group cohomology, nonabelian group cohomology, Lie group cohomology
cohomology with constant coefficients / with a local system of coefficients
differential cohomology
under construction
Nonabelian Hodge theory generalizes aspects of Hodge theory from abelian cohomology (abelian sheaf cohomology) to nonabelian cohomology.
Notice or recall (for instance from generalized universal bundle and action groupoid) the following equivalent description of sections of associated bundles:
for a group with action on an object witnessed by the action groupoid sequence
the -associated bundle to a -principal bundle classified by an anafunctor is the pullback
Since this is a pullback diagram by definition, a glance at a pasting diagram of the form
shows that sections
are in bijection with maps that make
commute.
In the special case that is a connected manifold and a discrete group we can without restriction take be the action groupoid of the universal cover by the homotopy group, so that the classifying map is the same as a group homomorphism
In that case the above says that a section of the associated bundle is a -equivariant map
This is the way these sections are formulated usually in the literature. The above description has the advantage that it works more generally in nonabelian cohomology for principal bundles generalized to principal ∞-bundles.
Next consider furthermore the special case that is the coset homogeneous space of quotiented by a subgroup . Then if is a Lie group or algebraic group consider moreover a choice of -invariant metric on the quotient . Also consider a Riemannian manifold structure on .
Then
The energy of a section of an associated -bundle as above is the real number
Here
is the -equivariant map describing the section as above,
the norm is taken with respect to the chocen invariant metric on
and the integral is taken with respect to the Riemannian metric on .
Such a is called harmonic if it is a critical point of .
(Corlette, generalizing Eells-Sampson)
If is a representation with
is
Zariski-dense in
or its Zariski-closure is itself reductive
then there exists a harmonic section in the above sense.
This is due to (Corlett 88). A version of the proof is reproduced in Simpson 96, p. 8
The nonabelian Hodge theorem due to (Simpson 92) establishes, for a compact Kähler manifold, an equivalence between (irreducible) flat vector bundles on and (stable) Higgs bundles with vanishing first Chern class.
The sense in which the nonabelian Hodge theorem of (Simpson 92) generalizes the abelian Hodge theorem is the following (Simpson 92, Introduction).
The abelian cohomology group classifies flat complex line bundles whose underlying line bundle is trivial, hence closed differential 1-forms modulo 0-forms. The abelian Hodge theorem gives for this hence the decomposition
It is this kind of relation which is generalized by the nonabelian Hodge theorem. Here one starts instead with the nonabelian cohomology set which classifies flat rank- vector bundles on , for . The equivalence to Higgs bundles gives now a decomposition of these structures into a holomorphic vector bundle classified by and a differential 1-form with values in endomorphisms of that, subject to some conditions.
A quick review of the theorem in (Simpson 92) is for instance in (Raboso 15, section 1.2). An elegant abstract reformulation in terms of differential cohesion/D-geometry, following (Simpson 96) is in (Raboso 15, section 3.3):
Analogous to how the de Rham stack of is the (homotopy) quotient of by the first order infinitesimal neighbourhood of the diagonal in , so there is a space (stack) which is the formal completion of the 0-section of the tangent bundle of (Simpson 96).
Now a flat vector bundle on is essentially just a vector bundle on the de Rham stack , and a Higgs bundle is essentially just a vector bundle on . Therefore in this language the nonabelian Hodge theorem reads (for a linear algebraic group over )
where the superscript on the right denotes restriction to semistable Higgs bundles with vanishing first Chern class (see Raboso 15, Theorem 3.3).
A generalization of the nonabelian Hodge theorem of (Simpson 92) to twisted bundles in discussed in (Raboso 15).
Nonabelian Hodge theory is closely related to the geometric Langlands correspondence.
Lecture notes on nonabelian Hodge theory include:
Ron Donagi, Tony Pantev, Lectures on the geometric Langlands
conjecture and non-abelian Hodge theory_, 2009 (pdf)
Alberto García Raboso, Steven Rayan, Introduction to Nonabelian Hodge Theory: flat connections, Higgs bundles, and complex variations of Hodge structure, Fields Inst. Monogr. 34 (2015), 131–171 (arXiv) (Springer)
Corlette’s nonabelian Hodge theorem can be found in:
Works by Carlos Simpson on nonabelian Hodge theory include:
Carlos Simpson, Higgs bundles and local systems, Inst. Hautes Etudes Sci. Publ. Math. (1992), no. 75, 5{95. MR 1179076 (94d:32027) (numdam)
Carlos Simpson, The Hodge filtration on nonabelian cohomology, Santa Cruz 1995, Proc. Sympos. Pure Math., vol. 62, Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI, 1997, pp. 217{281. MR
1492538 (99g:14028) (arXiv:9604005)
Carlos Simpson, Secondary Kodaira-Spencer classes and nonabelian Dolbeault cohomology (arXiv:9712020)
Carlos Simpson, Algebraic aspects of higher nonabelian Hodge theory (arXiv:9902067)
Carlos Simpson, Tony Pantev, Ludmil Katzarkov, Nonabelian mixed Hodge structures (arXiv)
The nonabelian Hodge theorem of (Simpson 92) is generalized to twisted bundles in:
Gothen’s paper starts with a survey on nonabelian Hodge correspondence,
Peter B. Gothen, Higgs bundles and the real symplectic group, arXiv:1102.4175
C. C. Liu, S. Rayan, Y. Tanaka, The Kapustin–Witten equations and nonabelian Hodge theory Eur. J. Math. 8 (Suppl 1) 23–41 (2022) doi
Last revised on October 1, 2023 at 12:46:32. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.