Some remarks and problems on complex homogeneous domains (Q867816)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Some remarks and problems on complex homogeneous domains
scientific article

    Statements

    Some remarks and problems on complex homogeneous domains (English)
    0 references
    16 February 2007
    0 references
    The author discusses realizations of homogeneous domains in \({\mathbb C}^n\) which satisfy some natural geometric conditions. He formulates 5 problems and illustrates them by several examples. Problem 1. (1) Give an affine classification of convex homogeneous domains in \({\mathbb C}^n\) which do not contain complex lines. Is it true that any such domain is affine equivalent to a Siegel domain of the third kind? (2) Is it true that any convex bounded homogeneous domain in \({\mathbb C}^n\) is symmetric? Problems~2 and~3 concern the universality of the Cauchy-Szegő kernels. In \({\mathbb C}\), the Cauchy kernel \({{1}\over{2\pi i}}{{1}\over{z-u}}\) is independent of the domain. Let \(D\) be a symmetric tube domain. Is it true that the Cauchy-Szegő kernel for \(D\) of the type \(K(z-u)\) is universal in the class of convex domains which are biholomorphically equivalent to \(D\)? Conversely, if \(D'\) has the same kernel, is it equivalent to \(D\) (under some additional restrictions)? A cone \(V\subseteq {\mathbb C}^n\) is called \(k\)-linear concave if it is the union of \(k\)-planes which are contained in \(V\). A strictly \(k\)-concave cone is a \(k\)-linear concave cone such that any maximal convex subcone is a \(k\)-wedge (i.e., it is a direct product of a linear \(k\)-subspace and an \((n-k)\)-dimensional convex cone which does not contain lines). Problem 4. (1) Is it true that strictly \(k\)-linear concave self-dual homogeneous cones are exactly cones corresponding to pseudo-Hermitian symmetric spaces of tube type? In other words, do they correspond to Jordan algebras? (2) Is it true that corresponding tubes in the non-Hermitian case are rigid such that any biholomorphically equivalent to such a tube \(k\)-linear concave domain is affine equivalent? The definition of the self-duality is natural but too complicated to be formulated here. Problem 5. (1) Is it possible to describe the structure of homogeneous strictly \(k\)-concave cones in \({\mathbb R}^n\)? (2) Is it possible to describe the structure of homogeneous strictly \(k\)-concave domains in \({\mathbb C}^n\)?
    0 references
    0 references
    bounded homogeneous domain
    0 references
    symmetric domain
    0 references
    Siegel domain
    0 references
    homogeneous cone
    0 references
    tube domain
    0 references
    Cauchy kernel
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references