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Virasoro algebra

In mathematics, the Virasoro algebra (named after the physicist Miguel Ángel Virasoro)[1] is a complex Lie algebra and the unique central extension of the Witt algebra. It is widely used in two-dimensional conformal field theory and in string theory.

Definition edit

The Virasoro algebra is spanned by generators Ln for n ∈ ℤ and the central charge c. These generators satisfy   and

 

The factor of   is merely a matter of convention. For a derivation of the algebra as the unique central extension of the Witt algebra, see derivation of the Virasoro algebra.

The Virasoro algebra has a presentation in terms of two generators (e.g. L3 and L−2) and six relations.[2][3]

Representation theory edit

Highest weight representations edit

A highest weight representation of the Virasoro algebra is a representation generated by a primary state: a vector   such that

 

where the number h is called the conformal dimension or conformal weight of  .[4]

A highest weight representation is spanned by eigenstates of  . The eigenvalues take the form  , where the integer   is called the level of the corresponding eigenstate.

More precisely, a highest weight representation is spanned by  -eigenstates of the type   with   and  , whose levels are  . Any state whose level is not zero is called a descendant state of  .

For any pair of complex numbers h and c, the Verma module   is the largest possible highest weight representation. (The same letter c is used for both the element c of the Virasoro algebra and its eigenvalue in a representation.)

The states   with   and   form a basis of the Verma module. The Verma module is indecomposable, and for generic values of h and c it is also irreducible. When it is reducible, there exist other highest weight representations with these values of h and c, called degenerate representations, which are cosets of the Verma module. In particular, the unique irreducible highest weight representation with these values of h and c is the quotient of the Verma module by its maximal submodule.

A Verma module is irreducible if and only if it has no singular vectors.

Singular vectors edit

A singular vector or null vector of a highest weight representation is a state that is both descendant and primary.

A sufficient condition for the Verma module   to have a singular vector at the level   is   for some positive integers   such that  , with

 

In particular,  , and the reducible Verma module   has a singular vector   at the level  . Then  , and the corresponding reducible Verma module has a singular vector   at the level  .

This condition for the existence of a singular vector at the level   is not necessary. In particular, there is a singular vector at the level   if   with   and  . This singular vector is now a descendant of another singular vector at the level  . This type of singular vectors can however only exist if the central charge is of the type

 .

(For   coprime, these are the central charges of the minimal models.)[4]

Hermitian form and unitarity edit

A highest weight representation with a real value of   has a unique Hermitian form such that the Hermitian adjoint of   is   and the norm of the primary state is one. The representation is called unitary if that Hermitian form is positive definite. Since any singular vector has zero norm, all unitary highest weight representations are irreducible.

The Gram determinant of a basis of the level   is given by the Kac determinant formula,

 

where the function p(N) is the partition function, and   is a positive constant that does not depend on   or  . The Kac determinant formula was stated by V. Kac (1978), and its first published proof was given by Feigin and Fuks (1984).

The irreducible highest weight representation with values h and c is unitary if and only if either c ≥ 1 and h ≥ 0, or

 

and h is one of the values

 

for r = 1, 2, 3, ..., m − 1 and s = 1, 2, 3, ..., r.

Daniel Friedan, Zongan Qiu, and Stephen Shenker (1984) showed that these conditions are necessary, and Peter Goddard, Adrian Kent, and David Olive (1986) used the coset construction or GKO construction (identifying unitary representations of the Virasoro algebra within tensor products of unitary representations of affine Kac–Moody algebras) to show that they are sufficient.

Characters edit

The character of a representation   of the Virasoro algebra is the function

 

The character of the Verma module   is

 

where   is the Dedekind eta function.

