The loop equation for special cubic Hodge integrals (Q2169818): Difference between revisions

From MaRDI portal
Import240304020342 (talk | contribs)
Set profile property.
Set OpenAlex properties.
Property / OpenAlex ID
 
Property / OpenAlex ID: W2901509376 / rank
 
Normal rank

Revision as of 02:33, 20 March 2024

scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
The loop equation for special cubic Hodge integrals
scientific article

    Statements

    The loop equation for special cubic Hodge integrals (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    30 August 2022
    0 references
    Let $\overline{\mathcal{M}}_{g,n}$ be the moduli space of stable algebraic curves of genus $g$ with $n$ distinct marked points, where $g$ and $n$ are non-negative integers satisfying the stability condition $2g-2+n>0$. For $1\le k\le n$ and $0\le j\le g$, denote by $\psi_k$ the first Chern class of the $k$-th tautological line bundle $\mathbb{L}_k$ on $\overline{\mathcal{M}}_{g,n}$, and by $\lambda_j$ the $j$-th Chern class of the Hodge bundle $\mathbb{E}_{g,n}$ on $\overline{\mathcal{M}}_{g,n}$. The rational numbers defined by the formula \[ \int_{\overline{\mathcal{M}}_{g,n}} \psi_1^{i_1}\cdots\psi_n^{i_n}\lambda_{j_1}\cdots\lambda_{j_m} \] are called the Hodge integrals. These numbers take zero value unless the degree-dimension counting matches, i.e. \[ i_1+\dots +i_n+ j_1+\dots +j_m = 3g-3+n. \tag{1} \] Denote by $\mathcal{C}_g(z):= \sum_{j=0}^g \lambda_j z^j$ the Chern polynomial of $\mathbb{E}_{g,n}$. We will be particularly interested in the following class of Hodge integrals defined via the cubic products of Chern polynomials, called the cubic Hodge integrals: \[ \int_{\overline{\mathcal{M}}_{g,n}} \psi_1^{i_1}\cdots\psi_n^{i_n} \mathcal{C}_g(-p)\mathcal{C}_g(-q)\mathcal{C}_g(-r),\tag{2} \] where $p,q,r$ are complex parameters. These integrals are called \textit{special} if $p,q,r$ satisfy the following \textit{local Calabi-Yau condition}: \[ pq+qr+rp=0.\tag{3} \] Let $\mathcal{H}=\mathcal{H}(\mathbf{t}; p,q,r; \epsilon)$ be the cubic Hodge free energy defined by \begin{align*} \mathcal{H}(\mathbf{t}; p,q,r; \epsilon) &:= \sum_{g\geq0}\epsilon^{2g-2}\mathcal{H}_g(\mathbf{t}; p,q,r), \\ \mathcal{H}_g(\mathbf{t}; p,q,r) &:= \sum_{n\geq 0} \sum_{i_1,\dots,i_n\geq 0} \frac{t_{i_1}\cdots t_{i_n}}{n!} \int_{\overline{\mathcal{M}}_{g,n}} \psi_1^{i_1}\cdots\psi_n^{i_n} \mathcal{C}_g(-p)\mathcal{C}_g(-q)\mathcal{C}_g(-r) . \end{align*} Here $\mathcal{H}_g(\mathbf{t}; p,q,r)$ is called the genus $g$ part of the free energy $\mathcal{H}$. Then the exponential \[ e^{\mathcal{H}(\mathbf{t};p,q,r;\epsilon)} =:Z_{\text{cubic}}(\mathbf{t};p,q,r;\epsilon)=:Z_{\text{cubic}} \] is called the cubic Hodge partition function. Clearly, $\mathcal{H}_g(\mathbf{t}; p,q,r)\in \mathbb{C}[p,q,r][[\mathbf{t}]]$. The genus zero free energy $\mathcal{H}_0(\mathbf{t})$ is actually independent of $p,q,r$ and has the explicit expression \[ \mathcal{H}_0(\mathbf{t}) = \sum_{n\geq 3} \frac{1}{n(n-1)(n-2)} \sum_{i_1+\dots+i_n=n-3} \frac{t_{i_1}}{i_1!} \cdots \frac{t_{i_n}}{i_n!} . \] Define \[ v(\mathbf{t}):=\partial_{t_0}^2 \mathcal{H}_0(\mathbf{t})=\sum_{n\geq 1} \frac1n \sum_{i_1+\dots+i_n=n-1} \frac{t_{i_1}}{i_1!} \cdots \frac{t_{i_n}}{i_n!}.\tag{4} \] It satisfies the following Riemann hierarchy: \[ \frac{\partial v}{\partial t_i} = \frac{v^i}{i!} \frac{\partial v}{\partial t_0} , \quad i\geq 0.