Lagrangian curves on spectral curves of monopoles (Q430020): Difference between revisions

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The space \(\mathbb L(\mathbb E^3)\) of oriented affine lines in the Euclidean space \(\mathbb E^3\) is naturally identifiable with \( TS^2 = T \mathbb C P^1 \simeq T^* \mathbb C P^1\) and it is therefore endowed with the complex structure of \(T \mathbb C P^1\) and the symplectic structure of \(T^* \mathbb C P^1\). It is known that a complex curve in \( \mathbb L(\mathbb E^3)\) is Lagrangian at all points if and only if it consists of the oriented normals of a plane or a sphere. This paper is devoted to the smooth compact complex curves in \(\mathbb L(\mathbb E^3)\) which are not of this kind. The authors prove that any such complex curve \(\Sigma\) does not have isolated Lagrangian points, that any curve \(\mathcal C \subset \Sigma\) of Lagrangian points corresponds to a ruled surface \( \mathcal S_{\Sigma, \mathcal C} \subset \mathbb E^3\) of zero Gaussian curvature and that the points of the edges of regression of such ruled surfaces can be characterized by having a smaller number of lines of \(\Sigma\) passing through them. The authors then consider the spectral curves in \(T \mathbb C P^1 (\simeq \mathbb L(\mathbb E^3))\), which correspond to \(\text{SU}_2\)-monopoles on \(\mathbb E^3\) of charge \(2\) and of tetrahedrically symmetric charge \(3\), and determine the curves of Lagrangian points in such spectral curves and their associated ruled surfaces.
Property / review text: The space \(\mathbb L(\mathbb E^3)\) of oriented affine lines in the Euclidean space \(\mathbb E^3\) is naturally identifiable with \( TS^2 = T \mathbb C P^1 \simeq T^* \mathbb C P^1\) and it is therefore endowed with the complex structure of \(T \mathbb C P^1\) and the symplectic structure of \(T^* \mathbb C P^1\). It is known that a complex curve in \( \mathbb L(\mathbb E^3)\) is Lagrangian at all points if and only if it consists of the oriented normals of a plane or a sphere. This paper is devoted to the smooth compact complex curves in \(\mathbb L(\mathbb E^3)\) which are not of this kind. The authors prove that any such complex curve \(\Sigma\) does not have isolated Lagrangian points, that any curve \(\mathcal C \subset \Sigma\) of Lagrangian points corresponds to a ruled surface \( \mathcal S_{\Sigma, \mathcal C} \subset \mathbb E^3\) of zero Gaussian curvature and that the points of the edges of regression of such ruled surfaces can be characterized by having a smaller number of lines of \(\Sigma\) passing through them. The authors then consider the spectral curves in \(T \mathbb C P^1 (\simeq \mathbb L(\mathbb E^3))\), which correspond to \(\text{SU}_2\)-monopoles on \(\mathbb E^3\) of charge \(2\) and of tetrahedrically symmetric charge \(3\), and determine the curves of Lagrangian points in such spectral curves and their associated ruled surfaces. / rank
 
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Property / reviewed by
 
Property / reviewed by: Andrea F. Spiro / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 53A25 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 81T13 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 53C55 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH DE Number
 
Property / zbMATH DE Number: 6048555 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
ruled surfaces
Property / zbMATH Keywords: ruled surfaces / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
monopoles
Property / zbMATH Keywords: monopoles / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
Lagrangian curves
Property / zbMATH Keywords: Lagrangian curves / rank
 
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Revision as of 23:39, 29 June 2023

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Lagrangian curves on spectral curves of monopoles
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    Lagrangian curves on spectral curves of monopoles (English)
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    20 June 2012
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    The space \(\mathbb L(\mathbb E^3)\) of oriented affine lines in the Euclidean space \(\mathbb E^3\) is naturally identifiable with \( TS^2 = T \mathbb C P^1 \simeq T^* \mathbb C P^1\) and it is therefore endowed with the complex structure of \(T \mathbb C P^1\) and the symplectic structure of \(T^* \mathbb C P^1\). It is known that a complex curve in \( \mathbb L(\mathbb E^3)\) is Lagrangian at all points if and only if it consists of the oriented normals of a plane or a sphere. This paper is devoted to the smooth compact complex curves in \(\mathbb L(\mathbb E^3)\) which are not of this kind. The authors prove that any such complex curve \(\Sigma\) does not have isolated Lagrangian points, that any curve \(\mathcal C \subset \Sigma\) of Lagrangian points corresponds to a ruled surface \( \mathcal S_{\Sigma, \mathcal C} \subset \mathbb E^3\) of zero Gaussian curvature and that the points of the edges of regression of such ruled surfaces can be characterized by having a smaller number of lines of \(\Sigma\) passing through them. The authors then consider the spectral curves in \(T \mathbb C P^1 (\simeq \mathbb L(\mathbb E^3))\), which correspond to \(\text{SU}_2\)-monopoles on \(\mathbb E^3\) of charge \(2\) and of tetrahedrically symmetric charge \(3\), and determine the curves of Lagrangian points in such spectral curves and their associated ruled surfaces.
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    ruled surfaces
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    monopoles
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    Lagrangian curves
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