fbpx
Wikipedia

Fubini–Study metric

In mathematics, the Fubini–Study metric is a Kähler metric on projective Hilbert space, that is, on a complex projective space CPn endowed with a Hermitian form. This metric was originally described in 1904 and 1905 by Guido Fubini and Eduard Study.[1][2]

A Hermitian form in (the vector space) Cn+1 defines a unitary subgroup U(n+1) in GL(n+1,C). A Fubini–Study metric is determined up to homothety (overall scaling) by invariance under such a U(n+1) action; thus it is homogeneous. Equipped with a Fubini–Study metric, CPn is a symmetric space. The particular normalization on the metric depends on the application. In Riemannian geometry, one uses a normalization so that the Fubini–Study metric simply relates to the standard metric on the (2n+1)-sphere. In algebraic geometry, one uses a normalization making CPn a Hodge manifold.

Construction

The Fubini–Study metric arises naturally in the quotient space construction of complex projective space.

Specifically, one may define CPn to be the space consisting of all complex lines in Cn+1, i.e., the quotient of Cn+1\{0} by the equivalence relation relating all complex multiples of each point together. This agrees with the quotient by the diagonal group action of the multiplicative group C* = C \ {0}:

 

This quotient realizes Cn+1\{0} as a complex line bundle over the base space CPn. (In fact this is the so-called tautological bundle over CPn.) A point of CPn is thus identified with an equivalence class of (n+1)-tuples [Z0,...,Zn] modulo nonzero complex rescaling; the Zi are called homogeneous coordinates of the point.

Furthermore, one may realize this quotient mapping in two steps: since multiplication by a nonzero complex scalar z = Re can be uniquely thought of as the composition of a dilation by the modulus R followed by a counterclockwise rotation about the origin by an angle  , the quotient mapping Cn+1 → CPn splits into two pieces.

 

where step (a) is a quotient by the dilation Z ~ RZ for R ∈ R+, the multiplicative group of positive real numbers, and step (b) is a quotient by the rotations Z ~ eZ.

The result of the quotient in (a) is the real hypersphere S2n+1 defined by the equation |Z|2 = |Z0|2 + ... + |Zn|2 = 1. The quotient in (b) realizes CPn = S2n+1/S1, where S1 represents the group of rotations. This quotient is realized explicitly by the famous Hopf fibration S1 → S2n+1 → CPn, the fibers of which are among the great circles of  .

As a metric quotient

When a quotient is taken of a Riemannian manifold (or metric space in general), care must be taken to ensure that the quotient space is endowed with a metric that is well-defined. For instance, if a group G acts on a Riemannian manifold (X,g), then in order for the orbit space X/G to possess an induced metric,   must be constant along G-orbits in the sense that for any element h ∈ G and pair of vector fields   we must have g(Xh,Yh) = g(X,Y).

The standard Hermitian metric on Cn+1 is given in the standard basis by

 

whose realification is the standard Euclidean metric on R2n+2. This metric is not invariant under the diagonal action of C*, so we are unable to directly push it down to CPn in the quotient. However, this metric is invariant under the diagonal action of S1 = U(1), the group of rotations. Therefore, step (b) in the above construction is possible once step (a) is accomplished.

The Fubini–Study metric is the metric induced on the quotient CPn = S2n+1/S1, where   carries the so-called "round metric" endowed upon it by restriction of the standard Euclidean metric to the unit hypersphere.

In local affine coordinates

Corresponding to a point in CPn with homogeneous coordinates [Z0:...:Zn], there is a unique set of n coordinates (z1,...,zn) such that

 

provided Z0 ≠ 0; specifically, zj = Zj/Z0. The (z1,...,zn) form an affine coordinate system for CPn in the coordinate patch U0 = {Z0 ≠ 0}. One can develop an affine coordinate system in any of the coordinate patches Ui = {Zi ≠ 0} by dividing instead by Zi in the obvious manner. The n+1 coordinate patches Ui cover CPn, and it is possible to give the metric explicitly in terms of the affine coordinates (z1,...,zn) on Ui. The coordinate derivatives define a frame   of the holomorphic tangent bundle of CPn, in terms of which the Fubini–Study metric has Hermitian components

 

where |z|2 = |z1|2+...+|zn|2. That is, the Hermitian matrix of the Fubini–Study metric in this frame is

 

Note that each matrix element is unitary-invariant: the diagonal action   will leave this matrix unchanged.

Accordingly, the line element is given by

 

In this last expression, the summation convention is used to sum over Latin indices i,j that range from 1 to n.

The metric can be derived from the following Kähler potential:[3]

 

as

 

Using homogeneous coordinates

An expression is also possible in the notation of homogeneous coordinates, commonly used to describe projective varieties of algebraic geometry: Z = [Z0:...:Zn]. Formally, subject to suitably interpreting the expressions involved, one has

 

Here the summation convention is used to sum over Greek indices α β ranging from 0 to n, and in the last equality the standard notation for the skew part of a tensor is used:

 

Now, this expression for ds2 apparently defines a tensor on the total space of the tautological bundle Cn+1\{0}. It is to be understood properly as a tensor on CPn by pulling it back along a holomorphic section σ of the tautological bundle of CPn. It remains then to verify that the value of the pullback is independent of the choice of section: this can be done by a direct calculation.

