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Do you think that symplectic reduction (Marsden Weinstein reduction) is interesting from a physical point of view? If so, why? Does it give you some new physical insights?

There are some possible answers I often heard of, but I don't really understand it. Perhaps you could comment these points. Explain and illustrate why they are good reasons or if not, explain why they are nonsense:

1) Symplectic reduction is interesting because "it simplifies" the system under consideration because you exploit symmetries to eliminate some redundant degrees of freedom. I do not really understand what's the point here because in general reduction leads to a more complicated geometry. (Or even to singular spaces if you consider more general reduction settings).

2) It's interesting because it is a toy model for gauge theories.

3) It's interesting because if you want to "quantize" a system, from a conceptual point of view, one should start from the reduced system, from the "real" phase space. I don't see why one should do this for nonrelativistic quantum systems. Even for gauge theories I don't get the point, because the usual procedure is quantize the unreduced system (via gauge fixing), isn't it?

If there are points which make symplectic reduction interesting from a physical point of view, are there physical reasons why one should study reduction by stages?

Added; after reading José Figueroa-O'Farrill's answer I had some thoughts I should add:

I am still by far not an expert in gauge theories. But I think, that in gauge theories, one typically has redundant variables, which have no or at least not a direct physical interpretation. So I would agree that the "physical" dynamics takes place at the quotient in the case that the gauge theory itself has a physical meaning (in particular experimental evidence). Concerning quantization, however, if I am not mistaken, the only known quantum gauge theory which corresponding classical gauge theory which experimental support is quantum electrodynamics. For the other physical relevant quantum gauge theories, I think, the classical counterparts play just the role of auxiliary theories in some sense. In this case I would agree, that on the quantum side only the reduced space has physical meaning, but I think for the corresponding classical one, this seems to be a rather pointless question. So the question remains, why it is physically interesting to study on the classical side the reduced phase space in case of gauge theories. Moreover as José Figueroa-O'Farrill points out, the classical reduced space in most cases too complicated to quantize it directly, one would use some kind of extrinsic quantization as BRST instead. I don't know exactly how the situation for gravitation is. I think one can formulate ART as classical gauge theory. But makes it sense in this case to study the reduced classical phase space for quantization purposes? I guess not.

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  • $\begingroup$ This is a nice question! $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 23, 2010 at 16:47
  • $\begingroup$ The post raises some interesting issues, but it's too argumentative for my taste, which is reaffirmed by the "opinion" tag. $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 23, 2010 at 17:05
  • $\begingroup$ It is interesting to work out the example of the two-body problem (without using the standard "tricks") just by noting the SO(3)-invariance. (Note that we are dealing with singular symplectic reduction in this case!) $\endgroup$
    – Orbicular
    Commented Sep 23, 2010 at 19:35
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    $\begingroup$ A side note: I just learned that Jerrold Marsden passed away this week (aged 68). $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 24, 2010 at 17:01
  • $\begingroup$ @student: the standard model of particle physics is a quantum gauge theory with lots of experimental support and it's not just quantum electrodynamics. (Sorry I just noticed this addition to the question now!) $$ $$ @Hans: Sad news about Jerry Marsden. $\endgroup$ Commented Oct 30, 2010 at 22:59

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Symplectic reduction arises naturally in constrained hamiltonian systems, e.g., gauge theories. So it is not just a question of it being "interesting" as much as a fact of life.

The way to deal with coisotropic constraints -- those whose zero locus is a coisotropic submanifold -- is via symplectic reduction. The real (read, physically meaningful) dynamics are taking place in the symplectic quotient, which is the standard quotient of the zero locus of the constraints by the (integrable) distribution defined by the hamiltonian vector fields associated to the constraints.

Now, as you point out, the symplectic quotient is usually much more complicated geometrically than the original symplectic manifold and this makes working there cumbersome. For instance, quantising the symplectic quotient is usually difficult. Luckily, one can go the other way: instead of performing the symplectic quotient and then quantising, one can first quantise the constrained system and then do a quantum version of the symplectic quotient. One such procedure, which works in many gauge theories, is BRST quantisation. This is a homological approach to the quantisation of constrained hamiltonian systems. It has the virtue that it preserves the symmetries of the original system which "gauge fixing" typically destroys.