For any   and for  , the Verma module   is reducible due to the existence of a singular vector at level  . This singular vector generates a submodule, which is isomorphic to the Verma module  . The quotient of   by this submodule is irreducible if   does not have other singular vectors, and its character is

 

Let   with   and   coprime, and   and  . (Then   is in the Kac table of the corresponding minimal model). The Verma module   has infinitely many singular vectors, and is therefore reducible with infinitely many submodules. This Verma module has an irreducible quotient by its largest nontrivial submodule. (The spectrums of minimal models are built from such irreducible representations.) The character of the irreducible quotient is

 

This expression is an infinite sum because the submodules   and   have a nontrivial intersection, which is itself a complicated submodule.

Applications edit

Conformal field theory edit

In two dimensions, the algebra of local conformal transformations is made of two copies of the Witt algebra. It follows that the symmetry algebra of two-dimensional conformal field theory is the Virasoro algebra. Technically, the conformal bootstrap approach to two-dimensional CFT relies on Virasoro conformal blocks, special functions that include and generalize the characters of representations of the Virasoro algebra.

String theory edit

Since the Virasoro algebra comprises the generators of the conformal group of the worldsheet, the stress tensor in string theory obeys the commutation relations of (two copies of) the Virasoro algebra. This is because the conformal group decomposes into separate diffeomorphisms of the forward and back lightcones. Diffeomorphism invariance of the worldsheet implies additionally that the stress tensor vanishes. This is known as the Virasoro constraint, and in the quantum theory, cannot be applied to all the states in the theory, but rather only on the physical states (compare Gupta–Bleuler formalism).

Generalizations edit

Super Virasoro algebras edit

There are two supersymmetric N = 1 extensions of the Virasoro algebra, called the Neveu–Schwarz algebra and the Ramond algebra. Their theory is similar to that of the Virasoro algebra, now involving Grassmann numbers. There are further extensions of these algebras with more supersymmetry, such as the N = 2 superconformal algebra.

W-algebras edit

W-algebras are associative algebras which contain the Virasoro algebra, and which play an important role in two-dimensional conformal field theory. Among W-algebras, the Virasoro algebra has the particularity of being a Lie algebra.

Affine Lie algebras edit

The Virasoro algebra is a subalgebra of the universal enveloping algebra of any affine Lie algebra, as shown by the Sugawara construction. In this sense, affine Lie algebras are extensions of the Virasoro algebra.

Meromorphic vector fields on Riemann surfaces edit

The Virasoro algebra is a central extension of the Lie algebra of meromorphic vector fields with two poles on a genus 0 Riemann surface. On a higher-genus compact Riemann surface, the Lie algebra of meromorphic vector fields with two poles also has a central extension, which is a generalization of the Virasoro algebra.[5] This can be further generalized to supermanifolds.[6]

Vertex algebras and conformal algebras edit

The Virasoro algebra also has vertex algebraic and conformal algebraic counterparts, which basically come from arranging all the basis elements into generating series and working with single objects.

History edit

The Witt algebra (the Virasoro algebra without the central extension) was discovered by É. Cartan (1909). Its analogues over finite fields were studied by E. Witt in about the 1930s. The central extension of the Witt algebra that gives the Virasoro algebra was first found (in characteristic p > 0) by R. E. Block (1966, page 381) and independently rediscovered (in characteristic 0) by I. M. Gelfand and Dmitry Fuchs (1968). Virasoro (1970) wrote down some operators generating the Virasoro algebra (later known as the Virasoro operators) while studying dual resonance models, though he did not find the central extension. The central extension giving the Virasoro algebra was rediscovered in physics shortly after by J. H. Weis, according to Brower and Thorn (1971, footnote on page 167).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ M. A. Virasoro (1970). "Subsidiary conditions and ghosts in dual-resonance models". Physical Review D. 1 (10): 2933–2936. Bibcode:1970PhRvD...1.2933V. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.1.2933.
  2. ^ Fairlie, D. B.; Nuyts, J.; Zachos, C. K. (1988). "A presentation for the Virasoro and super-Virasoro algebras". Communications in Mathematical Physics. 117 (4): 595. Bibcode:1988CMaPh.117..595F. doi:10.1007/BF01218387. S2CID 119811901.
  3. ^ Uretsky, J. L. (1989). "Redundancy of conditions for a Virasoro algebra". Communications in Mathematical Physics. 122 (1): 171–173. Bibcode:1989CMaPh.122..171U. doi:10.1007/BF01221412. S2CID 119887710.
  4. ^ a b P. Di Francesco, P. Mathieu, and D. Sénéchal, Conformal Field Theory, 1997, ISBN 0-387-94785-X.
  5. ^ Krichever, I. M.; Novikov, S.P. (1987). "Algebras of Virasoro type, Riemann surfaces and structures of the theory of solitons". Funkts. Anal. Appl. 21 (2): 46–63. doi:10.1007/BF01078026. S2CID 55989582.
  6. ^ Rabin, J. M. (1995). "Super elliptic curves". Journal of Geometry and Physics. 15 (3): 252–280. arXiv:hep-th/9302105. Bibcode:1995JGP....15..252R. doi:10.1016/0393-0440(94)00012-S. S2CID 10921054.

