra information as the map from the real K theory of Y to the complex K theory is not always injective If there is a group action of a group G on the compact manifold X commuting with the elliptic operator then one replaces ordinary K theory with equivariant K theory Moreover one gets generalizations of the Lefschetz fixed point theorem with terms coming from fixed point submanifolds of the group G See also equivariant index theorem Atiyah 1976 showed how to extend the index theorem to some non compact manifolds acted on by a discrete group with compact quotient The kernel of the elliptic operator is in general infinite dimensional in this case but it is possible to get a finite index using the dimension of a module over a von Neumann algebra this index is in general real rather than integer valued This version is called the L2 index theorem and was used by Atiyah amp Schmid 1977 to rederive properties of the discrete series representations of semisimple Lie groups The Callias index theorem is an index theorem for a Dirac operator on a noncompact odd dimensional space The Atiyah Singer index is only defined on compact spaces and vanishes when their dimension is odd In 1978 Constantine Callias at the suggestion of his Ph D advisor Roman Jackiw used the axial anomaly to derive this index theorem on spaces equipped with a Hermitian matrix called the Higgs field 29 The index of the Dirac operator is a topological invariant which measures the winding of the Higgs field on a sphere at infinity If U is the unit matrix in the direction of the Higgs field then the index is proportional to the integral of U dU n 1 over the n 1 sphere at infinity If n is even it is always zero The topological interpretation of this invariant and its relation to the Hormander index proposed by Boris Fedosov as generalized by Lars Hormander was published by Raoul Bott and Robert Thomas Seeley 30 Examples editChern Gauss Bonnet theorem edit Suppose that M displaystyle M nbsp is a compact oriented manifold of dimension n 2r displaystyle n 2r nbsp If we take Leven displaystyle Lambda text even nbsp to be the sum of the even exterior powers of the cotangent bundle and Lodd displaystyle Lambda text odd nbsp to be the sum of the odd powers define D d d displaystyle D d d nbsp considered as a map from Leven displaystyle Lambda text even nbsp to Lodd displaystyle Lambda text odd nbsp Then the analytical index of D displaystyle D nbsp is the Euler characteristic x M displaystyle chi M nbsp of the Hodge cohomology of M displaystyle M nbsp and the topological index is the integral of the Euler class over the manifold The index formula for this operator yields the Chern Gauss Bonnet theorem The concrete computation goes as follows according to one variation of the splitting principle if E displaystyle E nbsp is a real vector bundle of dimension n 2r displaystyle n 2r nbsp in order to prove assertions involving characteristic classes we may suppose that there are complex line bundles l1 lr displaystyle l 1 ldots l r nbsp such that E C l1 l1 lr lr displaystyle E otimes mathbb C l 1 oplus overline l 1 oplus dotsm l r oplus overline l r nbsp Therefore we can consider the Chern roots xi E C c1 li displaystyle x i E otimes mathbb C c 1 l i nbsp xr i E C c1 li xi E C displaystyle x r i E otimes mathbb C c 1 mathord left overline l i right x i E otimes mathbb C nbsp i 1 r displaystyle i 1 ldots r nbsp Using Chern roots as above and the standard properties of the Euler class we have that e TM irxi TM C textstyle e TM prod i r x i TM otimes mathbb C nbsp As for the Chern character and the Todd class 31 ch Leven Lodd 1 ch T M C ch L2T M C 1 nch LnT M C 1 ine xi TM C i lt je xie xj TM C 1 ne x1 e xn TM C in 1 e xi TM C Td TM C inxi1 e xi TM C displaystyle begin aligned operatorname ch mathord left Lambda text even Lambda text odd right amp 1 operatorname ch T M otimes mathbb C operatorname ch mathord left Lambda 2 T M otimes mathbb C right ldots 1 n operatorname ch mathord left Lambda n T M otimes mathbb C right amp 1 sum i n e x i TM otimes mathbb C sum i lt j e x i e x j TM otimes mathbb C ldots 1 n e x 1 dotsm e x