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  • $\begingroup$ Do you think it would be bring new insights to have quantization methods which work generally well for complicated geometries so that you are able to quantize the reduced space directly in physical relevant cases? $\endgroup$
    – student
    Commented Sep 23, 2010 at 19:49
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    $\begingroup$ Absolutely: it would be fantastic to be able to quantise complicated systems! Alas, I think it is fair to say we are far from that. One often hears that we only know how to quantise the harmonic oscillator and while this is an exaggeration, it is not too far from the truth. $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 23, 2010 at 21:47
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Inviscid fluid mechanics is one example of a physical system where symplectic reduction actually tells you a great deal, which would be very hard to obtain by other means.

The unreduced configuration space for a (inviscid, incompressible) fluid in a 3-dimensional container $M$ is the group $SDiff(M)$ of volume-preserving diffeomorphisms. This group acts on itself from the right and this action leaves the fluid kinetic energy invariant. Now, there are various kinds of reduction, and all of them give some insight into fluid dynamics:

  • Working directly with the unreduced configuration space allows you to do fluid dynamics in Lagrangian variables, that is, you track every particle through its motion and record where it goes as time progresses;

  • By factoring out the diffeomorphism group action, you end up from $T^\ast Q$ in the dual of the Lie algebra of $SDiff(M)$ and this will let you do fluid dynamics in the Eulerian picture. Here you are fixed in space, and instead of tracking individual fluid particles you record what happens at a fixed position in space. This is an instance of Poisson reduction, and will show you that the canonical Poisson structure on the dual of the Lie algebra of $SDiff(M)$ is the right one if you want to show that Euler's equations are Hamiltonian. Not only does this process explicitly give you the Poisson structure, it also tells you that (e.g.) it satisfies Jacobi's identity (since it is obtained through reduction from the canonical Poisson structure on $T^\ast Q$), a fact which would otherwise be hard to obtain directly.

  • Now fix an element $\mu$ in the dual of the Lie algebra of $SDiff(M)$ and do symplectic reduction at $\mu$. V.I. Arnold has shown that the elements of the dual of the Lie algebra of $SDiff(M)$ can be interpreted as vorticity distributions of the fluid, so performing symplectic reduction is tantamount to fixing the vorticity distribution of the fluid, and only considering fluids with that amount of vorticity. One important example shows up when you take $\mu$ to have support along a closed curve (knot or link). In that case, the symplectic reduced space is nothing but the space of all knots/links that are diffeomorphic to the original curve, equipped with the natural symplectic form! This is quite a simplification, and for instance tells you that the dynamics of vortex rings (a fundamental part of fluid dynamics) is Hamiltonian and has an incredibly nice geometric interpretation. Moreover, by varying $\mu$ you get various other fluid-dynamical systems, such as the Kelvin, Lamb, Kirchoff-Lin, etc. equations, all in one fell swoop!

It's also important emphasize that symplectic reduction doesn't just give you "old" results in a new formulation, but also clears up much of the confusion that you would get when doing straightforward calculations. For instance, people have been known to come up with various sequences of "conserved quantities" for the Euler equations, attempting to establish complete integrability this way. However, having a clear picture of the geometry and how the coadjoint orbits sit inside the dual Lie algebra will quickly show you that these quantities are merely Casimirs and could hence never be used for integrability.

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Symplectic reduction is interesting because "it simplifies" the system under consideration because you exploit symmetries to eliminate some redundant degrees of freedom. I do not really understand what's the point here because in general reduction leads to a more complicated geometry. (Or even to singular spaces if you consider more general reduction settings).

Actually, the idea is to a find simpler dynamic "upstairs" in order to understand the complicated dynamic that occurs on the quotient space.

Let me give you an example with the so-called Calogero-Moser system.

Consider the cotangent space $T^*(\mathbb{C}^n_{reg})$ of the space $\mathbb{C}^n_{reg}$ consisting of $n$ pairwize dinstinct points in the complex plane. And try to study the dynamic associated to the Hamiltonian $$ H(p_1,\dots,p_n,q_1,\dots,q_n):=\sum_ip_i^2-\sum_{i\neq j}\frac{1}{q_i-q_j} $$ Are there enough conserved quantities ? What are the integral curves ? etc...

Actually you can see that everything is invariant under the symmetric group $S_n$ so I will actually try to study the same dynamic on $T^*(\mathbb{C}^n_{reg})/S_n$.

