Chiral algebra
In mathematics, a chiral algebra is an algebraic structure introduced by Beilinson & Drinfeld (2004) as a rigorous version of the rather vague concept of a chiral algebra in physics. In Chiral Algebras, Beilinson and Drinfeld introduced the notion of chiral algebra, which based on the pseudo-tensor category of D-modules. They give a 'coordinate independent' notion of vertex algebras, which are based on formal power series. Chiral algebras on curves are essentially conformal vertex algebras.
Definition
[edit]A chiral algebra[1] on a smooth algebraic curve is a right D-module , equipped with a D-module homomorphism on and with an embedding , satisfying the following conditions
- (Skew-symmetry)
- (Jacobi identity)
- The unit map is compatible with the homomorphism ; that is, the following diagram commutes
Where, for sheaves on , the sheaf is the sheaf on whose sections are sections of the external tensor product with arbitrary poles on the diagonal: is the canonical bundle, and the 'diagonal extension by delta-functions' is
Relation to other algebras
[edit]Vertex algebra
[edit]The category of vertex algebras as defined by Borcherds or Kac is equivalent to the category of chiral algebras on equivariant with respect to the group of translations.
Factorization algebra
[edit]Chiral algebras can also be reformulated as factorization algebras.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- Beilinson, Alexander; Drinfeld, Vladimir (2004), Chiral algebras, American Mathematical Society Colloquium Publications, vol. 51, Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-0-8218-3528-9, MR 2058353
- ^ Ben-Zvi, David; Frenkel, Edward (2004). Vertex algebras and algebraic curves (Second ed.). Providence, Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society. p. 339. ISBN 9781470413156.
Further reading
[edit]- Francis, John; Gaitsgory, Dennis (2012). "Chiral Koszul duality". Sel. Math. New Series. 18 (1): 27–87. arXiv:1103.5803. doi:10.1007/s00029-011-0065-z. S2CID 8316715.