Difference between revisions of "Eta-invariant"
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+ | ''$ \eta $-invariant'' | ||
− | + | Let $A$ be an unbounded [[Self-adjoint operator|self-adjoint operator]] with only pure point spectrum (cf. also [[Spectrum of an operator|Spectrum of an operator]]). Let $a _ { n }$ be the eigenvalues of $A$, counted with multiplicity. If $A$ is a first-order elliptic [[Differential operator|differential operator]] on a compact [[Manifold|manifold]], then $| a _ { n } | \rightarrow \infty$ and the series | |
− | + | \begin{equation*} \eta ( s ) = \sum _ { a _ { n } \neq 0 } \frac { a _ { n } } { | a _ { n } | } | a _ { n } | ^ { - s } \end{equation*} | |
− | + | is convergent for $\operatorname { Re } ( s )$ large enough. Moreover, $ \eta $ has a meromorphic continuation to the complex plane, with $s = 0$ a regular value (cf. also [[Analytic continuation|Analytic continuation]]). The value of $\eta _ { A }$ at $0$ is called the eta-invariant of $A$, and was introduced by M.F. Atiyah, V.K. Patodi and I.M. Singer in the foundational paper [[#References|[a1]]] as a correction term for an index theorem on manifolds with boundary (cf. also [[Index formulas|Index formulas]]). For example, in that paper, they prove that the signature $\operatorname{sign}( M )$ of a compact, oriented, $4 k$-dimensional [[Riemannian manifold|Riemannian manifold]] with boundary $M$ whose [[Metric|metric]] is a product metric near the boundary is | |
+ | |||
+ | \begin{equation*} \operatorname { sign } ( M ) = \int _ { M } \mathcal{L} ( M , g ) - \eta _ { D } ( 0 ), \end{equation*} | ||
+ | |||
+ | where $D = \pm ( * d - d * )$ is the signature operator on the boundary and $\mathcal{L} ( M , g )$ the Hirzebruch $L$-polynomial associated to the Riemannian metric on $M$. | ||
The definition of the eta-invariant was generalized by J.-M. Bismut and J. Cheeger in [[#References|[a2]]], where they introduced the eta-form of a family of elliptic operators as above. It can be used to recover the eta-invariant of operators in the family. | The definition of the eta-invariant was generalized by J.-M. Bismut and J. Cheeger in [[#References|[a2]]], where they introduced the eta-form of a family of elliptic operators as above. It can be used to recover the eta-invariant of operators in the family. | ||
====References==== | ====References==== | ||
− | <table>< | + | <table><tr><td valign="top">[a1]</td> <td valign="top"> M.F. Atiyah, V.K. Patodi, I.M. Singer, "Spectral asymmetry and Riemannian Geometry" ''Math. Proc. Cambridge Philos. Soc.'' , '''77''' (1975) pp. 43–69</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a2]</td> <td valign="top"> J.-M. Bismut, J. Cheeger, "Eta invariants and their adiabatic limits" ''J. Amer. Math. Soc.'' , '''2''' : 1 (1989) pp. 33–77</td></tr></table> |
Latest revision as of 16:58, 1 July 2020
$ \eta $-invariant
Let $A$ be an unbounded self-adjoint operator with only pure point spectrum (cf. also Spectrum of an operator). Let $a _ { n }$ be the eigenvalues of $A$, counted with multiplicity. If $A$ is a first-order elliptic differential operator on a compact manifold, then $| a _ { n } | \rightarrow \infty$ and the series
\begin{equation*} \eta ( s ) = \sum _ { a _ { n } \neq 0 } \frac { a _ { n } } { | a _ { n } | } | a _ { n } | ^ { - s } \end{equation*}
is convergent for $\operatorname { Re } ( s )$ large enough. Moreover, $ \eta $ has a meromorphic continuation to the complex plane, with $s = 0$ a regular value (cf. also Analytic continuation). The value of $\eta _ { A }$ at $0$ is called the eta-invariant of $A$, and was introduced by M.F. Atiyah, V.K. Patodi and I.M. Singer in the foundational paper [a1] as a correction term for an index theorem on manifolds with boundary (cf. also Index formulas). For example, in that paper, they prove that the signature $\operatorname{sign}( M )$ of a compact, oriented, $4 k$-dimensional Riemannian manifold with boundary $M$ whose metric is a product metric near the boundary is
\begin{equation*} \operatorname { sign } ( M ) = \int _ { M } \mathcal{L} ( M , g ) - \eta _ { D } ( 0 ), \end{equation*}
where $D = \pm ( * d - d * )$ is the signature operator on the boundary and $\mathcal{L} ( M , g )$ the Hirzebruch $L$-polynomial associated to the Riemannian metric on $M$.
The definition of the eta-invariant was generalized by J.-M. Bismut and J. Cheeger in [a2], where they introduced the eta-form of a family of elliptic operators as above. It can be used to recover the eta-invariant of operators in the family.
References
[a1] | M.F. Atiyah, V.K. Patodi, I.M. Singer, "Spectral asymmetry and Riemannian Geometry" Math. Proc. Cambridge Philos. Soc. , 77 (1975) pp. 43–69 |
[a2] | J.-M. Bismut, J. Cheeger, "Eta invariants and their adiabatic limits" J. Amer. Math. Soc. , 2 : 1 (1989) pp. 33–77 |
Eta-invariant. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Eta-invariant&oldid=50253