- Source: Siegel modular form
In mathematics, Siegel modular forms are a major type of automorphic form. These generalize conventional elliptic modular forms which are closely related to elliptic curves. The complex manifolds constructed in the theory of Siegel modular forms are Siegel modular varieties, which are basic models for what a moduli space for abelian varieties (with some extra level structure) should be and are constructed as quotients of the Siegel upper half-space rather than the upper half-plane by discrete groups.
Siegel modular forms are holomorphic functions on the set of symmetric n × n matrices with positive definite imaginary part; the forms must satisfy an automorphy condition. Siegel modular forms can be thought of as multivariable modular forms, i.e. as special functions of several complex variables.
Siegel modular forms were first investigated by Carl Ludwig Siegel (1939) for the purpose of studying quadratic forms analytically. These primarily arise in various branches of number theory, such as arithmetic geometry and elliptic cohomology. Siegel modular forms have also been used in some areas of physics, such as conformal field theory and black hole thermodynamics in string theory.
Definition
= Preliminaries
=Let
g
,
N
∈
N
{\displaystyle g,N\in \mathbb {N} }
and define
H
g
=
{
τ
∈
M
g
×
g
(
C
)
|
τ
T
=
τ
,
Im
(
τ
)
positive definite
}
,
{\displaystyle {\mathcal {H}}_{g}=\left\{\tau \in M_{g\times g}(\mathbb {C} )\ {\big |}\ \tau ^{\mathrm {T} }=\tau ,{\textrm {Im}}(\tau ){\text{ positive definite}}\right\},}
the Siegel upper half-space. Define the symplectic group of level
N
{\displaystyle N}
, denoted by
Γ
g
(
N
)
,
{\displaystyle \Gamma _{g}(N),}
as
Γ
g
(
N
)
=
{
γ
∈
G
L
2
g
(
Z
)
|
γ
T
(
0
I
g
−
I
g
0
)
γ
=
(
0
I
g
−
I
g
0
)
,
γ
≡
I
2
g
mod
N
}
,
{\displaystyle \Gamma _{g}(N)=\left\{\gamma \in GL_{2g}(\mathbb {Z} )\ {\big |}\ \gamma ^{\mathrm {T} }{\begin{pmatrix}0&I_{g}\\-I_{g}&0\end{pmatrix}}\gamma ={\begin{pmatrix}0&I_{g}\\-I_{g}&0\end{pmatrix}},\ \gamma \equiv I_{2g}\mod N\right\},}
where
I
g
{\displaystyle I_{g}}
is the
g
×
g
{\displaystyle g\times g}
identity matrix. Finally, let
ρ
:
GL
g
(
C
)
→
GL
(
V
)
{\displaystyle \rho :{\textrm {GL}}_{g}(\mathbb {C} )\rightarrow {\textrm {GL}}(V)}
be a rational representation, where
V
{\displaystyle V}
is a finite-dimensional complex vector space.
= Siegel modular form
=Given
γ
=
(
A
B
C
D
)
{\displaystyle \gamma ={\begin{pmatrix}A&B\\C&D\end{pmatrix}}}
and
γ
∈
Γ
g
(
N
)
,
{\displaystyle \gamma \in \Gamma _{g}(N),}
define the notation
(
f
|
γ
)
(
τ
)
=
(
ρ
(
C
τ
+
D
)
)
−
1
f
(
γ
τ
)
.
{\displaystyle (f{\big |}\gamma )(\tau )=(\rho (C\tau +D))^{-1}f(\gamma \tau ).}
Then a holomorphic function
f
:
H
g
→
V
{\displaystyle f:{\mathcal {H}}_{g}\rightarrow V}
is a Siegel modular form of degree
g
{\displaystyle g}
(sometimes called the genus), weight
ρ
{\displaystyle \rho }
, and level
N
{\displaystyle N}
if
(
f
|
γ
)
=
f
{\displaystyle (f{\big |}\gamma )=f}
for all
γ
∈
Γ
g
(
N
)
{\displaystyle \gamma \in \Gamma _{g}(N)}
.
In the case that
g
=
1
{\displaystyle g=1}
, we further require that
f
{\displaystyle f}
be holomorphic 'at infinity'. This assumption is not necessary for
g
>
1
{\displaystyle g>1}
due to the Koecher principle, explained below. Denote the space of weight
ρ
{\displaystyle \rho }
, degree
g
{\displaystyle g}
, and level
N
{\displaystyle N}
Siegel modular forms by
M
ρ
(
Γ
g
(
N
)
)
.
{\displaystyle M_{\rho }(\Gamma _{g}(N)).}
Examples
Some methods for constructing Siegel modular forms include:
Eisenstein series
Theta functions of lattices and Siegel theta series
Saito–Kurokawa lift for degree 2
Ikeda lift
Miyawaki lift
Products of Siegel modular forms.
= Level 1, small degree
=For degree 1, the level 1 Siegel modular forms are the same as level 1 modular forms. The ring of such forms is a polynomial ring C[E4,E6] in the (degree 1) Eisenstein series E4 and E6.
For degree 2, (Igusa 1962, 1967) showed that the ring of level 1 Siegel modular forms is generated by the (degree 2) Eisenstein series E4 and E6 and 3 more forms of weights 10, 12, and 35. The ideal of relations between them is generated by the square of the weight 35 form minus a certain polynomial in the others.
For degree 3, Tsuyumine (1986) described the ring of level 1 Siegel modular forms, giving a set of 34 generators.