The Kähler form of this metric is

 

where the   are the Dolbeault operators. The pullback of this is clearly independent of the choice of holomorphic section. The quantity log|Z|2 is the Kähler potential (sometimes called the Kähler scalar) of CPn.

In bra-ket coordinate notation

In quantum mechanics, the Fubini–Study metric is also known as the Bures metric.[4] However, the Bures metric is typically defined in the notation of mixed states, whereas the exposition below is written in terms of a pure state. The real part of the metric is (four times) the Fisher information metric.[4]

The Fubini–Study metric may be written using the bra–ket notation commonly used in quantum mechanics. To explicitly equate this notation to the homogeneous coordinates given above, let

 

where   is a set of orthonormal basis vectors for Hilbert space, the   are complex numbers, and   is the standard notation for a point in the projective space   in homogeneous coordinates. Then, given two points   and   in the space, the distance (length of a geodesic) between them is

 

or, equivalently, in projective variety notation,

 

Here,   is the complex conjugate of  . The appearance of   in the denominator is a reminder that   and likewise   were not normalized to unit length; thus the normalization is made explicit here. In Hilbert space, the metric can be rather trivially interpreted as the angle between two vectors; thus it is occasionally called the quantum angle. The angle is real-valued, and runs from 0 to  .

The infinitesimal form of this metric may be quickly obtained by taking  , or equivalently,   to obtain

 

In the context of quantum mechanics, CP1 is called the Bloch sphere; the Fubini–Study metric is the natural metric for the geometrization of quantum mechanics. Much of the peculiar behaviour of quantum mechanics, including quantum entanglement and the Berry phase effect, can be attributed to the peculiarities of the Fubini–Study metric.

The n = 1 case

When n = 1, there is a diffeomorphism   given by stereographic projection. This leads to the "special" Hopf fibration S1 → S3 → S2. When the Fubini–Study metric is written in coordinates on CP1, its restriction to the real tangent bundle yields an expression of the ordinary "round metric" of radius 1/2 (and Gaussian curvature 4) on S2.

Namely, if z = x + iy is the standard affine coordinate chart on the Riemann sphere CP1 and x = r cos θ, y = r sin θ are polar coordinates on C, then a routine computation shows

 

where   is the round metric on the unit 2-sphere. Here φ, θ are "mathematician's spherical coordinates" on S2 coming from the stereographic projection r tan(φ/2) = 1, tan θ = y/x. (Many physics references interchange the roles of φ and θ.)

The Kähler form is

 

Choosing as vierbeins   and  , the Kähler form simplifies to

 

Applying the Hodge star to the Kähler form, one obtains

 

implying that K is harmonic.

The n = 2 case

The Fubini–Study metric on the complex projective plane CP2 has been proposed as a gravitational instanton, the gravitational analog of an instanton.[5][3] The metric, the connection form and the curvature are readily computed, once suitable real 4D coordinates are established. Writing   for real Cartesian coordinates, one then defines polar coordinate one-forms on the 4-sphere (the quaternionic projective line) as

 

The   are the standard left-invariant one-form coordinate frame on the Lie group  ; that is, they obey   for   cyclic.

The corresponding local affine coordinates are   and   then provide

 

with the usual abbreviations that   and  .

The line element, starting with the previously given expression, is given by

 

The vierbeins can be immediately read off from the last expression:

 

That is, in the vierbein coordinate system, using roman-letter subscripts, the metric tensor is Euclidean:

 

Given the vierbein, a spin connection can be computed; the Levi-Civita spin connection is the unique connection that is torsion-free and covariantly constant, namely, it is the one-form   that satisfies the torsion-free condition

 

and is covariantly constant, which, for spin connections, means that it is antisymmetric in the vierbein indexes:

 

The above is readily solved; one obtains

 

The curvature 2-form is defined as

 

and is constant:

 

The Ricci tensor in veirbein indexes is given by

 

where the curvature 2-form was expanded as a four-component tensor:

 

The resulting Ricci tensor is constant

 

so that the resulting Einstein equation

 

can be solved with the cosmological constant  .

The Weyl tensor for Fubini–Study metrics in general is given by

 

For the n = 2 case, the two-forms

 

are self-dual:

 

Curvature properties

In the n = 1 special case, the Fubini–Study metric has constant sectional curvature identically equal to 4, according to the equivalence with the 2-sphere's round metric (which given a radius R has sectional curvature  ). However, for n > 1, the Fubini–Study metric does not have constant curvature. Its sectional curvature is instead given by the equation[6]

 

where   is an orthonormal basis of the 2-plane σ, J : TCPn → TCPn is the complex structure on CPn, and   is the Fubini–Study metric.

A consequence of this formula is that the sectional curvature satisfies   for all 2-planes  . The maximum sectional curvature (4) is attained at a holomorphic 2-plane — one for which J(σ) ⊂ σ — while the minimum sectional curvature (1) is attained at a 2-plane for which J(σ) is orthogonal to σ. For this reason, the Fubini–Study metric is often said to have "constant holomorphic sectional curvature" equal to 4.