n TM otimes mathbb C amp prod i n left 1 e x i right TM otimes mathbb C 3pt operatorname Td TM otimes mathbb C amp prod i n frac x i 1 e x i TM otimes mathbb C end aligned nbsp Applying the index theorem x M 1 r M in 1 e xi irxi inxi1 e xi TM C 1 r M 1 r irxi TM C Me TM displaystyle chi M 1 r int M frac prod i n left 1 e x i right prod i r x i prod i n frac x i 1 e x i TM otimes mathbb C 1 r int M 1 r prod i r x i TM otimes mathbb C int M e TM nbsp which is the topological version of the Chern Gauss Bonnet theorem the geometric one being obtained by applying the Chern Weil homomorphism Hirzebruch Riemann Roch theorem edit Take X to be a complex manifold of complex dimension n with a holomorphic vector bundle V We let the vector bundles E and F be the sums of the bundles of differential forms with coefficients in V of type 0 i with i even or odd and we let the differential operator D be the sum displaystyle overline partial overline partial nbsp restricted to E This derivation of the Hirzebruch Riemann Roch theorem is more natural if we use the index theorem for elliptic complexes rather than elliptic operators We can take the complex to be 0 V V L0 1T X V L0 2T X displaystyle 0 rightarrow V rightarrow V otimes Lambda 0 1 T X rightarrow V otimes Lambda 0 2 T X rightarrow dotsm nbsp with the differential given by displaystyle overline partial nbsp Then the i th cohomology group is just the coherent cohomology group Hi X V so the analytical index of this complex is the holomorphic Euler characteristic of V index D p 1 pdim Hp X V x X V displaystyle operatorname index D sum p 1 p dim H p X V chi X V nbsp Since we are dealing with complex bundles the computation of the topological index is simpler Using Chern roots and doing similar computations as in the previous example the Euler class is given by e TX inxi TX textstyle e TX prod i n x i TX nbsp and ch jn 1 jV LjT X ch V jn 1 exj TX Td TX C Td TX Td TX inxi1 e xi jn xj1 exj TX displaystyle begin aligned operatorname ch left sum j n 1 j V otimes Lambda j overline T X right amp operatorname ch V prod j n left 1 e x j right TX operatorname Td TX otimes mathbb C operatorname Td TX operatorname Td left overline TX right amp prod i n frac x i 1 e x i prod j n frac x j 1 e x j TX end aligned nbsp Applying the index theorem we obtain the Hirzebruch Riemann Roch theorem x X V Xch V Td TX displaystyle chi X V int X operatorname ch V operatorname Td TX nbsp In fact we get a generalization of it to all complex manifolds Hirzebruch s proof only worked for projective complex manifolds X Hirzebruch signature theorem edit The Hirzebruch signature theorem states that the signature of a compact oriented manifold X of dimension 4k is given by the L genus of the manifold This follows from the Atiyah Singer index theorem applied to the following signature operator The bundles E and F are given by the 1 and 1 eigenspaces of the operator on the bundle of differential forms of X that acts on k forms as ik k 1 displaystyle i k k 1 nbsp times the Hodge star operator The operator D is the Hodge Laplacian D D d d 2 displaystyle D equiv Delta mathrel left mathbf d mathbf d right 2 nbsp restricted to E where d is the Cartan exterior derivative and d is its adjoint The analytic index of D is the signature of the manifold X and its topological index is the L genus of X so these are equal A genus and Rochlin s theorem edit The A genus is a rational number defined for any manifold but is in general not an integer Borel and Hirzebruch showed that it is integral for spin manifolds and an even integer if in addition the dimension is 4 mod 8 This can be deduced from the index theorem which implies that the A genus for spin manifolds is the index of a Dirac operator The extra factor of 2 in dimensions 4 mod 8 comes from the fact that in this case the kernel and cokernel of the Dirac operator have a quaternionic structure so as complex vector spaces they have even dimensions so the index is even In dimension 4 this result implies Rochlin s theorem that the signature of a 4 dimensional spin manifold is divisible by 16 this follows because in dimension 4 the