References edit

  • Alexander Belavin, Alexander Polyakov and Alexander Zamolodchikov (1984). "Infinite conformal symmetry in two-dimensional quantum field theory". Nuclear Physics B. 241 (2): 333–380. Bibcode:1984NuPhB.241..333B. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(84)90052-X.
  • R. E. Block (1966). "On the Mills–Seligman axioms for Lie algebras of classical type". Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. 121 (2): 378–392. doi:10.1090/S0002-9947-1966-0188356-3. JSTOR 1994485.
  • R. C. Brower; C. B. Thorn (1971). "Eliminating spurious states from the dual resonance model". Nuclear Physics B. 31 (1): 163–182. Bibcode:1971NuPhB..31..163B. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(71)90452-4..
  • E. Cartan (1909). "Les groupes de transformations continus, infinis, simples". Annales Scientifiques de l'École Normale Supérieure. 26: 93–161. doi:10.24033/asens.603. JFM 40.0193.02.
  • B. L. Feigin, D. B. Fuchs, Verma modules over the Virasoro algebra L. D. Faddeev (ed.) A. A. Mal'tsev (ed.), Topology. Proc. Internat. Topol. Conf. Leningrad 1982, Lect. notes in math., 1060, Springer (1984) pp. 230–245
  • Friedan, D., Qiu, Z. and Shenker, S. (1984). "Conformal invariance, unitarity and critical exponents in two dimensions". Physical Review Letters. 52 (18): 1575–1578. Bibcode:1984PhRvL..52.1575F. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.52.1575. S2CID 122320349.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link).
  • I.M. Gel'fand, D. B. Fuchs, The cohomology of the Lie algebra of vector fields in a circle Funct. Anal. Appl., 2 (1968) pp. 342–343 Funkts. Anal. i Prilozh., 2 : 4 (1968) pp. 92–93
  • P. Goddard, A. Kent & D. Olive (1986). "Unitary representations of the Virasoro and super-Virasoro algebras". Communications in Mathematical Physics. 103 (1): 105–119. Bibcode:1986CMaPh.103..105G. doi:10.1007/BF01464283. MR 0826859. S2CID 91181508. Zbl 0588.17014..
  • Iohara, Kenji; Koga, Yoshiyuki (2011), Representation theory of the Virasoro algebra, Springer Monographs in Mathematics, London: Springer-Verlag London Ltd., doi:10.1007/978-0-85729-160-8, ISBN 978-0-85729-159-2, MR 2744610
  • A. Kent (1991). "Singular vectors of the Virasoro algebra". Physics Letters B. 273 (1–2): 56–62. arXiv:hep-th/9204097. Bibcode:1991PhLB..273...56K. doi:10.1016/0370-2693(91)90553-3. S2CID 15105921.
  • Victor Kac (2001) [1994], "Virasoro algebra", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
  • V. G. Kac, "Highest weight representations of infinite dimensional Lie algebras", Proc. Internat. Congress Mathematicians (Helsinki, 1978), pp.299-304
  • V. G. Kac, A. K. Raina, Bombay lectures on highest weight representations, World Sci. (1987) ISBN 9971-5-0395-6.
  • Dobrev, V. K. (1986). "Multiplet classification of the indecomposable highest weight modules over the Neveu-Schwarz and Ramond superalgebras". Lett. Math. Phys. 11 (3): 225–234. Bibcode:1986LMaPh..11..225D. doi:10.1007/bf00400220. S2CID 122201087. & correction: ibid. 13 (1987) 260.
  • V. K. Dobrev, "Characters of the irreducible highest weight modules over the Virasoro and super-Virasoro algebras", Suppl. Rendiconti del Circolo Matematico di Palermo, Serie II, Numero 14 (1987) 25-42.
  • Antony Wassermann (2010). "Lecture notes on Kac-Moody and Virasoro algebras". arXiv:1004.1287 [math.RT].
  • Antony Wassermann (2010). "Direct proofs of the Feigin-Fuchs character formula for unitary representations of the Virasoro algebra". arXiv:1012.6003 [math.RT].