This makes CPn a (non-strict) quarter pinched manifold; a celebrated theorem shows that a strictly quarter-pinched simply connected n-manifold must be homeomorphic to a sphere.

The Fubini–Study metric is also an Einstein metric in that it is proportional to its own Ricci tensor: there exists a constant  ; such that for all i,j we have

 

This implies, among other things, that the Fubini–Study metric remains unchanged up to a scalar multiple under the Ricci flow. It also makes CPn indispensable to the theory of general relativity, where it serves as a nontrivial solution to the vacuum Einstein field equations.

The cosmological constant   for CPn is given in terms of the dimension of the space:

 

Product metric

The common notions of separability apply for the Fubini–Study metric. More precisely, the metric is separable on the natural product of projective spaces, the Segre embedding. That is, if   is a separable state, so that it can be written as  , then the metric is the sum of the metric on the subspaces:

 

where   and   are the metrics, respectively, on the subspaces A and B.

Connection and curvature

The fact that the metric can be derived from the Kähler potential means that the Christoffel symbols and the curvature tensors contain a lot of symmetries, and can be given a particularly simple form:[7] The Christoffel symbols, in the local affine coordinates, are given by

 

The Riemann tensor is also particularly simple:

 

The Ricci tensor is

 

Pronunciation

A common pronunciation mistake, made especially by native English speakers, is to assume that Study is pronounced the same as the verb to study. Since it is actually a German name, the correct way to pronounce the u in Study is the same as the u in Fubini. Furthermore, the S in Study is pronounced like the sh in Fisher. In terms of phonetics: ʃtuːdi.

See also

References

  1. ^ G. Fubini, "Sulle metriche definite da una forme Hermitiana", (1904) Atti del Reale Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti , 63 pp. 502–513
  2. ^ Study, E. (1905). "Kürzeste Wege im komplexen Gebiet". Mathematische Annalen (in German). Springer Science and Business Media LLC. 60 (3): 321–378. doi:10.1007/bf01457616. ISSN 0025-5831. S2CID 120961275.
  3. ^ a b Eguchi, Tohru; Gilkey, Peter B.; Hanson, Andrew J. (1980). "Gravitation, gauge theories and differential geometry". Physics Reports. Elsevier BV. 66 (6): 213–393. Bibcode:1980PhR....66..213E. doi:10.1016/0370-1573(80)90130-1. ISSN 0370-1573.
  4. ^ a b Paolo Facchi, Ravi Kulkarni, V. I. Man'ko, Giuseppe Marmo, E. C. G. Sudarshan, Franco Ventriglia "Classical and Quantum Fisher Information in the Geometrical Formulation of Quantum Mechanics" (2010), Physics Letters A 374 pp. 4801. doi:10.1016/j.physleta.2010.10.005
  5. ^ Eguchi, Tohru; Freund, Peter G. O. (1976-11-08). "Quantum Gravity and World Topology". Physical Review Letters. American Physical Society (APS). 37 (19): 1251–1254. Bibcode:1976PhRvL..37.1251E. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.37.1251. ISSN 0031-9007.
  6. ^ Sakai, T. Riemannian Geometry, Translations of Mathematical Monographs No. 149 (1995), American Mathematics Society.
  7. ^ Andrew J. Hanson, Ji-PingSha, "Visualizing the K3 Surface" (2006)