An a priori unrelated system

Consider the space of pairs $(X,Y)$ of $n\times n$ matrices. We actually have $M_n\times M_n=T^*(M_n)$ via the bilinear form $tr(XY)$. The Poisson bracket on coordinates is given by $$ \{x_{ij},x_{kl}\}=0=\{y_{ij},y_{kl}\}\quad\{y_{ij},x_{kl}\}=\delta_{il}\delta{jk} $$ Where $x_{ij}$ and $y_{kl}$ are the obvious coordinates on $M_n\times M_n$.

Consider the map to $\mathfrak{sl}_n$ defined by $\mu(X,Y)=[X,Y]$. It is a momentum map ( we again identify $\mathfrak{sl}_n$ with its dual as above), and take the reduction w.r.t the (co)adjoint orbit $\mathcal{O}$ of $diag(-1,\dots,-1,n-1)$. The reduced space $M_{red}$ is then the space of pairs $(X,Y)$ of matrices such that $[X,Y]-Id$ has rank $1$, modulo simultaneous conjugation.

Now observe that the functions $H_i=tr(Y^i)$, $i=1,\dots,n$, form an integrable system on $M_{red}$. Namely, they are independant Poisson commuting and conjugation invariant functions on $M_n\times M_n$ - therefore they descend to $M_{red}$ which has precisely dimension $n$.

The dynamic of $H_2$ is very easy. It is linear! Integral curves of $H_2$ are of the form $$ (X(t),Y(t))=(X_0+2Y_0t,Y_0). $$

How the hell is this related to what we had before?

The point is that we have an injective Poisson map from $T^*(\mathbb{C}^n_{reg})/S_n$ to $M_{red}$ that sends $(p_1,\dots,p_n,q_1,\dots,q_n)$ to the pair $(X,Y)$ with $X=diag(q_1,\dots, q_m)$, $Y_{ii}=p_i$ and $Y_{ij}=\frac{1}{q_i-q_j}$. Moreover, th eimage of this map coincide with the dense open subset consisting of conjugation classes of pairs $(X,Y)$ such that $X$ is diagonalizable with pairwize distinct eigenvalues.

Now if you write $H_2$ in $(p,q)$ coordinates you find exactly the $H$ we started with.

So, in the end we found a way to write a complicated system as the reduction of a very simple one. This helps us to understand well the complicates one (e.g. in this example it helped to prove integrability).


The is not the only motivation for symplectic reduction. Studiing systems with constraints might be another one. But I found this example very enlighting about the potential useness of symplectic reduction.


reference: I think that the people who did this are Kazhdan, Kostant and Sternberg. You can find a very nice presentation of it (as well as many other interesting things) in the book "Lectures on Calogero-Moser systems" by Pavel Etingof.

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  • $\begingroup$ Maybe I didn't get something? What group is acting in your matrix example and how? $\endgroup$
    – Olga
    Commented Jan 21, 2016 at 9:20
  • $\begingroup$ $PGL_n$ acts (by simultaneous conjugation on both factors) . $\endgroup$
    – DamienC
    Commented Mar 28, 2016 at 22:05
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    $\begingroup$ @DamienC So, just to confirm that I’m seeing through your argument correctly, in the example that you mention here, symplectic reduction is a tool to understand the Calogero-Moser space better, because the equations in terms of matrices are simpler to understand and compute with, am I right? If yes, then this seems a bit strange to me, because I thought that the whole idea of reduction was to reduce the number of parameters to get a system which is supposedly simpler. $\endgroup$
    – MathManiac
    Commented May 13, 2021 at 22:13
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    $\begingroup$ @MathManiac Yes, you're seeing through my argument correctly. It is true that the reduced system has less parameters, but it doesn't mean that it's simpler. Sometimes it becomes more complicated (and thus, more interesting). $\endgroup$
    – DamienC
    Commented May 14, 2021 at 22:44
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Of course it is interesting, and the idea of factoring out symmetries goes back to Newton.

As for your point (1), yes it leads to more complicated geometry, and often some form of singular reduction is required (e.g. have a look at the blue book of Bates & Cushman for the case of integrable Hamiltonian systems with finitely many degrees of freedom), but from a dynamical point of view it makes much more sense.

For instance suppose you would like to study numerically a classical mechanical system (integrable or non-integrable all the same): working in reduced coordinates allows to easily distinguish between different Periodic Orbits (i.e. to count them only once), while in non-reduced dynamics the Periodic Orbits come in continuous families.

As for your comment, the topology of the reduced space is certainly a "new physical insight". Have a look at this recent paper by Yanguas, Palacian, Meyer & Dumas where they study periodic orbits of a non-integrable system as you ask, and where they discuss the issue of reduction and provide further references.