A genus is minus one eighth of the signature Proof techniques editPseudodifferential operators edit Main article pseudodifferential operator Pseudodifferential operators can be explained easily in the case of constant coefficient operators on Euclidean space In this case constant coefficient differential operators are just the Fourier transforms of multiplication by polynomials and constant coefficient pseudodifferential operators are just the Fourier transforms of multiplication by more general functions Many proofs of the index theorem use pseudodifferential operators rather than differential operators The reason for this is that for many purposes there are not enough differential operators For example a pseudoinverse of an elliptic differential operator of positive order is not a differential operator but is a pseudodifferential operator Also there is a direct correspondence between data representing elements of K B X S X clutching functions and symbols of elliptic pseudodifferential operators Pseudodifferential operators have an order which can be any real number or even and have symbols which are no longer polynomials on the cotangent space and elliptic differential operators are those whose symbols are invertible for sufficiently large cotangent vectors Most versions of the index theorem can be extended from elliptic differential operators to elliptic pseudodifferential operators Cobordism edit The initial proof was based on that of the Hirzebruch Riemann Roch theorem 1954 and involved cobordism theory and pseudodifferential operators The idea of this first proof is roughly as follows Consider the ring generated by pairs X V where V is a smooth vector bundle on the compact smooth oriented manifold X with relations that the sum and product of the ring on these generators are given by disjoint union and product of manifolds with the obvious operations on the vector bundles and any boundary of a manifold with vector bundle is 0 This is similar to the cobordism ring of oriented manifolds except that the manifolds also have a vector bundle The topological and analytical indices are both reinterpreted as functions from this ring to the integers Then one checks that these two functions are in fact both ring homomorphisms In order to prove they are the same it is then only necessary to check they are the same on a set of generators of this ring Thom s cobordism theory gives a set of generators for example complex vector spaces with the trivial bundle together with certain bundles over even dimensional spheres So the index theorem can be proved by checking it on these particularly simple cases K theory edit Atiyah and Singer s first published proof used K theory rather than cobordism If i is any inclusion of compact manifolds from X to Y they defined a pushforward operation i on elliptic operators of X to elliptic operators of Y that preserves the index By taking Y to be some sphere that X embeds in this reduces the index theorem to the case of spheres If Y is a sphere and X is some point embedded in Y then any elliptic operator on Y is the image under i of some elliptic operator on the point This reduces the index theorem to the case of a point where it is trivial Heat equation edit Atiyah Bott and Patodi 1973 gave a new proof of the index theorem using the heat equation see e g Berline Getzler amp Vergne 1992 The proof is also published in Melrose 1993 and Gilkey 1994 If D is a differential operator with adjoint D then D D and DD are self adjoint operators whose non zero eigenvalues have the same multiplicities However their zero eigenspaces may have different multiplicities as these multiplicities are the dimensions of the kernels of D and D Therefore the index of D is given by index D dim Ker D Tr e tD D Tr e tDD displaystyle operatorname index D dim operatorname Ker D operatorname Tr left e tD D right operatorname Tr left e tDD right nbsp for any positive t The right hand side is given by the trace of the difference of the kernels of two heat operators These have an asymptotic expansion for small positive t which can be used to evaluate the limit as t tends to 0 