fubini, study, metric, mathematics, kähler, metric, projective, hilbert, space, that, complex, projective, space, endowed, with, hermitian, form, this, metric, originally, described, 1904, 1905, guido, fubini, eduard, study, hermitian, form, vector, space, def. In mathematics the Fubini Study metric is a Kahler metric on projective Hilbert space that is on a complex projective space CPn endowed with a Hermitian form This metric was originally described in 1904 and 1905 by Guido Fubini and Eduard Study 1 2 A Hermitian form in the vector space Cn 1 defines a unitary subgroup U n 1 in GL n 1 C A Fubini Study metric is determined up to homothety overall scaling by invariance under such a U n 1 action thus it is homogeneous Equipped with a Fubini Study metric CPn is a symmetric space The particular normalization on the metric depends on the application In Riemannian geometry one uses a normalization so that the Fubini Study metric simply relates to the standard metric on the 2n 1 sphere In algebraic geometry one uses a normalization making CPn a Hodge manifold Contents 1 Construction 1 1 As a metric quotient 1 2 In local affine coordinates 1 3 Using homogeneous coordinates 1 4 In bra ket coordinate notation 2 The n 1 case 3 The n 2 case 4 Curvature properties 5 Product metric 6 Connection and curvature 7 Pronunciation 8 See also 9 ReferencesConstruction EditThe Fubini Study metric arises naturally in the quotient space construction of complex projective space Specifically one may define CPn to be the space consisting of all complex lines in Cn 1 i e the quotient of Cn 1 0 by the equivalence relation relating all complex multiples of each point together This agrees with the quotient by the diagonal group action of the multiplicative group C C 0 C P n Z Z 0 Z 1 Z n C n 1 0 Z c Z c C displaystyle mathbf CP n left mathbf Z Z 0 Z 1 ldots Z n in mathbf C n 1 setminus 0 right mathbf Z sim c mathbf Z c in mathbf C This quotient realizes Cn 1 0 as a complex line bundle over the base space CPn In fact this is the so called tautological bundle over CPn A point of CPn is thus identified with an equivalence class of n 1 tuples Z0 Zn modulo nonzero complex rescaling the Zi are called homogeneous coordinates of the point Furthermore one may realize this quotient mapping in two steps since multiplication by a nonzero complex scalar z R ei8 can be uniquely thought of as the composition of a dilation by the modulus R followed by a counterclockwise rotation about the origin by an angle 8 displaystyle theta the quotient mapping Cn 1 CPn splits into two pieces C n 1 0 a S 2 n 1 b C P n displaystyle mathbf C n 1 setminus 0 stackrel a longrightarrow S 2n 1 stackrel b longrightarrow mathbf CP n where step a is a quotient by the dilation Z RZ for R R the multiplicative group of positive real numbers and step b is a quotient by the rotations Z ei8Z The result of the quotient in a is the real hypersphere S2n 1 defined by the equation Z 2 Z0 2 Zn 2 1 The quotient in b realizes CPn S2n 1 S1 where S1 represents the group of rotations This quotient is realized explicitly by the famous Hopf fibration S1 S2n 1 CPn the fibers of which are among the great circles of S 2 n 1 displaystyle S 2n 1 As a metric quotient Edit When a quotient is taken of a Riemannian manifold or metric space in general care must be taken to ensure that the quotient space is endowed with a metric that is well defined For instance if a group G acts on a Riemannian manifold X g then in order for the orbit space X G to possess an induced metric g displaystyle g must be constant along G orbits in the sense that for any element h G and pair of vector fields X Y displaystyle X Y we must have g Xh Yh g X Y The standard Hermitian metric on Cn 1 is given in the standard basis by d s 2 d Z d Z d Z 0 d Z 0 d Z n d Z n displaystyle ds 2 d mathbf Z otimes d bar mathbf Z dZ 0 otimes d bar Z 0 cdots dZ n otimes d bar Z n whose realification is the standard Euclidean metric on R2n 2 This metric is not invariant under the diagonal action of C so we are unable to directly push it down to CPn in the quotient However this metric is invariant under the diagonal action of S1 U 1 the group of rotations Therefore step b in the above construction is possible once step a is accomplished The Fubini Study metric is the metric induced on the quotient CPn S2n 1 S1 where S 2 n 1 displaystyle S 2n 1 carries the so called round metric endowed upon it by restriction of the standard Euclidean metric to the unit hypersphere In local affine coordinates Edit Corresponding to a point in CPn with homogeneous coordinates Z0 Zn there is a unique set of n coordinates z1 zn such that Z 0 Z n 1 z 1 z n displaystyle Z 0 dots Z n sim 1 z 1 dots z n provided Z0 0 specifically zj Zj Z0 The z1 zn form an affine coordinate system for CPn in