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In General > s.a. Totally Geodesic Mapping.
$ Def: A map f : M → N between
two manifolds with metric, (M, gab)
and (N, hAB), with
coordinates respectively {xa}
and {φA}, is said
to be a harmonic map if it extremizes the energy functional
E[f]:= \(1\over2\)∫M hAB (∇a φA) (∇b φB) gab |g|1/2 dx , i.e. , δE[f] = 0 .
* Terminology: (M, g)
is called the base space and (N, h) the target space.
* Euler-Lagrange equations:
φA,a;a
= 0 , where
φA;ab:=
∂b
φA,a
− φAc
Γcab
+ ΓABC
φB,a
φC,b ,
or |g|−1/2
∂a
(|g|1/2gab
∂bφA)
+ gab
ΓABC
∂aφB
∂bφC = 0 .
* Properties: E[f] is positive definite if (M, g) and (N, h) are Riemannian; The equations \(\delta E[f] = 0\) are elliptic iff (M, g) is Riemannian.
References
@ General:
Fuller PNAS(54) [introduced them and terminology];
Eells & Samson AJM(64).
@ Reviews: Eells & Lemaire BLMS(78);
Eells & Lemaire 83.
@ Related topics: Hardt BAMS(97) [singularities].
Examples
* 1D target space: The
simplest example; We get the Laplace equation or the wave equation (depending
on the signature of g), which defines the harmonic functions,
∂m(|g|1/2 gmn ∂nφ) = 0 .
* 1D base space: If M
= E1 (1D Euclidean space), we get the
action for geodesics and the geodesic equation.
* 2D base space: If M
= \(\mathbb R\)2, we get the membrane problem
(if...).
* Other special types:
- Any isometry, covering or minimal
immersion of Riemannian manifolds M → M'.
- Any homomorphism of compact
semisimple Lie groups G → G'.
- Any holomorphic map of Kähler manifolds.
@ References: Bizoń PRS(95) [S3 → S3];
Bizoń & Chmaj PRS(97),
Chiakuei & Zizhou Top(98) [spheres];
Speight m.DG/01 [L\(^2\) metric
on harmonic maps \({\rm S}^2 \to {\rm S}^2\) or \(\mathbb R{\rm P}^2 \to \mathbb R{\rm P}^2\)];
Daskalopoulos & Mese JDG(08) [from a simplicial complex].
Applications in Physics
> s.a. sigma models; embeddings.
* Common cases: Usually
(M, g) is flat and (N, h) is the set
of values of some naturally non-linear field.
* In general relativity:
Harmonic maps have been used extensively in general relativity, e.g., to find
families of solutions of the Einstein equation (> see Ernst
Equation) or Einstein-Yang-Mills theory, or in connection with the black-hole
uniqueness theorems, using in all these cases the existence of one or two Killing
vector fields.
* In particle physics:
They have been used in σ-models.
@ References: Misner PRD(78);
Guest 97 [loop groups and integrable systems];
Nutku in(93)gq/98 [colliding electrovacuum waves];
Corlette & Wald CMP(01)mp/99;
Ren & Duan CSF(17)-a1703
[connecting general relativity with classic chaos and quantum theory].
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send feedback and suggestions to bombelli at olemiss.edu – modified 26 oct 2018