virasoro, algebra, mathematics, named, after, physicist, miguel, Ángel, virasoro, complex, algebra, unique, central, extension, witt, algebra, widely, used, dimensional, conformal, field, theory, string, theory, contents, definition, representation, theory, hi. In mathematics the Virasoro algebra named after the physicist Miguel Angel Virasoro 1 is a complex Lie algebra and the unique central extension of the Witt algebra It is widely used in two dimensional conformal field theory and in string theory Contents 1 Definition 2 Representation theory 2 1 Highest weight representations 2 2 Singular vectors 2 3 Hermitian form and unitarity 2 4 Characters 3 Applications 3 1 Conformal field theory 3 2 String theory 4 Generalizations 4 1 Super Virasoro algebras 4 2 W algebras 4 3 Affine Lie algebras 4 4 Meromorphic vector fields on Riemann surfaces 4 5 Vertex algebras and conformal algebras 5 History 6 See also 7 Notes 8 ReferencesDefinition editThe Virasoro algebra is spanned by generators Ln for n ℤ and the central charge c These generators satisfy c L n 0 displaystyle c L n 0 nbsp and L m L n m n L m n c 12 m 3 m d m n 0 displaystyle L m L n m n L m n frac c 12 m 3 m delta m n 0 nbsp The factor of 1 12 displaystyle 1 12 nbsp is merely a matter of convention For a derivation of the algebra as the unique central extension of the Witt algebra see derivation of the Virasoro algebra The Virasoro algebra has a presentation in terms of two generators e g L 3 and L 2 and six relations 2 3 Representation theory editHighest weight representations edit A highest weight representation of the Virasoro algebra is a representation generated by a primary state a vector v displaystyle v nbsp such that L n gt 0 v 0 L 0 v h v displaystyle L n gt 0 v 0 quad L 0 v hv nbsp where the number h is called the conformal dimension or conformal weight of v displaystyle v nbsp 4 A highest weight representation is spanned by eigenstates of L 0 displaystyle L 0 nbsp The eigenvalues take the form h N displaystyle h N nbsp where the integer N 0 displaystyle N geq 0 nbsp is called the level of the corresponding eigenstate More precisely a highest weight representation is spanned by L 0 displaystyle L 0 nbsp eigenstates of the type L n 1 L n 2 L n k v displaystyle L n 1 L n 2 cdots L n k v nbsp with 0 lt n 1 n 2 n k displaystyle 0 lt n 1 leq n 2 leq cdots n k nbsp and k 0 displaystyle k geq 0 nbsp whose levels are N i 1 k n i displaystyle N sum i 1 k n i nbsp Any state whose level is not zero is called a descendant state of v displaystyle v nbsp For any pair of complex numbers h and c the Verma module V c h displaystyle mathcal V c h nbsp is the largest possible highest weight representation The same letter c is used for both the element c of the Virasoro algebra and its eigenvalue in a representation The states L n 1 L n 2 L n k v displaystyle L n 1 L n 2 cdots L n k v nbsp with 0 lt n 1 n 2 n k displaystyle 0 lt n 1 leq n 2 leq cdots n k nbsp and k 0 displaystyle k geq 0 nbsp form a basis of the Verma module The Verma module is indecomposable and for generic values of h and c it is also irreducible When it is reducible there exist other highest weight representations with these values of h and c called degenerate representations which are cosets of the Verma module In particular the unique irreducible highest weight representation with these values of h and c is the quotient of the Verma module by its maximal submodule A Verma module is irreducible if and only if it has no singular vectors Singular vectors edit A