The Calabi-Yau condition comes from a physical consideration of preserving some supersymmetry, and by matching against what we observe, one can try and find the correct manifold to compactify on. This is of course a whole research field, string phenomenology.
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Calabi-Yau spaces are important in string theory, where one model posits the geometry of the universe to consist of a ten-dimensional space of the form , where is a four dimensional manifold (space-time) and is a six dimensional compact Calabi-Yau space. They are related to Kummer surfaces. Although the main application of Calabi-Yau spaces is in theoretical physics, they are also interesting from a purely mathematical standpoint. Consequently, they go by slightly different names, depending mostly on context, such as Calabi-Yau manifolds or Calabi-Yau varieties.
Although the definition can be generalized to any dimension, they are usually considered to have three complex dimensions. Since their complex structure may vary, it is convenient to think of them as having six real dimensions and a fixed smooth structure.
A Calabi-Yau space is characterized by the existence of a nonvanishingharmonicspinor . This condition implies that its canonical bundle is trivial.
Consider the local situation using coordinates. In , pick coordinates and so that
gives it the structure of . Then
is a local section of the canonical bundle. A unitary change of coordinates , where is a unitary matrix, transforms by , i.e.,
If the linear transformation has determinant 1, that is, it is a special unitary transformation, then is consistently defined as or as .
On a Calabi-Yau manifold , such a can be defined globally, and the Lie group is very important in the theory. In fact, one of the many equivalent definitions, coming from Riemannian geometry, says that a Calabi-Yau manifold is a -dimensional manifold whose holonomy group reduces to . Another is that it is a calibrated manifold with a calibration form , which is algebraically the same as the real part of
Often, the extra assumptions that is simply connected and/or compact are made.
Whatever definition is used, Calabi-Yau manifolds, as well as their moduli spaces, have interesting properties. One is the symmetries in the numbers forming the Hodge diamond of a compact Calabi-Yau manifold. It is surprising that these symmetries, called mirror symmetry, can be realized by another Calabi-Yau manifold, the so-called mirror of the original Calabi-Yau manifold. The two manifolds together form a mirror pair. Some of the symmetries of the geometry of mirror pairs have been the object of recent research.
SEE ALSO:Calibrated Manifold, Canonical Bundle, Complex Manifold, Dolbeault Cohomology, Harmonic, Hodge Diamond, Kähler Form, Lie Group, Mirror Pair, Moduli Space, Spinor, Variety
This entry contributed by ToddRowland
CITE THIS AS:Rowland, Todd. 'Calabi-Yau Space.' From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource, created by Eric W. Weisstein. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Calabi-YauSpace.html