1,239 research outputs found
Equivariant differential characters and symplectic reduction
We describe equivariant differential characters (classifying equivariant
circle bundles with connections), their prequantization, and reduction
On Non-Abelian Symplectic Cutting
We discuss symplectic cutting for Hamiltonian actions of non-Abelian compact
groups. By using a degeneration based on the Vinberg monoid we give, in good
cases, a global quotient description of a surgery construction introduced by
Woodward and Meinrenken, and show it can be interpreted in algebro-geometric
terms. A key ingredient is the `universal cut' of the cotangent bundle of the
group itself, which is identified with a moduli space of framed bundles on
chains of projective lines recently introduced by the authors.Comment: Various edits made, to appear in Transformation Groups. 28 pages, 8
figure
Convex Polytopes and Quasilattices from the Symplectic Viewpoint
We construct, for each convex polytope, possibly nonrational and nonsimple, a
family of compact spaces that are stratified by quasifolds, i.e. each of these
spaces is a collection of quasifolds glued together in an suitable way. A
quasifold is a space locally modelled on modulo the action of a
discrete, possibly infinite, group. The way strata are glued to each other also
involves the action of an (infinite) discrete group. Each stratified space is
endowed with a symplectic structure and a moment mapping having the property
that its image gives the original polytope back. These spaces may be viewed as
a natural generalization of symplectic toric varieties to the nonrational
setting.Comment: LaTeX, 29 pages. Revised version: TITLE changed, reorganization of
notations and exposition, added remarks and reference
Semitoric integrable systems on symplectic 4-manifolds
Let M be a symplectic 4-manifold. A semitoric integrable system on M is a
pair of real-valued smooth functions J, H on M for which J generates a
Hamiltonian S^1-action and the Poisson brackets {J,H} vanish. We shall
introduce new global symplectic invariants for these systems; some of these
invariants encode topological or geometric aspects, while others encode
analytical information about the singularities and how they stand with respect
to the system. Our goal is to prove that a semitoric system is completely
determined by the invariants we introduce
L^{2}-restriction bounds for eigenfunctions along curves in the quantum completely integrable case
We show that for a quantum completely integrable system in two dimensions,the
-normalized joint eigenfunctions of the commuting semiclassical
pseudodifferential operators satisfy restriction bounds ofthe form for generic
curves on the surface. We also prove that the maximal restriction
bounds of Burq-Gerard-Tzvetkov are always attained for certain exceptional
subsequences of eigenfunctions.Comment: Correct some typos and added some more detail in section
Mutually Penetrating Motion of Self-Organized 2D Patterns of Soliton-Like Structures
Results of numerical simulations of a recently derived most general
dissipative-dispersive PDE describing evolution of a film flowing down an
inclined plane are presented. They indicate that a novel complex type of
spatiotemporal patterns can exist for strange attractors of nonequilibrium
systems. It is suggested that real-life experiments satisfying the validity
conditions of the theory are possible: the required sufficiently viscous
liquids are readily available.Comment: minor corrections, 4 pages, LaTeX, 6 figures, mpeg simulations
available upon or reques
Stability of relative equilibria with singular momentum values in simple mechanical systems
A method for testing -stability of relative equilibria in Hamiltonian
systems of the form "kinetic + potential energy" is presented. This method
extends the Reduced Energy-Momentum Method of Simo et al. to the case of
non-free group actions and singular momentum values. A normal form for the
symplectic matrix at a relative equilibrium is also obtained.Comment: Partially rewritten. Some mistakes fixed. Exposition improve
Parabolic resonances and instabilities in near-integrable two degrees of freedom Hamiltonian flows
When an integrable two-degrees-of-freedom Hamiltonian system possessing a
circle of parabolic fixed points is perturbed, a parabolic resonance occurs. It
is proved that its occurrence is generic for one parameter families
(co-dimension one phenomenon) of near-integrable, t.d.o. systems. Numerical
experiments indicate that the motion near a parabolic resonance exhibits new
type of chaotic behavior which includes instabilities in some directions and
long trapping times in others. Moreover, in a degenerate case, near a {\it flat
parabolic resonance}, large scale instabilities appear. A model arising from an
atmospherical study is shown to exhibit flat parabolic resonance. This supplies
a simple mechanism for the transport of particles with {\it small} (i.e.
atmospherically relevant) initial velocities from the vicinity of the equator
to high latitudes. A modification of the model which allows the development of
atmospherical jets unfolds the degeneracy, yet traces of the flat instabilities
are clearly observed
Moduli spaces of toric manifolds
We construct a distance on the moduli space of symplectic toric manifolds of
dimension four. Then we study some basic topological properties of this space,
in particular, path-connectedness, compactness, and completeness. The
construction of the distance is related to the Duistermaat-Heckman measure and
the Hausdorff metric. While the moduli space, its topology and metric, may be
constructed in any dimension, the tools we use in the proofs are
four-dimensional, and hence so is our main result.Comment: To appear in Geometriae Dedicata, minor changes to previous version,
19 pages, 6 figure
Point vortices on the sphere: a case with opposite vorticities
We study systems formed of 2N point vortices on a sphere with N vortices of
strength +1 and N vortices of strength -1. In this case, the Hamiltonian is
conserved by the symmetry which exchanges the positive vortices with the
negative vortices. We prove the existence of some fixed and relative
equilibria, and then study their stability with the ``Energy Momentum Method''.
Most of the results obtained are nonlinear stability results. To end, some
bifurcations are described.Comment: 35 pages, 9 figure
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