For degree 4, the level 1 Siegel modular forms of small weights have been found. There are no cusp forms of weights 2, 4, or 6. The space of cusp forms of weight 8 is 1-dimensional, spanned by the Schottky form. The space of cusp forms of weight 10 has dimension 1, the space of cusp forms of weight 12 has dimension 2, the space of cusp forms of weight 14 has dimension 3, and the space of cusp forms of weight 16 has dimension 7 (Poor & Yuen 2007).
For degree 5, the space of cusp forms has dimension 0 for weight 10, dimension 2 for weight 12. The space of forms of weight 12 has dimension 5.
For degree 6, there are no cusp forms of weights 0, 2, 4, 6, 8. The space of Siegel modular forms of weight 2 has dimension 0, and those of weights 4 or 6 both have dimension 1.
= Level 1, small weight
=For small weights and level 1, Duke & Imamoḡlu (1998) give the following results (for any positive degree):
Weight 0: The space of forms is 1-dimensional, spanned by 1.
Weight 1: The only Siegel modular form is 0.
Weight 2: The only Siegel modular form is 0.
Weight 3: The only Siegel modular form is 0.
Weight 4: For any degree, the space of forms of weight 4 is 1-dimensional, spanned by the theta function of the E8 lattice (of appropriate degree). The only cusp form is 0.
Weight 5: The only Siegel modular form is 0.
Weight 6: The space of forms of weight 6 has dimension 1 if the degree is at most 8, and dimension 0 if the degree is at least 9. The only cusp form is 0.
Weight 7: The space of cusp forms vanishes if the degree is 4 or 7.
Weight 8:In genus 4, the space of cusp forms is 1-dimensional, spanned by the Schottky form and the space of forms is 2-dimensional. There are no cusp forms if the genus is 8.
There are no cusp forms if the genus is greater than twice the weight.
= Table of dimensions of spaces of level 1 Siegel modular forms
=The following table combines the results above with information from Poor & Yuen (2006) and Chenevier & Lannes (2014) and Taïbi (2014).
Koecher principle
The theorem known as the Koecher principle states that if
f
{\displaystyle f}
is a Siegel modular form of weight
ρ
{\displaystyle \rho }
, level 1, and degree
g
>
1
{\displaystyle g>1}
, then
f
{\displaystyle f}
is bounded on subsets of
H
g
{\displaystyle {\mathcal {H}}_{g}}
of the form
{
τ
∈
H
g
|
Im
(
τ
)
>
ϵ
I
g
}
,
{\displaystyle \left\{\tau \in {\mathcal {H}}_{g}\ |{\textrm {Im}}(\tau )>\epsilon I_{g}\right\},}
where
ϵ
>
0
{\displaystyle \epsilon >0}
. Corollary to this theorem is the fact that Siegel modular forms of degree
g
>
1
{\displaystyle g>1}
have Fourier expansions and are thus holomorphic at infinity.
Applications to physics
In the D1D5P system of supersymmetric black holes in string theory, the function that naturally captures the microstates of black hole entropy is a Siegel modular form. In general, Siegel modular forms have been described as having the potential to describe black holes or other gravitational systems.
Siegel modular forms also have uses as generating functions for families of CFT2 with increasing central charge in conformal field theory, particularly the hypothetical AdS/CFT correspondence.
References
Chenevier, Gaëtan; Lannes, Jean (2014), Formes automorphes et voisins de Kneser des réseaux de Niemeier, arXiv:1409.7616, Bibcode:2014arXiv1409.7616C
Duke, W.; Imamoḡlu, Ö. (1998), "Siegel modular forms of small weight", Math. Ann., 310 (1): 73–82, doi:10.1007/s002080050137, MR 1600030, S2CID 122219495
Freitag, E. (1983), Siegelsche Modulfunktionen, Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften, vol. 254. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, doi:10.1007/978-3-642-68649-8, ISBN 978-3-540-11661-5, MR 0871067{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
van der Geer, Gerard (2008), "Siegel Modular Forms and Their Applications", The 1-2-3 of modular forms, 181–245, Universitext, Berlin: Springer, pp. 181–245, arXiv:math/0605346, doi:10.1007/978-3-540-74119-0_3, ISBN 978-3-540-74117-6, MR 2409679
Igusa, Jun-ichi (1962), "On Siegel modular forms of genus two", Amer. J. Math., 84 (1): 175–200, doi:10.2307/2372812, JSTOR 2372812, MR 0141643
Klingen, Helmut (2003), Introductory Lectures on Siegel Modular Forms, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-35052-5
Siegel, Carl Ludwig (1939), "Einführung in die Theorie der Modulfunktionen n-ten Grades", Math. Ann., 116: 617–657, doi:10.1007/bf01597381, MR 0001251, S2CID 124337559
Taïbi, Olivier (2014), Dimensions of spaces of level one automorphic forms for split classical groups using the trace formula, arXiv:1406.4247, Bibcode:2014arXiv1406.4247T
Tsuyumine, Shigeaki (1986), "On Siegel modular forms of degree three", Amer. J. Math., 108 (4): 755–862, doi:10.2307/2374517, JSTOR 2374517, MR 0853217
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Siegel modular form
- Modular form
- Siegel upper half-space
- Carl Ludwig Siegel
- Teichmüller modular form
- Siegel
- Hilbert modular form
- Siegel modular variety
- Siegel theta series
- Klingen Eisenstein series