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Let $(X,g)$ be a compact Kähler manifold. Physics allows us to consider a supersymmetric sigma model with target $(X,g)$, which is a N=2 two-dimensional field theory. From the two-dimensional point of view, the metric $g$ can be thougt as a coupling constant. At the classical level, this theory is conformally invariant. But it is well known that in a quantum theory, coupling constant are in general renormalized: there is only a effective coupling constant which depends on an energy scale $\mu$. Here, we have an effective metric $g(\mu)$. The dependence on $\mu$ of $g(\mu)$ is controlled by a differential equation of the form $dg/d(log \mu)= \beta(g)$ where the beta function $\beta$ can be computed order by order in perturbation theory. By definition, the quantum theory will be conformal iff the beta function vanishes. At the first order in perturbation theory, $\beta$ is proportional to the Ricci curvature and so one can solve $\beta=0$ if $X$ is Calabi-Yau ($c_{1}(X)=0$) and there is a unique up to scaling such solution in each Kähler class $[\omega]$ (by Yau's proof of the Calabi conjecture). But in general, there are higher order corrections. One can show that the Kähler class remains unchanged but this is not the case for the metric in this class. If one could solve the equation $\beta = 0$ order by order in perturbation theory and prove that the solutions converge, then this should define in each Kähler class of $X$ a unique metric $g_{CFT}$.

All this is rather well known from the mid 80's. At this time, there was an article of Nemeschansky and Sen, "Conformal invariance of supersymmetric $\sigma$-models on Calabi-Yau manifolds", which, I have the impression, has closed the question among physicists. In this article, it is proved that one can solve $\beta =0$ order by order but there is no result of convergence (as far as I understand). So my question is:

Has $g_{CFT}$ been mathematically proved to exist?

As the perturbative expansion is only valid for large Kähler class, it is likely that such a restriction is necessary. Maybe a better question is: is the perturbative expansion expected to converge for a large Kähler class or is it just some asymptotic expansion (as it is often the case for such question in perturbative quantum field theory)? In any case, the question of the existence of $g_{CFT}$ is rather well posed mathematically and I would like to know if it has been studied/solved. Any reference will be appreciated.

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    $\begingroup$ Do you know a reference in which the problem is stated cleanly in mathematical language in which, in particular, all of the terms are well-defined? I have seen this discussed from time to time in various papers, but the ones I've seen all refer for details to physics papers in which the problem is described in a physics-y jargon that I am not able to understand. You seem to be saying that there is a well-formulated mathematical problem here; I'm wondering whether it has been well described in the mathematics literature. $\endgroup$ Sep 20, 2013 at 12:32
  • $\begingroup$ I don't know such reference. As perturbative quantum field theory/string theory is rather well defined, I guess it should be possible to write a proper definition of the terms in the beta function as a sum over some Feynman diagrams. But such definition would be very complicated $\endgroup$
    – user25309
    Sep 21, 2013 at 13:01
  • $\begingroup$ and likely unpracticable. In fact, I think that my question makes sense by imposing just general conditions on the terms of beta of order greater than one : scalar function globally defined, polynomial in the derivatives of the Kähler potential...Only such properties are used in the article by Nemeschansky and Sen. $\endgroup$
    – user25309
    Sep 21, 2013 at 13:08
  • $\begingroup$ By the way, the article by Nemeschansky and Sen is rather readable and can be found here : ccdb5fs.kek.jp/cgi-bin/img/allpdf?198605369 $\endgroup$
    – user25309
    Sep 21, 2013 at 13:12
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    $\begingroup$ It may be readable to you, but I'm afraid that I don't have the necessary background in mathematical physics to be able to make sense of this article (which I have seen before). I was hoping for a reference in which the objects being discussed are actually defined mathematically. $\endgroup$ Sep 21, 2013 at 13:53

1 Answer 1

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To the best of my knowledge of the literature on this topic, the answer is: not really (a few exceptions appear below). Let me first give a rigorous statement of the problem: the physical equation $\beta = 0$ can be expressed as

$\sum_{k=0}^{\infty} \epsilon^k \beta_k = 0$,

where $\epsilon$ is a physical parameter one imagines is "small," and where $\beta_k$
is a symmetric two tensor depending on a Riemannian metric which arises as a certain universal expression in the curvature tensor and its derivatives, and which moreover obeys a natural scaling law and a natural "homogeneity" in terms of the number of derivatives of $g$ which are required to express it. These terms $\beta_k$ are computable in theory, although my understanding is that this has only been done on a piecemeal basis for the first few terms. There are many references one can easily find which do this for this and other sigma models. The first two terms are $\beta_0 = \mbox{Vol}(M) g$, $\beta_1 = \mbox{Rc}$, the term $\beta_2$ is a quadratic expression in the curvature tensor. Considering the equation up to order $k$ in the $\epsilon$ power expansion is referred to in physics literature as "up to $k$-loops."

So, with this background, there are at least two interesting questions one can ask:

1) Given $N \in \mathbb N \cup \{\infty\}$, can one construct on a given manifold a solution to $\sum_{k=0}^N \epsilon^k \beta_k = 0$?