singular vector or null vector of a highest weight representation is a state that is both descendant and primary A sufficient condition for the Verma module V c h displaystyle mathcal V c h nbsp to have a singular vector at the level N displaystyle N nbsp is h h r s c displaystyle h h r s c nbsp for some positive integers r s displaystyle r s nbsp such that N r s displaystyle N rs nbsp with h r s c 1 4 b b 1 2 b r b 1 s 2 where c 1 6 b b 1 2 displaystyle h r s c frac 1 4 Big b b 1 2 br b 1 s 2 Big quad text where quad c 1 6 b b 1 2 nbsp In particular h 1 1 c 0 displaystyle h 1 1 c 0 nbsp and the reducible Verma module V c 0 displaystyle mathcal V c 0 nbsp has a singular vector L 1 v displaystyle L 1 v nbsp at the level N 1 displaystyle N 1 nbsp Then h 2 1 c 1 2 3 4 b 2 displaystyle h 2 1 c frac 1 2 frac 3 4 b 2 nbsp and the corresponding reducible Verma module has a singular vector L 1 2 b 2 L 2 v displaystyle L 1 2 b 2 L 2 v nbsp at the level N 2 displaystyle N 2 nbsp This condition for the existence of a singular vector at the level N displaystyle N nbsp is not necessary In particular there is a singular vector at the level N displaystyle N nbsp if N r s r s displaystyle N rs r s nbsp with h h r s c displaystyle h h r s c nbsp and h r s h r s c displaystyle h rs h r s c nbsp This singular vector is now a descendant of another singular vector at the level r s displaystyle rs nbsp This type of singular vectors can however only exist if the central charge is of the type c 1 6 p q 2 p q with p q Z displaystyle c 1 6 frac p q 2 pq quad text with quad p q in mathbb Z nbsp For p gt q 2 displaystyle p gt q geq 2 nbsp coprime these are the central charges of the minimal models 4 Hermitian form and unitarity edit A highest weight representation with a real value of c displaystyle c nbsp has a unique Hermitian form such that the Hermitian adjoint of L n displaystyle L n nbsp is L n L n displaystyle L n dagger L n nbsp and the norm of the primary state is one The representation is called unitary if that Hermitian form is positive definite Since any singular vector has zero norm all unitary highest weight representations are irreducible The Gram determinant of a basis of the level N displaystyle N nbsp is given by the Kac determinant formula A N 1 r s N h h r s c p N r s displaystyle A N prod 1 leq r s leq N big h h r s c big p N rs nbsp where the function p N is the partition function and A N displaystyle A N nbsp is a positive constant that does not depend on h displaystyle h nbsp or c displaystyle c nbsp The Kac determinant formula was stated by V Kac 1978 and its first published proof was given by Feigin and Fuks 1984 The irreducible highest weight representation with values h and c is unitary if and only if either c 1 and h 0 or c 1 6 m m 1 m 2 3 4 0 1 2 7 10 4 5 6 7 25 28 displaystyle c in left 1 frac 6 m m 1 right m 2 3 4 ldots left 0 frac 1 2 frac 7 10 frac 4 5 frac 6 7 frac 25 28 ldots right nbsp and h is one of the values h h r s c m 1 r m s 2 1 4 m m 1 displaystyle h h r s c frac big m 1 r ms big 2 1 4m m 1 nbsp for r 1 2 3 m 1 and s 1 2 3 r Daniel Friedan Zongan Qiu and Stephen Shenker 1984 showed that these conditions are necessary and Peter Goddard Adrian Kent and David Olive 1986 used the coset construction or GKO construction identifying unitary representations of the Virasoro algebra within tensor products of unitary representations of affine Kac Moody algebras to show that they are sufficient Characters edit The character of a representation R displaystyle mathcal R