the coordinate patch U0 Z0 0 One can develop an affine coordinate system in any of the coordinate patches Ui Zi 0 by dividing instead by Zi in the obvious manner The n 1 coordinate patches Ui cover CPn and it is possible to give the metric explicitly in terms of the affine coordinates z1 zn on Ui The coordinate derivatives define a frame 1 n displaystyle partial 1 ldots partial n of the holomorphic tangent bundle of CPn in terms of which the Fubini Study metric has Hermitian components g i j h i j 1 z 2 d i j z i z j 1 z 2 2 displaystyle g i bar j h partial i bar partial j frac left 1 mathbf z 2 right delta i bar j bar z i z j left 1 mathbf z 2 right 2 where z 2 z1 2 zn 2 That is the Hermitian matrix of the Fubini Study metric in this frame is g i j 1 1 z 2 2 1 z 2 z 1 2 z 1 z 2 z 1 z n z 2 z 1 1 z 2 z 2 2 z 2 z n z n z 1 z n z 2 1 z 2 z n 2 displaystyle bigl g i bar j bigr frac 1 left 1 mathbf z 2 right 2 left begin array cccc 1 mathbf z 2 z 1 2 amp bar z 1 z 2 amp cdots amp bar z 1 z n bar z 2 z 1 amp 1 mathbf z 2 z 2 2 amp cdots amp bar z 2 z n vdots amp vdots amp ddots amp vdots bar z n z 1 amp bar z n z 2 amp cdots amp 1 mathbf z 2 z n 2 end array right Note that each matrix element is unitary invariant the diagonal action z e i 8 z displaystyle mathbf z mapsto e i theta mathbf z will leave this matrix unchanged Accordingly the line element is given by d s 2 g i j d z i d z j 1 z 2 d z 2 z d z z d z 1 z 2 2 1 z i z i d z j d z j z j z i d z j d z i 1 z i z i 2 displaystyle begin aligned ds 2 amp g i bar j dz i d bar z j 4pt amp frac left 1 mathbf z 2 right d mathbf z 2 bar mathbf z cdot d mathbf z mathbf z cdot d bar mathbf z left 1 mathbf z 2 right 2 4pt amp frac 1 z i bar z i dz j d bar z j bar z j z i dz j d bar z i left 1 z i bar z i right 2 end aligned In this last expression the summation convention is used to sum over Latin indices i j that range from 1 to n The metric can be derived from the following Kahler potential 3 K ln 1 z i z i ln 1 d i j z i z j displaystyle K ln 1 z i bar z i ln 1 delta i bar j z i bar z j as g i j K i j 2 z i z j K displaystyle g i bar j K i bar j frac partial 2 partial z i partial bar z j K Using homogeneous coordinates Edit An expression is also possible in the notation of homogeneous coordinates commonly used to describe projective varieties of algebraic geometry Z Z0 Zn Formally subject to suitably interpreting the expressions involved one has d s 2 Z 2 d Z 2 Z d Z Z d Z Z 4 Z a Z a d Z b d Z b Z a Z b d Z a d Z b Z a Z a 2 2 Z a d Z b Z a d Z b Z a Z a 2 displaystyle begin aligned ds 2 amp frac mathbf Z 2 d mathbf Z 2 bar mathbf Z cdot d mathbf Z mathbf Z cdot d bar mathbf Z mathbf Z 4 amp frac Z alpha bar Z alpha dZ beta d bar Z beta bar Z alpha Z beta dZ alpha d bar Z beta left Z alpha bar Z alpha right 2 amp frac 2Z alpha dZ beta bar Z alpha overline dZ beta left Z alpha bar Z alpha right 2 end aligned Here the summation convention is used to sum over Greek indices a b ranging from 0 to n and in the last equality the standard notation for the skew part of a tensor is used Z a W b 1 2 Z a W b Z b W a displaystyle Z alpha W beta frac 1 2 left Z alpha W beta Z beta W alpha right Now this expression for ds2 apparently defines a tensor on the total space of the tautological bundle Cn 1 0 It is to be understood properly as a tensor on CPn by pulling it back along a holomorphic section s of the tautological bundle of CPn It remains then to verify that the value of the pullback is independent of the choice of section this can be done by a direct calculation The Kahler form of this metric is w i 2 log Z 2 displaystyle omega frac i 2 partial bar partial log mathbf Z 2 where the displaystyle partial bar partial are the Dolbeault operators The pullback of this is clearly independent of the choice of holomorphic section The quantity log Z 2 is the Kahler potential sometimes called the Kahler scalar of CPn In bra ket coordinate notation Edit In quantum mechanics the Fubini Study metric is also known as the Bures metric 4 However the Bures metric is typically defined in the notation of mixed states whereas the exposition below is written in terms of a pure state The real part of the metric is four times the Fisher information metric 4 The Fubini Study metric may be written using the bra ket notation commonly used in quantum mechanics To explicitly equate this notation to the homogeneous coordinates given above let ps k 0 n Z k e k Z 0 Z 1 Z n displaystyle vert psi rangle sum k 0 n Z k vert e k rangle Z 0 Z 1 ldots Z n where e k displaystyle vert e k rangle is a set of orthonormal basis vectors for Hilbert space the Z k displaystyle Z k are complex numbers and Z a Z 0 Z 1 Z n displaystyle Z alpha Z 0 Z 1 ldots Z n is the standard notation for a point in the projective space C P n displaystyle