The asymptotic geometry of $G_2$-monopoles

Ákos Nagy (UCSB)

Joint work with Daniel Fadel & Gonçalo Oliveira.

arXiv: 2009.06788

Low Dimensional Topology, Gauge Theory, and Symplectic Geometry - Simons Center/Stony Brook University

Tuesday, March 22, 2022.

this talk can be viewed at: akosnagy.com/talks/g2talk-stony_brook/g2monopoles.html

$G_2$-manifolds



  • $(X, \varphi)$

  • $X$: smooth, oriented 7-manifold.

  • $\varphi \in \Omega_X^3$ is nondegenerate: defines a metric, $g_\varphi$ (in a nonlinear way): \begin{equation} \forall v \in T_x X : \quad (\iota_v \varphi) \wedge (\iota_v \varphi) \wedge \varphi = 6 |v|_{g_\varphi}^2 \mathrm{vol}_{g_\varphi}. \end{equation}

  • Linear PDE: $\mathrm{d} \varphi = 0$.

  • Nonlinear PDE: $\mathrm{d} \ast_{g_\varphi} \varphi = 0$.

  • $\mathrm{Hol}^{g_\varphi} \leqslant G_2$.

  • Model for $T_x X$: $\mathbb{R}^7 \simeq \mathrm{Im} (\mathbb{O})$.

The Donaldson–Segal program



  • Let $\psi := \ast_\varphi \varphi$. $N^4 \subset X$ is a coassociative submanifold, if $\psi|_N = \mathrm{vol}_N$ ($N$ is $\psi$-calibrated).

  • Donaldson–Segal: Potential invariants for $G_2$-manifolds by counting coassociatives. (Hard!)

  • Conjecturally related (equivalent?) and potentially easier:
    "counting" $G_2$-monopoles, $(\nabla, \Phi)$.

  • Intuitively, the correspondence between coassociatives and monopoles:
    $N = \Phi^{- 1} (0)$.

  • In simple cases these objects are computable and agree (Oliveira JG&P '14).

  • First step to prove more generally: analytic properties; e.g. asymptotics.

Yang–Mills–Higgs theory



  • $P \rightarrow X$: principal $SU (2)$-bundle.

  • Let $\nabla$ be a connection and $\Phi$ a section of $ad (P)$.

  • The Yang–Mills–Higgs energy: \begin{equation} E (\nabla, \Phi) = \int\limits_X \left( |F_\nabla|^2 + |\nabla \Phi|^2 \right) \mathrm{vol}_{g_\varphi}. \end{equation}

  • The Yang–Mills–Higgs equations: \begin{equation} \mathrm{d}_\nabla^* F_\nabla = [\nabla \Phi, \Phi], \quad \& \quad \nabla^* \nabla \Phi = 0. \end{equation}

  • Harmonicity $\Rightarrow$ noncompactness (or boundary) is needed for interesting solutions.

Yang–Mills–Higgs theory on $G_2$-manifolds



  • $\exists$ special Yang–Mills–Higgs fields, called $G_2$-monopoles: \begin{equation} \ast_{g_\varphi} (F_\nabla \wedge \psi) = \nabla \Phi. \end{equation}

  • $F_\nabla = F_\nabla^7 + F_\nabla^{14}$ ("vector" + "$\mathfrak{g}_2$").

  • $\ast (F_\nabla \wedge \psi) \sim F_\nabla^7$.

  • intermediate energy: \begin{align} E^\psi (\nabla, \Phi) &= \int\limits_X (|F_\nabla \wedge \psi|^2 + |\nabla \Phi|^2) \mathrm{vol}_{g_\varphi} \\ &= \underbrace{\int\limits_X (|\ast_{g_\varphi} (F_\nabla \wedge \psi) - \nabla \Phi|^2) \mathrm{vol}_{g_\varphi} + \mbox{boundary intergal (topological)}}_{\mbox{Bogomolny trick}} \end{align}

Asymptotically conical $G_2$-manifolds



  • $(X, \varphi)$ is asymptotically conical (AC).