nbsp of the Virasoro algebra is the function x R q Tr R q L 0 c 24 displaystyle chi mathcal R q operatorname Tr mathcal R q L 0 frac c 24 nbsp The character of the Verma module V c h displaystyle mathcal V c h nbsp is x V c h q q h c 24 n 1 1 q n q h c 1 24 h q q h c 24 1 q 2 q 2 3 q 3 5 q 4 displaystyle chi mathcal V c h q frac q h frac c 24 prod n 1 infty 1 q n frac q h frac c 1 24 eta q q h frac c 24 left 1 q 2q 2 3q 3 5q 4 cdots right nbsp where h displaystyle eta nbsp is the Dedekind eta function For any c C displaystyle c in mathbb C nbsp and for r s N displaystyle r s in mathbb N nbsp the Verma module V c h r s displaystyle mathcal V c h r s nbsp is reducible due to the existence of a singular vector at level r s displaystyle rs nbsp This singular vector generates a submodule which is isomorphic to the Verma module V c h r s r s displaystyle mathcal V c h r s rs nbsp The quotient of V c h r s displaystyle mathcal V c h r s nbsp by this submodule is irreducible if V c h r s displaystyle mathcal V c h r s nbsp does not have other singular vectors and its character is x V c h r s V c h r s r s x V c h r s x V c h r s r s 1 q r s x V c h r s displaystyle chi mathcal V c h r s mathcal V c h r s rs chi mathcal V c h r s chi mathcal V c h r s rs 1 q rs chi mathcal V c h r s nbsp Let c c p p displaystyle c c p p nbsp with 2 p lt p displaystyle 2 leq p lt p nbsp and p p displaystyle p p nbsp coprime and 1 r p 1 displaystyle 1 leq r leq p 1 nbsp and 1 s p 1 displaystyle 1 leq s leq p 1 nbsp Then r s displaystyle r s nbsp is in the Kac table of the corresponding minimal model The Verma module V c h r s displaystyle mathcal V c h r s nbsp has infinitely many singular vectors and is therefore reducible with infinitely many submodules This Verma module has an irreducible quotient by its largest nontrivial submodule The spectrums of minimal models are built from such irreducible representations The character of the irreducible quotient is x V c h r s V c h r s r s V c h r s p r p s k Z x V c 1 4 p p p r p s 2 k p p 2 p p 2 x V c 1 4 p p p r p s 2 k p p 2 p p 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp chi mathcal V c h r s mathcal V c h r s rs mathcal V c h r s p r p s amp sum k in mathbb Z left chi mathcal V c frac 1 4pp left p r ps 2kpp 2 p p 2 right chi mathcal V c frac 1 4pp left p r ps 2kpp 2 p p 2 right right end aligned nbsp This expression is an infinite sum because the submodules V c h r s r s displaystyle mathcal V c h r s rs nbsp and V c h r s p r p s displaystyle mathcal V c h r s p r p s nbsp have a nontrivial intersection which is itself a complicated submodule Applications editConformal field theory edit In two dimensions the algebra of local conformal transformations is made of two copies of the Witt algebra It follows that the symmetry algebra of two dimensional conformal field theory is the Virasoro algebra Technically the conformal bootstrap approach to two dimensional CFT relies on Virasoro conformal blocks special functions that include and generalize the characters of representations of the Virasoro algebra String theory edit Since the Virasoro algebra comprises the generators of the conformal group of the worldsheet the stress tensor in string theory obeys the commutation relations of two copies of the Virasoro algebra This is because the conformal group decomposes into separate diffeomorphisms of the forward and back lightcones Diffeomorphism invariance of the worldsheet implies additionally that the stress tensor vanishes This is known as the