Morse theory for Lagrangian intersections (Q1121562)

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Morse theory for Lagrangian intersections
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    Morse theory for Lagrangian intersections (English)
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    1988
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    This important paper develops ``Floer cohomology'' in a symplectic context, with the aim of proving the Arnold conjecture about the number of fixed points of an exact symplectic diffeomorphism. The author's abstract: ``Let P be a compact symplectic manifold and let \(L\subset P\) be a Lagrangian submanifold with \(\pi_ 2(P,L)=0\). For any exact diffeomorphism \(\phi\) of P with the property that \(\phi\) (L) intersects L transversally, we prove a Morse inequality relating the set \(\phi\) (L)\(\cap L\) to the cohomology of L. As a consequence, we prove a special case of the Arnold conjecture: If \(\pi_ 2(P)=0\) and \(\phi\) is an exact diffeomorphism all of whose fixed points are non-degenerate, then the number of fixed points is greater than or equal to the sum over the \({\mathbb{Z}}_ 2\)-Betti numbers of P.'' The Morse inequality comes from the ``Floer cohomology'' of a complex \(I^*(L,\phi,J)\) where \(I^ p(L,\phi,J)\) is the \({\mathbb{Z}}_ 2\)-module generated by the points in \(\phi\) (L)\(\cap L\) which have ``index p''. In order to define the boundary operator of \(I^*\) he observes that these intersection points are the critical points of a certain action functional \({\mathfrak a}\) on a space \(\Omega\) of paths z(t) in P which join a point z(0)\(\in L\) to a point z(1)\(\in \phi (L)\). Floer chooses a metric on \(\Omega\) using an auxiliary almost complex structure J on P. (If P were Kähler, this could just be the Kähler metric.) This has the property that the trajectories \(z_{\tau}\) of the gradient flow of \({\mathfrak a}\) on \(\Omega\) with respect to this metric fit together to form a J-holomorphic map u: (\(\tau\),t)\(\mapsto z_{\tau}(t)\) of the strip \({\mathbb{R}}\times [0,1]\) into P. Even though the gradient flow of \({\mathfrak a}\) is not globally defined on \(\Omega\), the trajectories which go from one critical point to another are well-behaved for generic J because they are solutions of an elliptic p.d.e.. Therefore, one can define the boundary in \(I^*\) by the recipe: \(\partial x=n(x,y)y\), where n(x,y) is the number (mod 2) of isolated trajectories from x to y if Index(y)- \(Index(x)=1\) and is zero otherwise. Floer shows that the cohomology of \((I^*(L,\phi,J),\partial)\) is invariant under deformations of \(\phi\), and equals \(H^*(P,{\mathbb{Z}}_ 2)\) when \(\phi\) is small. Thus the number of critical points of \({\mathfrak a}\) is at least dim \(H^*(P,{\mathbb{Z}}_ 2)\). The properties of \({\mathfrak a}\) are very close to those of the Chern- Simons functional on connections which the author uses in Commun. Math. Phys. 118, No.2, 215-240 (1988).
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    Lagrangian intersection
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    index of intersection points
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    elliptic operators
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    Floer cohomology
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    number of fixed points of an exact symplectic diffeomorphism
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    compact symplectic manifold
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    Lagrangian submanifold
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    Morse inequality
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    almost complex structure
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    gradient flow
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