2) Can one construct on a given manifold a one-parameter family of Riemannian metrics satisfying $\frac{\partial g}{\partial t} + \sum_{k=0}^N \epsilon^k \beta_k = 0$?

The original question was related to 1) above, but 2) is as important in the physics literature (AFAIK). Of course, the case $N=1$ of question 1) corresponds to solving the usual Riemannian Einstein equation (although one may need to justify ignoring the term $k=0$ in some cases, which physicists have ways of doing). In the Kähler setting the metric can come from the Calabi-Yau theorem as the poster stated. For question 2), the case $N=1$ corresponds to the (properly normalized) Ricci flow equation.

Now that I have properly stated the question, let me just say that I focus on studying elliptic/parabolic equations on manifolds, and for a while got interested in exactly this question. After much literature digging, I found only a few rigorous mathematical results:

http://arxiv.org/abs/0904.1241

http://arxiv.org/abs/1108.0526

http://arxiv.org/abs/1205.6507

The first paper considers the case $N=2$ of question 2). In this case the operator is still second-order, and so in special settings the equation can be rendered parabolic, and then known techniques can be applied. This paper is certainly interesting, although the techniques cannot really be extended to $N > 2$. The last two papers address the homogeneous setting.

Moving beyond $N = 2$ is, IMHO, extremely difficult from a PDE point of view, since one has very little information on the form of the terms $\beta_k$ beyond the general qualitative statements I made above. For instance, an interesting side question is: do there exist arbitrarily large values of $k$ for which $\beta_k$ corresponds to an elliptic operator of a Riemannian metric? This is true for $k=1$, but I believe it is very unlikely to be true for higher $k$ since I believe it is "known" in the physics sense that all of the terms arising in $\beta_k$ for $k > 1$ are at least quadratic combinations of curvature and derivatives. I.e., one cannot expect a term like $\Delta \mbox{Rc}$ to show up, which would be elliptic.

One can imagine considering the case $N > 2$ on homogeneous spaces, where in principle the equations reduce to a system of ODE, but again one does not have much in the way of understanding the form of the general term $\beta_k$.

It is also not inconceivable that if one starts with say a Ricci-flat metric, and is allowed to choose $\epsilon$ very small with respect to this metric, that one can perturb it to a solution to the higher order equations, but again without at least a little more hard data on the form of the $k$-th term this seems tricky.

EDIT: In response to Robert's comments, yes, I meant $\mbox{Vol}(M) g$ (fixed above). Also, let me give a reference:

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0550321389904227

This paper computes the terms $\beta_3$ and $\beta_4$ (The formula for $\beta_4$ covers half a page of terms, and each of these is shorthand for a complicated curvature expression already. Written out fully would take 2 pages at least!). As far as whether one can expect the $\beta$ functions to be simpler on a Kähler manifold, I can't speak to the physics well enough to really say. From a mathematical point of view, I don't really see any advantage beyond the fact that of course each term could be expressed in terms of a Kähler potential.

The case of symmetric spaces is probably more tractable. Looking for solutions within the class $\nabla \mbox{Rm} \equiv 0$ could certainly simplify the terms $\beta_k$ greatly. My understanding of how these terms are derived is extremely fuzzy, but let me speak anyways: I believe the different summands in $\beta_k$ correspond in some sense to different sized "loop diagrams" (see the above reference for some examples), and moreover the qualitative behavior of such terms (i.e. number of derivatives of $\mbox{Rm}$ which appear is (somehow) related to the topology of the diagram. One main difficulty in performing these calculations to derive the terms $\beta_k$ is the sheer number of diagrams which must be considered, which grows wildly with $k$. If, on the other hand, one could a priori rule out a large number of such diagrams (by assuming $\nabla \mbox{Rm} \equiv 0$), perhaps these calculations become more tractable, or at least some stronger qualitative statements could be made.

Lastly, the quantity $\epsilon$ (which, also note is usually $\alpha'$ in physics literature) is, I believe, meant to be small but fixed. Physically it apparently is meant to represent the "string tension."

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    $\begingroup$ Thanks! This is very helpful. But, in your write-up, did you really mean $\beta_0 = \mathrm{Vol}(M)$ and not $\beta_0=g$ (or maybe $\mathrm{Vol}(M)\ g$)? Also, are we to imagine $\epsilon\not=0$ as fixed throughout the discussion? Is there any hope of getting enough information about the formulae for the $\beta_k$ tensors so that one could compute them for, say, a symmetric space? Is it thought that the formulae for the $\beta_k$ are simpler for Kähler metrics than for the general metric? In particular, is there a place in the literature where $\beta_3$ is written down explicitly? $\endgroup$ Sep 25, 2013 at 20:05
  • $\begingroup$ Glad to help! See the edit above. $\endgroup$ Sep 25, 2013 at 23:32
  • $\begingroup$ Thanks a lot for the nice mathematical reformulation and for the interesting results on the question 2). $\endgroup$
    – user25309
    Sep 28, 2013 at 16:16

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