\tag{5} \] More generally, if one defines $w=\epsilon^2 \partial_{t_0}^2 \mathcal{H}(\mathbf{t};p,q,r;\epsilon)$, then $w$ satisfies an integrable hierarchy of Hamiltonian evolutionary PDEs [\textit{A. Buryak} et al., J. Differ. Geom. 92, No. 1, 153--185 (2012; Zbl 1259.53079); J. Geom. Phys. 62, No. 7, 1639--1651 (2012; Zbl 1242.53113); \textit{B. Dubrovin} et al., Adv. Math. 293, 382--435 (2016; Zbl 1335.53114)], called the Hodge hierarchy for the special cubic Hodge integrals, which is a deformation of the Riemann hierarchy. The Hodge-FVH correspondence is given by the following conjecture [\textit{S.-Q. Liu} et al., Lett. Math. Phys. 108, No. 2, 261--283 (2018; Zbl 1410.37061)]. \textbf{Conjecture.} \textit{The Hodge hierarchy for the special cubic Hodge integrals is equivalent, under a certain Miura type transformation, to the \textit{fractional Volterra hierarchy} (FVH). Furthermore, the special cubic Hodge partition function gives a tau function of the FVH.} From now on, we assume that $p,q,r$ satisfy the local Calabi-Yau condition (3). The case with $p,q,r\in \mathbb{Q}$ is called \textit{rational}. Let us first consider the rational case. Due to the symmetry property of the cubic Hodge integrals with respect to $p,q,r$, and the homogeneity property (deduced from (1)) \[ \mathcal{H}_g( \mathbf{t}; \lambda p, \lambda q, \lambda r)|_{t_i\mapsto t_i \lambda^{i-1}} = \lambda^{3g-3} \mathcal{H}_g( \mathbf{t}; p, q, r), \] we can assume that \[ p=\frac{1}{K_1},\quad q=\frac{1}{K_2}, \quad r=-\frac{1}{h},\tag{6} \] where $K_1, K_2 \in \mathbb{N}$, $(K_1,K_2)=1$ and $h:=K_1+K_2$. We denote, for $\ell\geq 0$, \begin{align*} b_{\alpha+h\ell} &:= \frac{\alpha}{K_1}+\ell, \quad c_{\alpha+h\ell} := \binom{b_{\alpha+h\ell} h}{b_{\alpha+h\ell} K_1} , \qquad \alpha=0,\dots,K_1-1,\tag{7} \\ b_{\alpha+h\ell} &:= \frac{-\alpha}{K_2}+\ell, \quad c_{\alpha+h\ell} := \binom{b_{\alpha+h\ell} h}{b_{\alpha+h\ell} K_2}, \qquad \alpha=-(K_2-1),\dots,-1,\tag{8} \end{align*} and \[ \mathbb{N}_*=(\mathbb{N}-K_2) \backslash \left(\{0\} \cup (h\mathbb{N}-K_2)\right), \quad \text{where } a\mathbb{N}-K_2:=\{ak-K_2|k\in \mathbb{N}\}. \] Define \[ Z(x,\mathbf{s};\epsilon):=\exp\left(\frac{A(x,\tilde{\mathbf{s}})}{\epsilon^2}\right) Z_{\text{cubic}}\left(\mathbf{t}(x,\mathbf{s}); \frac{1}{K_1}, \frac{1}{K_2}, -\frac{1}{h};\epsilon \right), \tag{9} \] where $\mathbf{s}:=(s_k)_{k\in \mathbb{N}_*}$ is an infinite vector of indeterminates, $\tilde{s}_k=s_k-c_h^{-1}\delta_{k,h}$ ($k\in \mathbb{N}_*$), \[ t_i=t_i(x,\mathbf{s})=\sum_{k\in \mathbb{N}_*} b_k^{i+1} c_k \tilde s_k+\delta_{i,1}+x \delta_{i,0},\quad i\geq 0,\tag{10} \] and $A$ is the quadratic series \[ A:=A(x,\mathbf{s})=\frac{1}{2}\sum_{k_1,k_2\in \mathbb{N}_*} \frac{b_{k_1} b_{k_2}}{b_{k_1} + b_{k_2}} c_{k_1} c_{k_2} s_{k_1} s_{k_2} + x \sum_{k\in \mathbb{N}_*} c_k s_k. \] Note that for $g\geq0$, $\mathcal{H}_g(\mathbf{t}(x,\mathbf{s});\frac{1}{K_1}, \frac{1}{K_2}, -\frac{1}{h})$ is a well-defined formal power series in $\mathbb{C}[[x-1]][[\mathbf{s}]]$. Denote $I=\{-(K_2-1),\dots,K_1-1\}$ and $I_*=I\backslash \{0\}$, and define a family of linear operators $L_m=L_m\left(\epsilon^{-1}x,\epsilon^{-1}\mathbf{s},\epsilon \partial/\partial \mathbf{s}\right)$, $m\geq 0$ by \begin{align*} L_0=&\sum_{k\in \mathbb{N}_*} b_k s_k \frac{\partial}{\partial s_k}+\frac{x^2}{2\epsilon^2}+\frac{1}{24}\left(\frac1h-\frac1{K_1}-\frac1{K_2}\right), \tag{11} \\ L_m=&\sum_{k\in \mathbb{N}_*} b_k s_k \frac{\partial}{\partial s_{k+h m}}+x\frac{\partial}{\partial s_{hm}} \\ & +\frac{\epsilon^2}{2} \sum_{\ell=1}^{m-1}\frac{\partial^2}{\partial s_{h \ell} \partial s_{h(m-\ell)}} + \frac{\epsilon^2}{2} \sum_{\alpha,\beta \in I_*} \sum_{\ell=0}^{m-1} G^{\alpha\beta} \frac{\partial^2}{\partial s_{\alpha+h\ell} \partial s_{\beta+h(m-1-\ell)}}, \tag{12} \end{align*} where $\left(G^{\alpha\beta}\right)_{\alpha,\beta\in I}$ is a symmetric nondegenerate constant matrix defined by \[ G^{\alpha\beta}= \begin{cases} \frac{K_1}{h}\delta^{\alpha+\beta,-K_2}, &\alpha,\beta<0;\\ 1, &\alpha=\beta=0;\\ \frac{K_2}{h}\delta^{\alpha+\beta, K_1}, &\alpha,\beta>0;\\ 0 &\text{elsewhere}. \end{cases}\tag{13} \] It is easy to check that the operators $L_m$ satisfy the following Virasoro commutation relations: \[ \left[ L_m,L_n \right]= \left(m-n\right) L_{m+n}, \quad \forall\, m,n\geq 0. \] \textbf{Theorem 1.} \textit{For the rational numbers $p,q,r$ given by (6), the series $Z(x,\mathbf{s};\epsilon)$ defined by (9) satisfies the following Virasoro constraints: \[ L_m\left(\epsilon^{-1}x,\epsilon^{-1}\tilde{\mathbf{s}},\epsilon \partial/\partial \mathbf{s}\right) Z(x,\mathbf{s};\epsilon)=0, \quad m\geq 0.\tag{14} \]} We proceed to the general case. Denote \[ \sigma_1 = -(p+q+r), \quad \sigma_3 = -2 \left(p^3+q^3+r^3\right).\tag{15} \] From the local Calabi-Yau condition (3) and the fact that the integral in (2) is symmetric in $p,q,r$, we know that \[ \mathcal{H}_g:=\mathcal{H}_g(\mathbf{t};p,q,r)\in \mathbb{C}[\sigma_1,\sigma_3][[\mathbf{t}]], \quad g\ge 0.\tag{16} \] The following theorem is the main result of the present paper. \textbf{Theorem 2.} \textit{ The equation \[ \begin{multlined} \sum_{i\geq0 }\left( \partial^i \Theta+\sum_{j=1}^i \binom{i}{j} P_{j-1,i-j+1}\right) \frac{\partial \Delta H }{\partial z_i} \\ = \frac{\Theta^2}{16}-\left(\frac{1}{16}-\frac{\sigma_1}{24}\right)\Theta+ \epsilon^2\sum_{i\geq0}\partial^{i+2}\left(\frac{\Theta^2}{16}-\left(\frac{1}{16}-\frac{\sigma_1}{24}\right)\Theta\right) \frac{\partial \Delta H}{\partial z_i}\\ + \frac{\epsilon^2}{2}\sum_{i,j\geq0} P_{i+1,j+1} \left(\frac{\partial^2\Delta H}{\partial z_i \partial z_j} +\frac{\partial \Delta H}{\partial z_i}\frac{\partial \Delta H}{\partial z_j}\right), \end{multlined} \tag{17} \] which is called the Dubrovin-Zhang loop equation for the special cubic Hodge integrals, has a unique solution of the form \[ \Delta H:=\sum_{g\geq 1} \epsilon^{2g-2} H_g,\quad H_g:=H_g(z_0,\dots,z_{3g-2};\sigma_1,\sigma_3) \] up to the addition of a constant to each $H_g$, $g\geq 1$. These constants can be uniquely determined by the following conditions: \[ H_1= \frac1{24} \log z_1 + \frac{\sigma_1}{24} z_0, \quad \sum_{j=1}^{3g-2} j z_j \frac{\partial H_g}{\partial z_j} = (2g-2)H_g, \quad g\geq 2. \tag{18} \] Here \[ \partial:=\sum_{k\geq 0} z_{k+1} \frac{\partial}{\partial z_k},\quad \Theta:= \frac1{1-e^{z_0}/\mu}, \] the coefficients $P_{i,j}$ are certain polynomials in $\Theta, \sigma_1,\sigma_3, z_1,z_2,\dots$ whose explicit expressions are given in Section 4, and $\mu$ is an arbitrary parameter. Moreover, let $v(\mathbf{t})$ be defined in (4), then the genus $g$ ($g\geq 1$) special cubic Hodge free energy has the expression \[ \mathcal{H}_g =H_g\left(v(\mathbf{t}), \frac{\partial v(\mathbf{t})}{\partial t_0},\cdots,\frac{\partial^{3g-2} v(\mathbf{t})}{\partial t_0^{3g-2}};\sigma_1,\sigma_3\right).\tag{19} \] } One can recursively solve the loop equation to obtain the free energies $H_g$, $g\geq 1$.
    0 references
    moduli space of curves of genus \(g\)
    0 references
    Hodge integrals
    0 references
    Virasoro constraint
    0 references
    loop equation
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references