Virasoro constraint and in the quantum theory cannot be applied to all the states in the theory but rather only on the physical states compare Gupta Bleuler formalism Generalizations editSuper Virasoro algebras edit Main article Super Virasoro algebra There are two supersymmetric N 1 extensions of the Virasoro algebra called the Neveu Schwarz algebra and the Ramond algebra Their theory is similar to that of the Virasoro algebra now involving Grassmann numbers There are further extensions of these algebras with more supersymmetry such as the N 2 superconformal algebra W algebras edit Main article W algebra W algebras are associative algebras which contain the Virasoro algebra and which play an important role in two dimensional conformal field theory Among W algebras the Virasoro algebra has the particularity of being a Lie algebra Affine Lie algebras edit Main article affine Lie algebra The Virasoro algebra is a subalgebra of the universal enveloping algebra of any affine Lie algebra as shown by the Sugawara construction In this sense affine Lie algebras are extensions of the Virasoro algebra Meromorphic vector fields on Riemann surfaces edit The Virasoro algebra is a central extension of the Lie algebra of meromorphic vector fields with two poles on a genus 0 Riemann surface On a higher genus compact Riemann surface the Lie algebra of meromorphic vector fields with two poles also has a central extension which is a generalization of the Virasoro algebra 5 This can be further generalized to supermanifolds 6 Vertex algebras and conformal algebras edit The Virasoro algebra also has vertex algebraic and conformal algebraic counterparts which basically come from arranging all the basis elements into generating series and working with single objects History editThe Witt algebra the Virasoro algebra without the central extension was discovered by E Cartan 1909 Its analogues over finite fields were studied by E Witt in about the 1930s The central extension of the Witt algebra that gives the Virasoro algebra was first found in characteristic p gt 0 by R E Block 1966 page 381 and independently rediscovered in characteristic 0 by I M Gelfand and Dmitry Fuchs 1968 Virasoro 1970 wrote down some operators generating the Virasoro algebra later known as the Virasoro operators while studying dual resonance models though he did not find the central extension The central extension giving the Virasoro algebra was rediscovered in physics shortly after by J H Weis according to Brower and Thorn 1971 footnote on page 167 See also editConformal field theory Goddard Thorn theorem Heisenberg algebra Lie conformal algebra Pohlmeyer charge Super Virasoro algebra W algebra Witt algebra WZW modelNotes edit M A Virasoro 1970 Subsidiary conditions and ghosts in dual resonance models Physical Review D 1 10 2933 2936 Bibcode 1970PhRvD 1 2933V doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 1 2933 Fairlie D B Nuyts J Zachos C K 1988 A presentation for the Virasoro and super Virasoro algebras Communications in Mathematical Physics 117 4 595 Bibcode 1988CMaPh 117 595F doi 10 1007 BF01218387 S2CID 119811901 Uretsky J L 1989 Redundancy of conditions for a Virasoro algebra Communications in Mathematical Physics 122 1 171 173 Bibcode 1989CMaPh 122 171U doi 10 1007 BF01221412 S2CID 119887710 a b P Di Francesco P Mathieu and D Senechal Conformal Field Theory 1997 ISBN 0 387 94785 X Krichever I M Novikov S P 1987 Algebras of Virasoro type Riemann surfaces and structures of the theory of solitons Funkts Anal Appl 21 