giving a proof of the Atiyah Singer index theorem The asymptotic expansions for small t appear very complicated but invariant theory shows that there are huge cancellations between the terms which makes it possible to find the leading terms explicitly These cancellations were later explained using supersymmetry Citations edit a b Atiyah amp Singer 1963 Kayani 2020 Hamilton 2020 p 11 Gel fand 1960 Palais 1965 Cartan Schwartz 1965 Atiyah amp Singer 1968a Atiyah amp Singer 1968a Atiyah amp Singer 1968b Atiyah amp Singer 1971a Atiyah amp Singer 1971b Novikov 1965 Kirby amp Siebenmann 1969 Thom 1956 Atiyah 1970 Singer 1971 Kasparov 1972 Atiyah Bott amp Patodi 1973 Melrose 1993 Sullivan 1979 Getzler 1983 Witten 1982 Teleman 1983 Teleman 1984 Connes 1986 Donaldson amp Sullivan 1989 Connes amp Moscovici 1990 Connes Sullivan amp Teleman 1994 Shanahan P 1978 The Atiyah Singer index theorem an introduction Lecture Notes in Mathematics vol 638 Springer CiteSeerX 10 1 1 193 9222 doi 10 1007 BFb0068264 ISBN 978 0 387 08660 6 Lawson H Blane Michelsohn Marie Louise 1989 Spin Geometry Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 08542 0 algebraic topology How to understand the Todd class Mathematics Stack Exchange Retrieved 2021 02 05 Index Theorems on Open Spaces Some Remarks on the Paper of Callias Nakahara Mikio 2003 Geometry topology and physics Institute of Physics Publishing ISBN 0 7503 0606 8References editThe papers by Atiyah are reprinted in volumes 3 and 4 of his collected works Atiyah 1988a 1988b Atiyah M F 1970 Global Theory of Elliptic Operators Proc Int Conf on Functional Analysis and Related Topics Tokyo 1969 University of Tokio Zbl 0193 43601 Atiyah M F 1976 Elliptic operators discrete groups and von Neumann algebras Colloque Analyse et Topologie en l Honneur de Henri Cartan Orsay 1974 Asterisque vol 32 33 Soc Math France Paris pp 43 72 MR 0420729 Atiyah M F Segal G B 1968 The Index of Elliptic Operators II Annals of Mathematics Second Series 87 3 531 545 doi 10 2307 1970716 JSTOR 1970716 This reformulates the result as a sort of Lefschetz fixed point theorem using equivariant K theory Atiyah Michael F Singer Isadore M 1963 The Index of Elliptic Operators on Compact Manifolds Bull Amer Math Soc 69 3 422 433 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1963 10957 X An announcement of the index theorem Atiyah Michael F Singer Isadore M 1968a The Index of Elliptic Operators I Annals of Mathematics 87 3 484 530 doi 10 2307 1970715 JSTOR 1970715 This gives a proof using K theory instead of cohomology Atiyah Michael F Singer Isadore M 1968b The Index of Elliptic Operators III Annals of Mathematics Second Series 87 3 546 604 doi 10 2307 1970717 JSTOR 1970717 This paper shows how to convert from the K theory version to a version using cohomology Atiyah Michael F Singer Isadore M 1971a The Index of Elliptic Operators IV Annals of Mathematics Second Series 93 1 119 138 doi 10 2307 1970756 JSTOR 1970756 This paper studies families of elliptic operators where the index is now an element of the K theory of the space parametrizing the family Atiyah Michael F Singer Isadore M 1971b The Index of Elliptic Operators V Annals of Mathematics Second Series 93 1 139 149 doi 10 2307 1970757 JSTOR 1970757 This studies families of real rather than complex elliptic operators when one can sometimes squeeze out a little extra information Atiyah M F Bott R 1966 A Lefschetz Fixed Point Formula for Elliptic Differential Operators Bull Am Math Soc 72 2 245 50 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1966 11483 0 This states a theorem calculating the Lefschetz number of an endomorphism of an elliptic complex Atiyah M F Bott R 1967 A Lefschetz Fixed Point Formula for Elliptic Complexes I Annals of Mathematics Second series 86 2 374 407 doi 10 2307 1970694 JSTOR 1970694 and Atiyah M F Bott R 1968 A Lefschetz Fixed Point Formula for Elliptic Complexes II Applications Annals of Mathematics Second Series 88 3 451 491 doi 10 2307 1970721 JSTOR 1970721 These give the proofs and some applications of the results announced in the previous paper Atiyah M Bott R Patodi V K 1973 On