In mathematics, specifically in symplectic geometry, the symplectic cut is a geometric modification on symplectic manifolds. Its effect is to decompose a given manifold into two pieces. There is an inverse operation, the symplectic sum, that glues two manifolds together into one. The symplectic cut can also be viewed as a generalization of symplectic blow up. The cut was introduced in 1995 by Eugene Lerman, who used it to study the symplectic quotient and other operations on manifolds.
Let
(X,\omega)
\mu:X\toR
a Hamiltonian on
X
\epsilon
\mu
\mu-1(\epsilon)
\mu-1(\epsilon)
Under these assumptions,
\mu-1([\epsilon,infty))
\mu-1(\epsilon)
\overline{X}\mu
by collapsing each circle fiber to a point. In other words,
\overline{X}\mu
X
\mu-1((-infty,\epsilon))
\overline{X}\mu
V
Similarly, one may form from
\mu-1((-infty,\epsilon])
\overline{X}\mu
V
\overline{X}\mu
\overline{X}\mu
Sometimes it is useful to view the two halves of the symplectic cut as being joined along their shared submanifold
V
\overline{X}\mu\cupV\overline{X}\mu.
For example, this singular space is the central fiber in the symplectic sum regarded as a deformation.
The preceding description is rather crude; more care is required to keep track of the symplectic structure on the symplectic cut. For this, let
(X,\omega)
U(1)
X
\mu:X\toR.
This moment map can be viewed as a Hamiltonian function that generates the circle action. The product space
X x C
z
C
\omega ⊕ (-idz\wedged\bar{z}).
The group
U(1)
ei\theta ⋅ (x,z)=(ei ⋅ x,e-iz)
with moment map
\nu(x,z)=\mu(x)-|z|2.
Let
\epsilon
\mu-1(\epsilon)
\epsilon
\nu
\nu-1(\epsilon)
This manifold
\nu-1(\epsilon)
(x,z)
\mu(x)=\epsilon
|z|2=0
\mu-1(\epsilon)
(x,z)
\mu(x)>\epsilon
X>:=\mu-1((\epsilon,infty))
and the circle.
The manifold
\nu-1(\epsilon)
\overline{X}\mu:=\nu-1(\epsilon)/U(1).
By construction, it contains
X\mu
V:=\mu-1(\epsilon)/U(1),
which is a symplectic submanifold of
\overline{X}\mu
If
X
\overline{X}\mu
X\mu
One constructs
\overline{X}\mu
V
\overline{X}\mu
\overline{X}\mu
V
X
The existence of a global Hamiltonian circle action on
X
\mu-1(\epsilon)
X
Z
Z
E
\epsilon
Blowing up a symplectic manifold is more subtle, since the symplectic form must be adjusted in a neighborhood of the blow up locus in order to continue smoothly across the exceptional divisor in the blow up. The symplectic cut is an elegant means of making the neighborhood-deletion/boundary-collapse process symplectically rigorous.
As before, let
(X,\omega)
U(1)
\mu
m
Z
X
U(1)
NXZ
1
Then for small
\epsilon
X\mu
Z
\overline{X}\mu
\epsilon
Z
X
Z