Virasoro algebra
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In mathematics, the Virasoro algebra is a complex Lie algebra and the unique nontrivial central extension of the Witt algebra. It is widely used in two-dimensional conformal field theory and in string theory. It is named after Miguel Ángel Virasoro.
Structure
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 or Schottenloher,[1] Thm. 5.1, pp. 79.
The Virasoro algebra has a presentation in terms of two generators (e.g. L3 and L−2) and six relations.[2][3]
The generators are called annihilation modes, while are creation modes. A basis of creation generators of the Virasoro algebra's universal enveloping algebra is the set
For , let , then .
Representation theory
In any indecomposable representation of the Virasoro algebra, the central generator of the algebra takes a constant value, also denoted and called the representation's central charge.
A vector in a representation of the Virasoro algebra has conformal dimension (or conformal weight) if it is an eigenvector of with eigenvalue :
An -eigenvector is called a primary state (of dimension ) if it is annihilated by the annihilation modes,
Highest weight representations
A highest weight representation of the Virasoro algebra is a representation generated by a primary state . A highest weight representation is spanned by the -eigenstates . The conformal dimension of is , where is called the level of . Any state whose level is not zero is called a descendant state of .
For any , the Verma module of central charge and conformal dimension is the representation whose basis is , for a primary state of dimension . The Verma module is the largest possible highest weight representation. The Verma module is indecomposable, and for generic values of it is also irreducible. When it is reducible, there exist other highest weight representations with these values of , called degenerate representations, which are quotients of the Verma module. In particular, the unique irreducible highest weight representation with these values of 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
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 is for some , where
Then the singular vector has level and conformal dimension
Here are the values of for , together with the corresponding singular vectors, written as for the primary state of :
Singular vectors for arbitrary may be computed using various algorithms,[4][5] and their explicit expressions are known.[6]
If , then has a singular vector at level if and only if with . If , there can also exist a singular vector at level if with and . This singular vector is now a descendant of another singular vector at level .
The integers that appear in are called Kac indices. It can be useful to use non-integer Kac indices for parametrizing the conformal dimensions of Verma modules that do not have singular vectors, for example in the critical random cluster model.
Shapovalov form
For any , the involution defines an automorphism of the Virasoro algebra and of its universal enveloping algebra. Then the Shapovalov form is the symmetric bilinear form on the Verma module such that , where the numbers are defined by and . The inverse Shapovalov form is relevant to computing Virasoro conformal blocks, and can be determined in terms of singular vectors.[7]
The determinant of the Shapovalov form at a given level is given by the Kac determinant formula,[8]
where is the partition function, and is a positive constant that does not depend on or .
Hermitian form and unitarity
If , a highest weight representation with conformal dimension has a unique
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. An irreducible highest weight representation is unitary if and only if
- either with ,
- or with
Characters
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
Conformal field theory
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
Since the Virasoro algebra comprises the generators of the conformal group of the
Generalizations
Super Virasoro algebras
There are two
W-algebras
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
The Virasoro algebra is a subalgebra of the universal enveloping algebra of any affine Lie algebra, as shown by the
Meromorphic vector fields on Riemann surfaces
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.[11] This can be further generalized to supermanifolds.[12]
Vertex algebras and conformal algebras
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
The Witt algebra (the Virasoro algebra without the central extension) was discovered by
The central extension of the Witt algebra that gives the Virasoro algebra was first found (in characteristic p > 0) by
The physicist Miguel Ángel Virasoro[16] (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[17] (1971, footnote on page 167).
See also
- Conformal field theory
- Goddard–Thorn theorem
- Heisenberg algebra
- Lie conformal algebra
- Pohlmeyer charge
- Super Virasoro algebra
- W-algebra
- Witt algebra
- WZW model
References
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- S2CID 119811901.
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- ISBN 0-387-94785-X.
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{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link - ^
P. Goddard, A. Kent & D. Olive (1986). "Unitary representations of the Virasoro and super-Virasoro algebras". Zbl 0588.17014.
- S2CID 55989582.
- S2CID 10921054.
- JFM 40.0193.02.
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R. E. Block (1966). "On the Mills–Seligman axioms for Lie algebras of classical type". JSTOR 1994485.
- ISSN 0016-2663.
- ISSN 0556-2821.
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Further reading
- Iohara, Kenji; Koga, Yoshiyuki (2011), Representation theory of the Virasoro algebra, Springer Monographs in Mathematics, London: Springer-Verlag London Ltd., MR 2744610
- Victor Kac (2001) [1994], "Virasoro algebra", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
- 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. 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.
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