mathbb C P n in homogeneous coordinates Then given two points ps Z a displaystyle vert psi rangle Z alpha and ϕ W a displaystyle vert phi rangle W alpha in the space the distance length of a geodesic between them is g ps ϕ arccos ps ϕ ϕ ps ps ps ϕ ϕ displaystyle gamma psi phi arccos sqrt frac langle psi vert phi rangle langle phi vert psi rangle langle psi vert psi rangle langle phi vert phi rangle or equivalently in projective variety notation g ps ϕ g Z W arccos Z a W a W b Z b Z a Z a W b W b displaystyle gamma psi phi gamma Z W arccos sqrt frac Z alpha bar W alpha W beta bar Z beta Z alpha bar Z alpha W beta bar W beta Here Z a displaystyle bar Z alpha is the complex conjugate of Z a displaystyle Z alpha The appearance of ps ps displaystyle langle psi vert psi rangle in the denominator is a reminder that ps displaystyle vert psi rangle and likewise ϕ displaystyle vert phi rangle were not normalized to unit length thus the normalization is made explicit here In Hilbert space the metric can be rather trivially interpreted as the angle between two vectors thus it is occasionally called the quantum angle The angle is real valued and runs from 0 to p 2 displaystyle pi 2 The infinitesimal form of this metric may be quickly obtained by taking ϕ ps d ps displaystyle phi psi delta psi or equivalently W a Z a d Z a displaystyle W alpha Z alpha dZ alpha to obtain d s 2 d ps d ps ps ps d ps ps ps d ps ps ps 2 displaystyle ds 2 frac langle delta psi vert delta psi rangle langle psi vert psi rangle frac langle delta psi vert psi rangle langle psi vert delta psi rangle langle psi vert psi rangle 2 In the context of quantum mechanics CP1 is called the Bloch sphere the Fubini Study metric is the natural metric for the geometrization of quantum mechanics Much of the peculiar behaviour of quantum mechanics including quantum entanglement and the Berry phase effect can be attributed to the peculiarities of the Fubini Study metric The n 1 case EditWhen n 1 there is a diffeomorphism S 2 C P 1 displaystyle S 2 cong mathbb CP 1 given by stereographic projection This leads to the special Hopf fibration S1 S3 S2 When the Fubini Study metric is written in coordinates on CP1 its restriction to the real tangent bundle yields an expression of the ordinary round metric of radius 1 2 and Gaussian curvature 4 on S2 Namely if z x iy is the standard affine coordinate chart on the Riemann sphere CP1 and x r cos 8 y r sin 8 are polar coordinates on C then a routine computation shows d s 2 Re d z d z 1 z 2 2 d x 2 d y 2 1 r 2 2 1 4 d ϕ 2 sin 2 ϕ d 8 2 1 4 d s u s 2 displaystyle ds 2 frac operatorname Re dz otimes d bar z left 1 mathbf z 2 right 2 frac dx 2 dy 2 left 1 r 2 right 2 frac 1 4 d phi 2 sin 2 phi d theta 2 frac 1 4 ds us 2 where d s u s 2 displaystyle ds us 2 is the round metric on the unit 2 sphere Here f 8 are mathematician s spherical coordinates on S2 coming from the stereographic projection r tan f 2 1 tan 8 y x Many physics references interchange the roles of f and 8 The Kahler form is K i 2 d z d z 1 z z 2 d x d y 1 x 2 y 2 2 displaystyle K frac i 2 frac dz wedge d bar z left 1 z bar z right 2 frac dx wedge dy left 1 x 2 y 2 right 2 Choosing as vierbeins e 1 d x 1 r 2 displaystyle e 1 dx 1 r 2 and e 2 d y 1 r 2 displaystyle e 2 dy 1 r 2 the Kahler form simplifies to K e 1 e 2 displaystyle K e 1 wedge e 2 Applying the Hodge star to the Kahler form one obtains K 1 displaystyle K 1 implying that K is harmonic The n 2 case EditThe Fubini Study metric on the complex projective plane CP2 has been proposed as a gravitational instanton the gravitational analog of an instanton 5 3 The metric the connection form and the curvature are readily computed once suitable real 4D coordinates are established Writing x y z t displaystyle x y z t for real Cartesian coordinates one then defines polar coordinate one forms on the 4 sphere the quaternionic projective line as r d r x d x y d y z d z t d t r 2 s 1 t d x z d y y d z x d t r 2 s 2 z d x t d y x d z y d t r 2 s 3 y d x x d y t d z z d t displaystyle begin aligned r dr amp x dx y dy z dz t dt r 2 sigma 1 amp t dx z dy y dz x dt r 2 sigma 2 amp z dx t dy x dz y dt r 2 sigma 3 amp y dx x dy t dz z dt end aligned The s 1 s 2 s 3 displaystyle sigma 1 sigma 2 sigma 3 are the standard left invariant one form coordinate frame on the Lie group S U 2 S 3 displaystyle SU 2 S 3 that is they obey d s i 2 s j s k displaystyle d sigma i 2 sigma j wedge sigma k for i j k 1 2 3 displaystyle i j k 1 2 3 cyclic The corresponding local affine coordinates are z 1 x i y displaystyle z 1 x iy and z 2 z i t displaystyle z 2 z it then provide z 1 z 1 z 2 z 2 r 2 x 2 y 2 z 2 t 2 d z 1 d z 1 d z 2 d z 2 d r 2 r 2 s 1 2 s 2 2 s 3 2 z 1 d z 1 z 2 d z 2 2 r 2 d r 2 r 2 s 3 2 displaystyle begin aligned z 1 bar z 1 z 2 bar z 2 amp r 2 x 