2 46 63 doi 10 1007 BF01078026 S2CID 55989582 Rabin J M 1995 Super elliptic curves Journal of Geometry and Physics 15 3 252 280 arXiv hep th 9302105 Bibcode 1995JGP 15 252R doi 10 1016 0393 0440 94 00012 S S2CID 10921054 References editAlexander Belavin Alexander Polyakov and Alexander Zamolodchikov 1984 Infinite conformal symmetry in two dimensional quantum field theory Nuclear Physics B 241 2 333 380 Bibcode 1984NuPhB 241 333B doi 10 1016 0550 3213 84 90052 X R E Block 1966 On the Mills Seligman axioms for Lie algebras of classical type Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 121 2 378 392 doi 10 1090 S0002 9947 1966 0188356 3 JSTOR 1994485 R C Brower C B Thorn 1971 Eliminating spurious states from the dual resonance model Nuclear Physics B 31 1 163 182 Bibcode 1971NuPhB 31 163B doi 10 1016 0550 3213 71 90452 4 E Cartan 1909 Les groupes de transformations continus infinis simples Annales Scientifiques de l Ecole Normale Superieure 26 93 161 doi 10 24033 asens 603 JFM 40 0193 02 B L Feigin D B Fuchs Verma modules over the Virasoro algebra L D Faddeev ed A A Mal tsev ed Topology Proc Internat Topol Conf Leningrad 1982 Lect notes in math 1060 Springer 1984 pp 230 245 Friedan D Qiu Z and Shenker S 1984 Conformal invariance unitarity and critical exponents in two dimensions Physical Review Letters 52 18 1575 1578 Bibcode 1984PhRvL 52 1575F doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 52 1575 S2CID 122320349 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link I M Gel fand D B Fuchs The cohomology of the Lie algebra of vector fields in a circle Funct Anal Appl 2 1968 pp 342 343 Funkts Anal i Prilozh 2 4 1968 pp 92 93 P Goddard A Kent amp D Olive 1986 Unitary representations of the Virasoro and super Virasoro algebras Communications in Mathematical Physics 103 1 105 119 Bibcode 1986CMaPh 103 105G doi 10 1007 BF01464283 MR 0826859 S2CID 91181508 Zbl 0588 17014 Iohara Kenji Koga Yoshiyuki 2011 Representation theory of the Virasoro algebra Springer Monographs in Mathematics London Springer Verlag London Ltd doi 10 1007 978 0 85729 160 8 ISBN 978 0 85729 159 2 MR 2744610 A Kent 1991 Singular vectors of the Virasoro algebra Physics Letters B 273 1 2 56 62 arXiv hep th 9204097 Bibcode 1991PhLB 273 56K doi 10 1016 0370 2693 91 90553 3 S2CID 15105921 Victor Kac 2001 1994 Virasoro algebra Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press V G Kac Highest weight representations of infinite dimensional Lie algebras Proc Internat Congress Mathematicians Helsinki 1978 pp 299 304 V G Kac A K Raina Bombay lectures on highest weight representations World Sci 1987 ISBN 9971 5 0395 6 Dobrev V K 1986 Multiplet classification of the indecomposable highest weight modules over the Neveu Schwarz and Ramond superalgebras Lett Math Phys 11 3 225 234 Bibcode 1986LMaPh 11 225D doi 10 1007 bf00400220 S2CID 122201087 amp correction ibid 13 1987 260 V K Dobrev Characters of the irreducible highest weight modules over the Virasoro and super Virasoro algebras Suppl Rendiconti del Circolo Matematico di Palermo Serie II Numero 14 1987 25 42 Antony Wassermann 2010 Lecture notes on Kac Moody and Virasoro algebras arXiv 1004 1287 math RT Antony Wassermann 2010 Direct proofs of the Feigin Fuchs character formula for unitary representations of the Virasoro algebra arXiv 1012 6003 math RT Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Virasoro algebra amp oldid 1181938388, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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