  • AC: there is a compact manifold-with-boundary $K^7 \subset X$, such that \begin{equation} (X - K, g_\varphi|_{X - K}) \sim ([R, \infty) \times \Sigma, \mathrm{d}r^2 + r^2 g_\Sigma). \end{equation}

  • In particular: maximal volume growth (for a Ricci-flat manifold).

  • Cheeger–Gromoll: $\Sigma$ has one component.

  • $\Sigma$ is a nearly Kähler 6-manifold ($\nabla^{\mathrm{LC}} J$ is skew).

Our main result



Theorem (Asymptotics of $G_2$-monopoles on AC manifolds; Fadel–N–Oliveira '20)

Let $(\nabla, \Phi)$ be a $G_2$-monopole such that
  1. $E^\psi (\nabla, \Phi) < \infty$,
  2. $r^2 F_\nabla^{14} \in L^\infty (X)$.

Then
  1. $|\Phi| \rightarrow m > 0$, (the mass of the monopole)
  2. $|\nabla \Phi| = O (r^{- 6})$, (sharp)
  3. $|[F_\nabla, \Phi]|$ decays exponentially,
  4. $(\nabla, \Phi)|_{\Sigma_R} \rightarrow (\nabla^\infty, \Phi^\infty)$, (in some gauge)
  5. $\nabla^\infty \Phi^\infty = 0$,
  6. $\nabla^\infty$ is pseudo-Hermitian–Yang–Mills: \begin{equation} \Lambda F_{\nabla^\infty} = 0, \quad \& \quad F_\nabla^{0,2} = 0. \end{equation}
Corollary: Energy expressions and Fredholm theory.
Ideas of the proof in the second part.

Future work



  • Conjecture: $\Phi^{- 1} (0)$ is coassociative, at least in the $m \rightarrow \infty$ case.

  • Works in the 3D toy-model: BPS monopoles (Fadel–Oliveira, PLMS '19)

  • Construct inverse: glue-in methods. Jointly with Esfahani, Fadel, and Oliveira

  • Prove finiteness: compactness & discreteness; at least in some sense.

Ideas of the proof



  • Finite mass: $\Delta |\Phi|^2 = - 2 |\nabla \Phi|^2 \ \oplus $ Taubes.

  • Decay: $\epsilon$-regularity and Moser iteration: if $x \in X$ is "far", that is $|x| = \mathrm{dist} (x, x_0) \gg 1$, then \begin{equation} |\nabla \Phi (x)|^2 \leqslant \frac{C}{|x|^{7/2}} \int\limits_{B_{|x|/2} (x)} |\nabla \Phi|^2 \mathrm{vol}_{g_\varphi}. \end{equation}

  • Key "trick": bound $\int_X r^{2 \alpha} |\nabla \Phi|^2 \mathrm{vol}_{g_\varphi}$, using a (sharp) Hardy-type inequality and Agmon's trick.
    (Stolen from Mark Stern, who in turn learned it from a paper of Agmon.)

Agmon's trick



  • We prove the following: \begin{equation} \int\limits_X f^2 \mathrm{vol}_{g_\varphi} \leqslant \frac{4}{25} \int\limits_X |\mathrm{d} (r f)|^2 \mathrm{vol}_{g_\varphi}, \quad \& \quad \int\limits_X |\nabla (\chi \Psi)|^2 \mathrm{vol}_{g_\varphi} = \int\limits_X |\mathrm{d} \chi|^2 |\Psi|^2 \mathrm{vol}_{g_\varphi} + \int\limits_X \chi^2 \langle \Psi | \nabla^* \nabla \Psi \rangle \mathrm{vol}_{g_\varphi}. \end{equation}

  • ...and use them with $f \approx r^\alpha |\nabla \Phi|$, $\chi = r^{\alpha + 1}$, and $\Psi = \nabla \Phi$.

  • This gives (after a little more magic): $\int\limits_X r^{2 \alpha} |\nabla \Phi|^2 \mathrm{vol}_{g_\varphi} \leqslant \frac{C}{5 - 2 \alpha} \| \nabla \Phi \|_{L^2}^2$.

  • Combining with Moser iteration yields: $|\nabla \Phi| = O (r^{- 6 + \epsilon})$.

  • Then $\epsilon = 0$ can be achieved via an "infinite maximum principle" argument.

  • The rest is standard...

Thank you for your attention!