Combinatorial mirror symmetry explained
A purely combinatorial approach to mirror symmetry was suggested by Victor Batyrev using the polar duality for
-dimensional convex polyhedra.
[1] The most famous examples of the polar duality provide
Platonic solids: e.g., the
cube is dual to
octahedron, the
dodecahedron is dual to
icosahedron. There is a natural bijection between the
-dimensional faces of a
-dimensional convex polyhedron
and
-dimensional faces of the
dual polyhedron
and one has
. In Batyrev's combinatorial approach to mirror symmetry the polar duality is applied to special
-dimensional convex lattice polytopes which are called reflexive polytopes.
[2] It was observed by Victor Batyrev and Duco van Straten[3] that the method of Philip Candelas et al.[4] for computing the number of rational curves on Calabi–Yau quintic 3-folds can be applied to arbitrary Calabi–Yau complete intersections using the generalized
-hypergeometric functions introduced by
Israel Gelfand, Michail Kapranov and
Andrei Zelevinsky[5] (see also the talk of
Alexander Varchenko[6]), where
is the set of lattice points in a reflexive polytope
.
The combinatorial mirror duality for Calabi–Yau hypersurfaces in toric varieties has been generalized by Lev Borisov [7] in the case of Calabi–Yau complete intersections in Gorenstein toric Fano varieties. Using the notions of dual cone and polar cone one can consider the polar duality for reflexive polytopes as a special case of the duality for convex Gorenstein cones [8] and of the duality for Gorenstein polytopes.[9] [10]
For any fixed natural number
there exists only a finite number
of
-dimensional reflexive polytopes up to a
-isomorphism. The number
is known only for
:
,
,
,
The combinatorial classification of
-dimensional reflexive simplices up to a
-isomorphism is closely related to the enumeration of all solutions
(k0,k1,\ldots,kd)\in\Nd+1
of the diophantine equation
. The classification of 4-dimensional reflexive polytopes up to a
-isomorphism is important for constructing many topologically different 3-dimensional
Calabi–Yau manifolds using hypersurfaces in 4-dimensional
toric varieties which are Gorenstein
Fano varieties. The complete list of 3-dimensional and 4-dimensional reflexive polytopes have been obtained by physicists Maximilian Kreuzer and Harald Skarke using a special software in
Polymake.
[11] [12] [13] [14] A mathematical explanation of the combinatorial mirror symmetry has been obtained by Lev Borisov via vertex operator algebras which are algebraic counterparts of conformal field theories.[15]
See also
Notes and References
- V. . Batyrev . 1994 . Dual polyhedra and mirror symmetry for Calabi–Yau hypersurfaces in toric varieties . Journal of Algebraic Geometry . 493–535 .
- Web site: B. . Nill . Reflexive polytopes .
- V. . Batyrev . D. . van Straten . 1995 . Generalized hypergeometric functions and rational curves on Calabi–Yau complete intersections in toric varieties . Comm. Math. Phys. . 168 . 3 . 493–533 . 10.1007/BF02101841 . alg-geom/9307010 . 1995CMaPh.168..493B . 16401756 .
- P. . Candelas . X. . de la Ossa . P. . Green . L. . Parkes . 1991 . A pair of Calabi–Yau manifolds as an exactly soluble superconformal field theory . Nuclear Physics B . 359 . 1 . 21–74 . 10.1016/0550-3213(91)90292-6 .
- I. Gelfand, M. Kapranov, S. Zelevinski (1989), "Hypergeometric functions and toric varieties", Funct. Anal. Appl. 23, no. 2, 94–10.
- A. Varchenko (1990), "Multidimensional hypergeometric functions in conformal field theory, algebraic K-theory, algebraic geometry", Proc. ICM-90, 281–300.
- L. Borisov (1994), "Towards the Mirror Symmetry for Calabi–Yau Complete intersections in Gorenstein Toric Fano Varieties",
- V. . Batyrev . L. . Borisov . 1997 . Dual cones and mirror symmetry for generalized Calabi–Yau manifolds . Mirror Symmetry, II . 71–86 .
- V. . Batyrev . B. . Nill . 2008 . Combinatorial aspects of mirror symmetry . Contemporary Mathematics . 452 . 35–66 . 10.1090/conm/452/08770 . 9780821841730 . 6817890 .
- Web site: M. . Kreuzer . 2008 . Combinatorics and Mirror Symmetry: Results and Perspectives .
- M. Kreuzer, H. Skarke (1997), "On the classification of reflexive polyhedra", Comm. Math. Phys., 185, 495–508
- M. Kreuzer, H. Skarke (1998) "Classification of reflexive polyhedra in three dimensions", Advances Theor. Math. Phys., 2, 847–864
- M. Kreuzer, H. Skarke (2002), "Complete classification of reflexive polyhedra in four dimensions", Advances Theor. Math. Phys., 4, 1209–1230
- M. Kreuzer, H. Skarke, Calabi–Yau data, http://hep.itp.tuwien.ac.at/~kreuzer/CY/
- L. Borisov (2001), "Vertex algebras and mirror symmetry", Comm. Math. Phys., 215, no. 3, 517–557.