geometric transitions

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Geometric Transitions 25 Giugno 2007 Michele Rossi

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Geometric Transitions. 25 Giugno 2007. Michele Rossi. Calabi—Yau Varieties. Let Y be a smooth, complex, projective variety with. Y will be called a Calabi-Yau variety if :. Remark. This definition of Calabi-Yau variety is a generalization of 1-dimensional smooth elliptic curves, - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Geometric Transitions

Geometric Transitions

25 Giugno 2007

Michele Rossi

Page 2: Geometric Transitions

Let Y be a smooth, complex, projective variety with

Calabi—Yau Varieties

Y will be called a Calabi-Yau variety if :

Remark. This definition of Calabi-Yau variety is a generalization of

1-dimensional smooth elliptic curves,

2-dimensional smooth K3 surfaces.

Page 3: Geometric Transitions

Geometric Transition

Let Y be a Calabi-Yau 3-fold and

be a birational contraction onto a normal variety.

If there exists a complex deformation (smoothing) of to a Calabi-Yau 3-fold ,

then the process of going from to is called a geometric transition (for short transition or g.t.) and denoted byor by the diagram

A conifold transition is a g.t. admitting singular locus

composed at most by ordinary double points (nodes).

Page 4: Geometric Transitions

The basic example: the conifold in . Let be the singular hypersurface

with generic

is the generic quintic 3-fold containing the plane

Its singular locus is then given by

1. is composed by 16 nodes.2. The resolution: can be

simultaneously resolved by a small blow up

such that Y is a smooth Calabi-Yau 3-fold.3. The smoothing: can be obviously

smoothed to the generic quintic 3-fold

Page 5: Geometric Transitions

Local meaning of a conifold transition: a surgery in topology (H. Clemens 1983)

Let be a conifold transition and (i.e. p is a node).

Let be a local chart such thatand has local

equation

Page 6: Geometric Transitions

Local meaning of a conifold transition: a surgery in topology (H. Clemens 1983)

Blow up along the plane and look at the proper transform of U, which is described in by

Page 7: Geometric Transitions

Local meaning of a conifold transition: a surgery in topology (H. Clemens 1983)

Page 8: Geometric Transitions

Local meaning of a conifold transition: a surgery in topology (H. Clemens 1983)

The local smoothing of the node is given by the 1-parameter family

where

Let for some real

Page 9: Geometric Transitions

Local meaning of a conifold transition: a surgery in topology (H. Clemens 1983)

Page 10: Geometric Transitions

Local meaning of a conifold transition: a surgery in topology (H. Clemens 1983)

Topologically is a cone over

Page 11: Geometric Transitions

Local meaning of a conifold transition: a surgery in topology (H. Clemens 1983)

=> admits a natural complex structure.

Page 12: Geometric Transitions

Local meaning of a conifold transition: a surgery in topology (H. Clemens 1983)

admits a natural symplectic structure.

Page 13: Geometric Transitions

Local meaning of a conifold transition: a surgery in topology (H. Clemens 1983)

Page 14: Geometric Transitions

Local meaning of a conifold transition: a surgery in topology (H. Clemens 1983)

Theorem 1 (Local conifold as a surgery) Let be the closed unit ball and consider

Then we get compact tubular neighborhoods

and

of the vanishing cycle and of the exceptional respectively. Consider the standard diffeomorphism

Then induces a surgery from to and can be obtained from by removing and pasting in , by means of the diffeomorphism

Page 15: Geometric Transitions
Page 16: Geometric Transitions

Local transition as a topological surgery

Page 17: Geometric Transitions

Global geometry of a conifold transition

Let be a conifold transition. Then

• where is a node,• there exists a simultaneous resolution which is a birational morphism contracting N rational curves ,• admits N vanishing cycles which are 3-spheres.

Example: the conifoldThen:• ,• contains 16 exceptional rational curves,• contains 16 vanishing spheres.

On the other hand:• , and , • , and

Page 18: Geometric Transitions

Theorem 2 (Clemens 1983, Reid 1987, Werner-vanGeemen 1990, Tian 1992, Namikawa-Steenbrink 1995, Morrison-Seiberg 1997, ...)

Let be a conifold transition and let

• N be the number of nodes composing ,

• k be the maximal number of homologically independent exceptional rational curves in Y ,

• c be the maximal number of homologically independent vanishing cycles in . 1. ;

2. (Betti numbers) for and

where vertical equalities are given by Poincaré Duality;3. (Hodge numbers)

=

homological type of

Page 19: Geometric Transitions

Applications: g.t. in algebraic geometry(the Reid’s Fantasy)

The problem: What about the moduli space of C.-Y. 3-folds ? Since there are plenty of topologically distinct well known examples of Calabi-Yau 3-folds, it should be wildly reducible, on the contrary of moduli spaces of elliptic curves and K3 surfaces.M. Reid in 1987: Use g.t.’s instead of analytic deformations to apply to C.-Y. 3-folds the same idea employed by Kodaira for K3 surfaces: find the right category to work with !Conjecture (the Reid's fantasy): Up to some kind of inductive limit over r, the birational classes of projective C.-Y. 3-folds can be fitted together, by means of geometric transitions, into one irreducible family parameterized by the moduli space of complex structures over suitable connected sum of copies of solid hypertori

Page 20: Geometric Transitions

Applications: g.t. in physics (I)(the vacuum degeneracy problem)

Consistent 10-dimensional super-string theories:

Low energy limits: 10-dimensional super-gravity locally modelled on

T-duality

T-duality

Mirror Symmetry S-

duality

Minkovsky space-time

Compact C.-Y. 3-fold

Calabi-Yau web conjecture. (P.Candelas & C. 1988) C.-Y. 3-folds could be (mathematically) connected each other by means of geometric (conifold) transitions.

A. Strominger in 1995: at least for a conifold transition, the topological change is physically explained by the condensation of massive black holes to massless ones.

Page 21: Geometric Transitions

Applications: g.t. in physics (II)(set-up of open/closed string dualities)

G. t'Hooft in 1974 conjectured that large N limit of gauge theories are equivalent (dual) to some kind of closed string theories.E. Witten in 1992 showed that a SU(N) (or U(N)) Chern-Simons gauge theory on the 3-sphere , is equivalent to an open type II-A string theory on with D-branes wrapped on the lagrangian .R. Gopakumar and C. Vafa in 1998 proposed evidences to the t'Hooft conjecture showing that large N, SU(N) Chern-Simons gauge theory on (or equivalently open type II-A string theory on , after Witten) are dual to type II-A closed string theory “compactified” on the resolution of the local conifold.The geometric set up of this duality is given by the local conifold transition

The same for type II-B theories after Mirror Symmetry.

Page 22: Geometric Transitions

Open Problems.1. G.T.’s as transformations: a bridge from complex to symplectic.

• Understand the local behaviour of a g.t.• Smith-Thomas-Yau 2003: symplectic resolutions

symplectic Reid’s fantasy (??)

3.“Analytic classification” of g.t.’s: under which conditions a g.t. can be “deformed” to a simpler one?

• Homological type of g.t.’s.• Are the equivalence classes of g.t.’s described by conifolds ones?• If no, which are the further simplest g.t.’s?

2. Lifting g.t.’ s to special holonomy 7-manifolds. • Physical motivation (Witten 1995): M-theory

• Acharya, Atiyah, Maldacena, Vafa, Witten (2000-2001): lifts the local conifold transition to a “flop” between 7-dimensional manifolds with holonomy , by means of suitable -actions.