the heat equation and the index theorem Invent Math 19 4 279 330 Bibcode 1973InMat 19 279A doi 10 1007 BF01425417 MR 0650828 S2CID 115700319 Atiyah M Bott R Patodi V K 1975 Errata Invent Math 28 3 277 280 Bibcode 1975InMat 28 277A doi 10 1007 BF01425562 MR 0650829 Atiyah Michael Schmid Wilfried 1977 A geometric construction of the discrete series for semisimple Lie groups Invent Math 42 1 62 Bibcode 1977InMat 42 1A doi 10 1007 BF01389783 MR 0463358 S2CID 189831012 Atiyah Michael Schmid Wilfried 1979 Erratum Invent Math 54 2 189 192 Bibcode 1979InMat 54 189A doi 10 1007 BF01408936 MR 0550183 Atiyah Michael 1988a Collected works Vol 3 Index theory 1 Oxford Science Publications New York The Clarendon Press Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 853277 4 MR 0951894 Atiyah Michael 1988b Collected works Vol 4 Index theory 2 Oxford Science Publications New York The Clarendon Press Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 853278 1 MR 0951895 Baum P Fulton W Macpherson R 1979 Riemann Roch for singular varieties Acta Mathematica 143 155 191 doi 10 1007 BF02684299 S2CID 83458307 Zbl 0332 14003 Berline Nicole Getzler Ezra Vergne Michele 1992 Heat Kernels and Dirac Operators Berlin Springer ISBN 978 3 540 53340 5 This gives an elementary proof of the index theorem for the Dirac operator using the heat equation and supersymmetry Bismut Jean Michel 1984 The Atiyah Singer Theorems A Probabilistic Approach I The index theorem J Funct Analysis 57 56 99 doi 10 1016 0022 1236 84 90101 0 Bismut proves the theorem for elliptic complexes using probabilistic methods rather than heat equation methods Cartan Schwartz 1965 Seminaire Henri Cartan Theoreme d Atiyah Singer sur l indice d un operateur differentiel elliptique 16 annee 1963 64 dirigee par Henri Cartan et Laurent Schwartz Fasc 1 Fasc 2 French Ecole Normale Superieure Secretariat mathematique Paris Zbl 0149 41102 Connes A 1986 Non commutative differential geometry Publications Mathematiques de l Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques 62 257 360 doi 10 1007 BF02698807 S2CID 122740195 Zbl 0592 46056 Connes A 1994 Noncommutative Geometry San Diego Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 185860 5 Zbl 0818 46076 Connes A Moscovici H 1990 Cyclic cohomology the Novikov conjecture and hyperbolic groups PDF Topology 29 3 345 388 doi 10 1016 0040 9383 90 90003 3 Zbl 0759 58047 Connes A Sullivan D Teleman N 1994 Quasiconformal mappings operators on Hilbert space and local formulae for characteristic classes Topology 33 4 663 681 doi 10 1016 0040 9383 94 90003 5 Zbl 0840 57013 Donaldson S K Sullivan D 1989 Quasiconformal 4 manifolds Acta Mathematica 163 181 252 doi 10 1007 BF02392736 Zbl 0704 57008 Gel fand I M 1960 On elliptic equations Russ Math Surv 15 3 113 123 Bibcode 1960RuMaS 15 113G doi 10 1070 rm1960v015n03ABEH004094 reprinted in volume 1 of his collected works p 65 75 ISBN 0 387 13619 3 On page 120 Gel fand suggests that the index of an elliptic operator should be expressible in terms of topological data Getzler E 1983 Pseudodifferential operators on supermanifolds and the Atiyah Singer index theorem Commun Math Phys 92 2 163 178 Bibcode 1983CMaPh 92 163G doi 10 1007 BF01210843 S2CID 55438589 Getzler E 1988 A short proof of the local Atiyah Singer index theorem Topology 25 111 117 doi 10 1016 0040 9383 86 90008 X Gilkey Peter B 1994 Invariance Theory the Heat Equation and the Atiyah Singer Theorem CRC Press ISBN 978 0 8493 7874 4 Free online textbook that proves the Atiyah Singer theorem with a heat equation approach Hamilton M J D 2020 The Higgs boson for mathematicians Lecture notes on gauge theory and symmetry breaking arXiv 1512 02632 math DG Kayani U 2020 Dynamical supersymmetry enhancement of black hole horizons arXiv 1910 01080 hep th Higson Nigel Roe John 2000 Analytic K homology Oxford University Press ISBN 9780191589201 Hilsum M 1999 Structures riemaniennes Lp et K homologie Annals of Mathematics 149 3 1007 1022 arXiv math 9905210 doi 10 2307 121079 JSTOR 121079 S2CID 119708566 Kasparov G G 1972 Topological invariance of elliptic operators I K homology Math USSR Izvestija