2 y 2 z 2 t 2 dz 1 d bar z 1 dz 2 d bar z 2 amp dr 2 r 2 sigma 1 2 sigma 2 2 sigma 3 2 left bar z 1 dz 1 bar z 2 dz 2 right 2 amp r 2 left dr 2 r 2 sigma 3 2 right end aligned with the usual abbreviations that d r 2 d r d r displaystyle dr 2 dr otimes dr and s k 2 s k s k displaystyle sigma k 2 sigma k otimes sigma k The line element starting with the previously given expression is given by d s 2 d z j d z j 1 z i z i z j z i d z j d z i 1 z i z i 2 d r 2 r 2 s 1 2 s 2 2 s 3 2 1 r 2 r 2 d r 2 r 2 s 3 2 1 r 2 2 d r 2 r 2 s 3 2 1 r 2 2 r 2 s 1 2 s 2 2 1 r 2 displaystyle begin aligned ds 2 amp frac dz j d bar z j 1 z i bar z i frac bar z j z i dz j d bar z i 1 z i bar z i 2 5pt amp frac dr 2 r 2 sigma 1 2 sigma 2 2 sigma 3 2 1 r 2 frac r 2 left dr 2 r 2 sigma 3 2 right left 1 r 2 right 2 4pt amp frac dr 2 r 2 sigma 3 2 left 1 r 2 right 2 frac r 2 left sigma 1 2 sigma 2 2 right 1 r 2 end aligned The vierbeins can be immediately read off from the last expression e 0 d r 1 r 2 e 3 r s 3 1 r 2 e 1 r s 1 1 r 2 e 2 r s 2 1 r 2 displaystyle begin aligned e 0 frac dr 1 r 2 amp amp amp e 3 frac r sigma 3 1 r 2 5pt e 1 frac r sigma 1 sqrt 1 r 2 amp amp amp e 2 frac r sigma 2 sqrt 1 r 2 end aligned That is in the vierbein coordinate system using roman letter subscripts the metric tensor is Euclidean d s 2 d a b e a e b e 0 e 0 e 1 e 1 e 2 e 2 e 3 e 3 displaystyle ds 2 delta ab e a otimes e b e 0 otimes e 0 e 1 otimes e 1 e 2 otimes e 2 e 3 otimes e 3 Given the vierbein a spin connection can be computed the Levi Civita spin connection is the unique connection that is torsion free and covariantly constant namely it is the one form w b a displaystyle omega b a that satisfies the torsion free condition d e a w b a e b 0 displaystyle de a omega b a wedge e b 0 and is covariantly constant which for spin connections means that it is antisymmetric in the vierbein indexes w a b w b a displaystyle omega ab omega ba The above is readily solved one obtains w 1 0 w 3 2 e 1 r w 2 0 w 1 3 e 2 r w 3 0 r 2 1 r e 3 w 2 1 1 2 r 2 r e 3 displaystyle begin aligned omega 1 0 amp omega 3 2 frac e 1 r omega 2 0 amp omega 1 3 frac e 2 r omega 3 0 amp frac r 2 1 r e 3 quad quad omega 2 1 frac 1 2r 2 r e 3 end aligned The curvature 2 form is defined as R b a d w b a w c a w b c displaystyle R b a d omega b a omega c a wedge omega b c and is constant R 01 R 23 e 0 e 1 e 2 e 3 R 02 R 31 e 0 e 2 e 3 e 1 R 03 4 e 0 e 3 2 e 1 e 2 R 12 2 e 0 e 3 4 e 1 e 2 displaystyle begin aligned R 01 amp R 23 e 0 wedge e 1 e 2 wedge e 3 R 02 amp R 31 e 0 wedge e 2 e 3 wedge e 1 R 03 amp 4e 0 wedge e 3 2e 1 wedge e 2 R 12 amp 2e 0 wedge e 3 4e 1 wedge e 2 end aligned The Ricci tensor in veirbein indexes is given by Ric c a R b c d a d b d displaystyle operatorname Ric c a R bcd a delta bd where the curvature 2 form was expanded as a four component tensor R b a 1 2 R b c d a e c e d displaystyle R b a frac 1 2 R bcd a e c wedge e d The resulting Ricci tensor is constant Ric a b 6 d a b displaystyle operatorname Ric ab 6 delta ab so that the resulting Einstein equation Ric a b 1 2 d a b R L d a b 0 displaystyle operatorname Ric ab frac 1 2 delta ab R Lambda delta ab 0 can be solved with the cosmological constant L 6 displaystyle Lambda 6 The Weyl tensor for Fubini Study metrics in general is given by W a b c d R a b c d 2 d a c d b d d a d d b c displaystyle W abcd R abcd 2 left delta ac delta bd delta ad delta bc right For the n 2 case the two forms W a b 1 2 W a b c d e c e d displaystyle W ab frac 1 2 W abcd e c wedge e d are self dual W 01 W 23 e 0 e 1 e 2 e 3 W 02 W 31 e 0 e 2 e 3 e 1 W 03 W 12 2 e 0 e 3 2 e 1 e 2 displaystyle begin aligned W 01 amp W 23 e 0 wedge e 1 e 2 wedge e 3 W 02 amp W 31 e 0 wedge e 2 e 3 wedge e 1 W 03 amp W 12 2e 0 wedge e 3 2e 1 wedge e 2 end aligned Curvature properties EditIn the n 1 special case the Fubini Study metric has constant sectional curvature identically equal to 4 according to the equivalence with the 2 sphere s round metric which given a radius R has sectional curvature 1 R 2 displaystyle 1 R 2 However for n gt 1 the Fubini Study metric does not have constant curvature Its sectional curvature is instead given by the equation 6 K s 1 3 J X Y 2 displaystyle K sigma 1 3 langle JX Y rangle 2 where X Y T p C P n displaystyle X Y in T p mathbf CP n is an orthonormal basis of the 2 plane s J TCPn TCPn is the complex structure on CPn and displaystyle langle cdot cdot rangle is the Fubini Study metric A consequence of this formula is that the sectional curvature satisfies 1 K s 4 displaystyle 1 leq K sigma leq 4 for all 2 planes s displaystyle sigma The maximum sectional curvature 4 is attained at a holomorphic 2 plane one for which J s s while the minimum sectional curvature 1 is attained at a 2 plane for which J s is orthogonal to s For this reason