G
\pi
G
\pi
\pi
G
ak{R}(\pi,G)=\operatorname{Hom}(\pi,G)/\sim.
More precisely,
G
\operatorname{Hom}(\pi,G)
\sim
\operatorname{Hom}(\pi,G)/G
Formally, and when the reductive group is defined over the complex numbers
\Complex
G
\Complex[\operatorname{Hom}(\pi,G)]G.
Here more generally one can consider algebraically closed fields of prime characteristic. In this generality, character varieties are only algebraic sets and are not actual varieties. To avoid technical issues, one often considers the associated reduced space by dividing by the radical of 0 (eliminating nilpotents). However, this does not necessarily yield an irreducible space either. Moreover, if we replace the complex group by a real group we may not even get an algebraic set. In particular, a maximal compact subgroup generally gives a semi-algebraic set. On the other hand, whenever
\pi
An interesting class of examples arise from Riemann surfaces: if
X
G
X
\pi=\pi1(X)
l{M}B(X,G)=ak{R}(\pi1(X),G)
For example, if
G=SL(2,\Complex)
X
\pi=\pi1(X)
\Complex3
\Complex[x,y,z]
G=SU(2)
Another example, also studied by Vogt and Fricke–Klein is the case with
G=SL(2,\Complex)
X
\pi=\pi1(X)
\Complex7
a2+b2+c2+d2+x2+y2+z2-(ab+cd)x-(ad+bc)y-(ac+bd)z+abcd+xyz-4=0.
This character variety appears in the theory of the sixth Painleve equation,[3] and has a natural Poisson structure such that
a,b,c,d
xyz+x2+y2+z2+c1x+c2y+c3z=c4
This construction of the character variety is not necessarily the same as that of Marc Culler and Peter Shalen (generated by evaluations of traces), although when
G=SL(n,\Complex)
G=SL(n,\Complex)
ak{R}=\operatorname{Hom}(\pi,H)
G ≠ H
For instance, when
\pi
G=SO(2)
G
S1 x S1.
But the trace algebra is a strictly small subalgebra (there are fewer invariants). This provides an involutive action on the torus that needs to be accounted for to yield the Culler–Shalen character variety. The involution on this torus yields a 2-sphere. The point is that up to
SO(2)
There is an interplay between these moduli spaces and the moduli spaces of principal bundles, vector bundles, Higgs bundles, and geometric structures on topological spaces, given generally by the observation that, at least locally, equivalent objects in these categories are parameterized by conjugacy classes of holonomy homomorphisms of flat connections. In other words, with respect to a base space
M
\pi1(M)
G
The coordinate ring of the character variety has been related to skein modules in knot theory.[4] [5] The skein module is roughly a deformation (or quantization) of the character variety. It is closely related to topological quantum field theory in dimension 2+1.
{\rmSL}2(C)
{\rmSL}2(C)