(Edited to correct an error; more links added in reply to comment.)

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  • $\begingroup$ Do you have some references for discussions of non-integrable physically relevant classical mechanical systems, where symplectic reduction brings some new insights? $\endgroup$
    – student
    Commented Sep 23, 2010 at 19:59
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Here is a fancy example: Supersymmetry. Rigid N=1 supersymmetric theories in 4 dimension have a natural Kahler structure on the field space. The D-term is precisely a moment map. The moduli space of the theory is the symplectic quotient from this moment map.

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  • $\begingroup$ Interesting. Do you have a reference with some details? $\endgroup$
    – jvkersch
    Commented Oct 21, 2010 at 23:21
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    $\begingroup$ J. Bagger and E. Witten, “The gauge invariant supersymmetric nonlinear sigma model,” Phys. Lett. B118 (1982) 103–106. J. Bagger and J. Wess, “Gauging the supersymmetric sigma model with a Goldstone field,” Phys. Lett. B199 (1987) 243–246. $\endgroup$
    – Moduli
    Commented Oct 22, 2010 at 2:13
  • $\begingroup$ Related to this, in a gauged supergravity theory, we do not have a symplectic quotient anymore; instead we have a GIT quotient. $\endgroup$
    – Moduli
    Commented Oct 22, 2010 at 2:15
  • $\begingroup$ Thanks! I definitely want to understand this some more. $\endgroup$
    – jvkersch
    Commented Oct 22, 2010 at 16:37
  • $\begingroup$ @Moduli I have been myself looking into these things following this recent work, arxiv.org/abs/1005.3546. It is not clear to me as to why this "conformal" manifold has to come from a symplectic quotient rather than a normal quotient. A similar argument for the case of vacua of supersymmetric gauge theories was given in this paper arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/9506098 where they again argued the need for a symplectic quotient. Though this argument is a little more understandable than the former. $\endgroup$
    – Anirbit
    Commented Jan 4, 2011 at 12:39
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Suppose you have a kinematics that is parameterized by a; whose symmetries are given by the Lie Algebra [X,Y] = aZ, [Y,Z] = X, [Z,X] = Y. For instance, a could be a coefficient that distinguishes a "classical" from "non-classical" formulation; or a parameter that distinguishes a "bound" (a < 0) from a "free" (a > 0) system. What are the representations of this system? And in what sense is "representation" meant?

With symplectic reduction one can not only answer the question within a unified framework in a way that cuts across paradigm boundaries (both quantum and classical); but across the different cases of the parameter (a).

In contrast with Hilbert space representation theory, where the different cases of (a) have to be treated separately and one has to resort to the awkward "group contraction" mechanism to handle the different cases, it is possible to devise the Poisson-Lie manifold for each case of (a) and to then continuously connect them all into a single Poisson manifold, by simply treating (a) as an extra coordinate.

The symplectic reduction is then carried out on the unified manifold. Each of the symplectic leaves for values of (a > 0) corresponds to irreducible representations. The method however generally breaks down when passing over to limit values of the contraction parameter (here: where a = 0), where the boundary case may not only fail the Peter Weyl Theorem, but may not even have a tractible Hilbert space representation problem at all. (Some groups, like the Galilei group have what's known as a wild representation type, whose representation problems are generally unsolvable.)

In contrast, passing over from a > 0 to a = 0 and even a < 0 causes no problem with symplectic reduction. For this example, the reduction yields the cases: {(0,0,0,a)}, for all values of a ((0,0,Z,0)}, for all non-zero values of Z {(X,Y,Z,a): XX + YY + aZZ = RR }, for all values of a and R > 0 and you can see immediately which subsets are connected to which, as (a) varies (i.e. how the symplectic leaves morph as (a) crosses from a > 0 to a = 0 to a < 0); and which ones are connected to which for each given value of (a).

This construction transcends the linear representation theory of Hilbert spaces in the sense that the Poisson manifold is not the Poisson-Lie manifold of any Lie group or its Lie algebra, but is a manifold which encapsulates an entire family of such Lie groups and Lie algebras in a single unified setting.

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  • $\begingroup$ An added note: the last family, if a < 0, also includes the cases XX + YY + aZZ = RR, where R = 0 or R is imaginary (double cones and 2-sheeted hyperboloids). $\endgroup$ Commented May 1, 2019 at 0:06
  • $\begingroup$ The Galilei group is not wild. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 7, 2019 at 23:47

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