the Fubini Study metric is often said to have constant holomorphic sectional curvature equal to 4 This makes CPn a non strict quarter pinched manifold a celebrated theorem shows that a strictly quarter pinched simply connected n manifold must be homeomorphic to a sphere The Fubini Study metric is also an Einstein metric in that it is proportional to its own Ricci tensor there exists a constant L displaystyle Lambda such that for all i j we have Ric i j L g i j displaystyle operatorname Ric ij Lambda g ij This implies among other things that the Fubini Study metric remains unchanged up to a scalar multiple under the Ricci flow It also makes CPn indispensable to the theory of general relativity where it serves as a nontrivial solution to the vacuum Einstein field equations The cosmological constant L displaystyle Lambda for CPn is given in terms of the dimension of the space Ric i j 2 n 1 g i j displaystyle operatorname Ric ij 2 n 1 g ij Product metric EditThe common notions of separability apply for the Fubini Study metric More precisely the metric is separable on the natural product of projective spaces the Segre embedding That is if ps displaystyle vert psi rangle is a separable state so that it can be written as ps ps A ps B displaystyle vert psi rangle vert psi A rangle otimes vert psi B rangle then the metric is the sum of the metric on the subspaces d s 2 d s A 2 d s B 2 displaystyle ds 2 ds A 2 ds B 2 where d s A 2 displaystyle ds A 2 and d s B 2 displaystyle ds B 2 are the metrics respectively on the subspaces A and B Connection and curvature EditThe fact that the metric can be derived from the Kahler potential means that the Christoffel symbols and the curvature tensors contain a lot of symmetries and can be given a particularly simple form 7 The Christoffel symbols in the local affine coordinates are given by G j k i g i m g k m z j G j k i g i m g k m z j displaystyle Gamma jk i g i bar m frac partial g k bar m partial z j qquad Gamma bar j bar k bar i g bar i m frac partial g bar k m partial bar z bar j The Riemann tensor is also particularly simple R i j k l g i m G j l m z k displaystyle R i bar j k bar l g i bar m frac partial Gamma bar j bar l bar m partial z k The Ricci tensor is R i j R i k j k G i k k z j R i j R i k j k G i k k z j displaystyle R bar i j R bar i bar k j bar k frac partial Gamma bar i bar k bar k partial z j qquad R i bar j R ik bar j k frac partial Gamma ik k partial bar z bar j Pronunciation EditA common pronunciation mistake made especially by native English speakers is to assume that Study is pronounced the same as the verb to study Since it is actually a German name the correct way to pronounce the u in Study is the same as the u in Fubini Furthermore the S in Study is pronounced like the sh in Fisher In terms of phonetics ʃtuːdi See also EditNon linear sigma model Kaluza Klein theory Arakelov heightReferences Edit G Fubini Sulle metriche definite da una forme Hermitiana 1904 Atti del Reale Istituto Veneto di Scienze Lettere ed Arti 63 pp 502 513 Study E 1905 Kurzeste Wege im komplexen Gebiet Mathematische Annalen in German Springer Science and Business Media LLC 60 3 321 378 doi 10 1007 bf01457616 ISSN 0025 5831 S2CID 120961275 a b Eguchi Tohru Gilkey Peter B Hanson Andrew J 1980 Gravitation gauge theories and differential geometry Physics Reports Elsevier BV 66 6 213 393 Bibcode 1980PhR 66 213E doi 10 1016 0370 1573 80 90130 1 ISSN 0370 1573 a b Paolo Facchi Ravi Kulkarni V I Man ko Giuseppe Marmo E C G Sudarshan Franco Ventriglia Classical and Quantum Fisher Information in the Geometrical Formulation of Quantum Mechanics 2010 Physics Letters A 374 pp 4801 doi 10 1016 j physleta 2010 10 005 Eguchi Tohru Freund Peter G O 1976 11 08 Quantum Gravity and World Topology Physical Review Letters American Physical Society APS 37 19 1251 1254 Bibcode 1976PhRvL 37 1251E doi 10 1103 physrevlett 37 1251 ISSN 0031 9007 Sakai T Riemannian Geometry Translations of Mathematical Monographs No 149 1995 American Mathematics Society Andrew J Hanson Ji PingSha Visualizing the K3 Surface 2006 Besse Arthur L 1987 Einstein manifolds Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete 3 Results in Mathematics and Related Areas 3 vol 10 Berlin New York Springer Verlag pp xii 510 ISBN 978 3 540 15279 8 Brody D C Hughston L P 2001 Geometric Quantum Mechanics Journal of Geometry and Physics 38 1 19 53 arXiv quant ph 9906086 Bibcode 2001JGP 38 19B doi 10 1016 S0393 0440 00 00052 8 S2CID 17580350 Griffiths P Harris J 1994 Principles of Algebraic Geometry Wiley Classics Library Wiley Interscience pp 30 31 ISBN 0 471 05059 8 Onishchik A L 2001 1994 Fubini Study metric Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fubini Study metric amp oldid 1113955404, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.