Engl Transl 9 4 751 792 Bibcode 1975IzMat 9 751K doi 10 1070 IM1975v009n04ABEH001497 Kirby R Siebenmann L C 1969 On the triangulation of manifolds and the Hauptvermutung Bull Amer Math Soc 75 4 742 749 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1969 12271 8 Kirby R Siebenmann L C 1977 Foundational Essays on Topological Manifolds Smoothings and Triangulations Annals of Mathematics Studies in Mathematics vol 88 Princeton Princeton University Press and Tokio University Press Lawson H Blane Michelsohn Marie Louise 1989 Spin Geometry Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 08542 0 Melrose Richard B 1993 The Atiyah Patodi Singer Index Theorem Wellesley Mass Peters ISBN 978 1 56881 002 7 Free online textbook Novikov S P 1965 Topological invariance of the rational Pontrjagin classes PDF Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR 163 298 300 Palais Richard S 1965 Seminar on the Atiyah Singer Index Theorem Annals of Mathematics Studies vol 57 S l Princeton Univ Press ISBN 978 0 691 08031 4 This describes the original proof of the theorem Atiyah and Singer never published their original proof themselves but only improved versions of it Shanahan P 1978 The Atiyah Singer index theorem an introduction Lecture Notes in Mathematics vol 638 Springer CiteSeerX 10 1 1 193 9222 doi 10 1007 BFb0068264 ISBN 978 0 387 08660 6 Singer I M 1971 Future extensions of index theory and elliptic operators Prospects in Mathematics Annals of Mathematics Studies in Mathematics vol 70 pp 171 185 Sullivan D 1979 Hyperbolic geometry and homeomorphisms J C Candrell Geometric Topology Proc Georgia Topology Conf Athens Georgia 1977 New York Academic Press pp 543 595 ISBN 978 0 12 158860 1 Zbl 0478 57007 Sullivan D Teleman N 1983 An analytic proof of Novikov s theorem on rational Pontrjagin classes Publications Mathematiques de l Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques 58 Paris 291 293 doi 10 1007 BF02953773 S2CID 8348213 Zbl 0531 58045 Teleman N 1980 Combinatorial Hodge theory and signature operator Inventiones Mathematicae 61 3 227 249 Bibcode 1980InMat 61 227T doi 10 1007 BF01390066 S2CID 122247909 Teleman N 1983 The index of signature operators on Lipschitz manifolds Publications Mathematiques de l Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques 58 251 290 doi 10 1007 BF02953772 S2CID 121497293 Zbl 0531 58044 Teleman N 1984 The index theorem on topological manifolds Acta Mathematica 153 117 152 doi 10 1007 BF02392376 Zbl 0547 58036 Teleman N 1985 Transversality and the index theorem Integral Equations and Operator Theory 8 5 693 719 doi 10 1007 BF01201710 S2CID 121137053 Thom R 1956 Les classes caracteristiques de Pontrjagin de varietes triangulees Symp Int Top Alg Mexico pp 54 67 Witten Edward 1982 Supersymmetry and Morse theory J Diff Geom 17 4 661 692 doi 10 4310 jdg 1214437492 MR 0683171 Shing Tung Yau ed 2009 First published in 2005 The Founders of Index Theory 2nd ed Somerville Mass International Press of Boston ISBN 978 1571461377 Personal accounts on Atiyah Bott Hirzebruch and Singer External links editLinks on the theory edit Mazzeo Rafe The Atiyah Singer Index Theorem What it is and why you should care PDF Archived from the original on June 24 2006 Retrieved January 3 2006 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Pdf presentation Voitsekhovskii M I Shubin M A 2001 1994 Index formulas Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press Wassermann Antony Lecture notes on the Atiyah Singer Index Theorem Archived from the original on March 29 2017 Links of interviews edit Raussen Martin Skau Christian 2005 Interview with Michael Atiyah and Isadore Singer PDF Notices of AMS pp 223 231 R R Seeley and other 1999 Recollections from the early days of index theory and pseudo differential operators A partial transcript of informal post dinner conversation during a symposium held in Roskilde Denmark in September 1998 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Atiyah Singer index theorem amp oldid 1170696794, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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