- Isomonodromic deformation
In
mathematics , the equations governing the isomonodromic deformation ofmeromorphic linear systems ofordinary differential equations are, in a fairly precise sense, the most fundamentalexact nonlinear differential equations. As a result, their solutions and properties lie at the heart of the field of exact nonlinearity andintegrable systems .Isomonodromic deformations were first studied by
Richard Fuchs , with early pioneering contributions fromPaul Painlevé ,René Garnier , andLudwig Schlesinger . Inspired by results instatistical mechanics , a seminal contribution to the theory was made byMichio Jimbo ,Tetsuji Miwa andKimio Ueno , who studied cases with arbitrary singularity structure.Fuchsian systems and Schlesinger's equations
We consider the
Fuchsian system of linear differential equations:where the dependent variable takes values in the complex projective line , the solution takes values in and the are constant matrices. By placing independent column solutions into afundamental matrix we can regard as taking values in . Solutions to this equation have simple poles at . For simplicity, we shall assume that there is no further pole at infinity (which amounts to the condition that ).Monodromy data
Now, fix a basepoint on the Riemann sphere away from the poles.
Analytic continuation of the solution around any pole and back to the basepoint will produce a new solution . The new and old solutions are linked by themonodromy matrix as follows::We therefore have the
Riemann-Hilbert homomorphism from thefundamental group of the punctured sphere to the monodromy representation::A change of basepoint merely results in a (simultaneous) conjugation of all the monodromy matrices. The monodromy matrices modulo simultaneous conjugation define the monodromy data of the Fuchsian system.
Hilbert's twenty-first problem
Now, with given monodromy data, can we find a Fuchsian system which exhibits this monodromy? This is one form of
Hilbert's twenty-first problem . We do not distinguish between coordinates and which are related byMöbius transformation s, and we do not distinguish between gauge equivalent Fuchsian systems - this means that we regard and :as being equivalent for any holomorphicgauge transformation . (It is thus most natural to regard a Fuchsian system geometrically, as aconnection with simple poles on a trivial rankvector bundle over the Riemann sphere).For generic monodromy data, the answer to Hilbert's twenty-first problem is 'yes' - as was first proved by
Joseph Plemelj . However, Plemelj neglected certain degenerate cases, and it was shown in 1989 byAndrey Bolibrukh that there are cases when the answer is 'no'. Here, we focus entirely on the generic case.chlesinger's equations
There are (generically) many Fuchsian systems with the same monodromy data. Thus, given any such Fuchsian system with specified monodromy data, we can perform isomonodromic deformations of it. We are therefore led to study families of Fuchsian systems, and allow the matrices to depend on the positions of the poles.
In 1912 (following earlier incorrect attempts) Ludwig Schlesinger proved that in general, the deformations which preserve the monodromy data of a (generic) Fuchsian system are governed by the
integrable holonomic system ofpartial differential equations which now bear his name::
These are therefore the isomonodromy equations for (generic) Fuchsian systems. It should be noted that the natural interpretation of these equations is as the flatness of a natural connection on a vector bundle over the 'deformation parameter space' which consists of the possible pole positions.
If we limit ourselves to the case when the take values in the Lie algebra , we obtain the so-called Garnier systems. If we specialize further to the case when there are only four poles, then the Schlesinger/Garnier equations can be reduced to the famous sixth
Painlevé equation .Irregular singularities
Motivated by the appearance of
Painlevé transcendents incorrelation functions in the theory ofBose gases , Michio Jimbo, Tetsuji Miwa and Kimio Ueno extended the notion of isomonodromic deformation to the case of arbitrary pole structure. The linear system we study is now of the form:with poles, with the pole at of order . The are constant matrices.Extended monodromy data
As well as the monodromy representation described in the Fuchsian setting, deformations of irregular systems of linear ordinary differential equations are required to preserve "extended" monodromy data. Roughly speaking, monodromy data is now regarded as data which glues together canonical solutions near the singularities. If we take as a local coordinate near a pole of
order , then we can solve term-by-term for a holomorphic gauge transformation such that locally, the system looks like:where and the are diagonal matrices. If this were valid, it would be extremely useful, because then (at least locally), we have decoupled the system into scalar differential equations which we can easily solve to find that (locally)::However, this does not work - because the power series we have solved term-for-term for will not, in general, converge.It was the great insight of Jimbo, Miwa and Ueno to realize that nevertheless, this approach provides canonical solutions near the singularities, and can therefore be gainfully employed to define extended monodromy data. This is because of a theorem of
George Birkhoff which states that given such a formal series, there is a unique convergent function such that in any particular sufficiently large sector around the pole, isasymptotic to , and :is a true solution of the differential equation. We therefore have a canonical solution in each such sector near each pole. The extended monodromy data consists of* the data from the monodromy representation as for the Fuchsian case;
*Stokes' matrices which connect canonical solutions between adjacent sectors at the same pole;
* connection matrices which connect canonical solutions between sectors at different poles.General isomonodromic deformations
As before, we now consider families of systems of linear differential equations, all with the same singularity structure. We therefore allow the matrices to depend on paramters. We allow ourselves to vary the positions of the poles , but now, in addition, we also vary the entries of the diagonal matrices which appear in the canonical solution near each pole.
Jimbo, Miwa and Ueno proved that if we define a one-form on the 'deformation parameter space' by:(where denotes
exterior differentiation with respect to the components of the only)then deformations of the meromorphic linear system specified by are isomonodromic if and only if :
These are the general isomonodromy equations. As before, these equations can be interpreted as the flatness of a natural connection on the deformation parameter space.
Properties
The isomonodromy equations enjoy a number of properties which justify their status as nonlinear
special functions .Painlevé property
This is perhaps the most important property of a solution to the isomonodromic deformation equations. This means that all
essential singularities of the solutions are fixed, although the positions of poles may move. It was proved byBernhard Malgrange for the case of Fuchsian systems, and byTetsuji Miwa in the general setting.Indeed, suppose we are given a partial differential equation (or a system of them). Then, 'possessing a reduction to an isomonodromy equation' is more or less equivalent to the
Painlevé property , and can therefore be used as a test forintegrability .Transcendence
In general, solutions of the isomonodromy equations cannot be expressed in terms of simpler functions such as solutions of linear differential equations. However, for particular (more precisely, reducible) choices of extended monodromy data, solutions can be expressed in terms of such functions (or at least, in terms of 'simpler' isomonodromy transcendents). The study of precisely what this transcendence means has been largely carried out by the invention of 'nonlinear
differential Galois theory ' byHiroshi Umemura andBernhard Malgrange .There are also very special solutions which are
algebraic . The study of such algebraic solutions involves examining thetopology of the deformation parameter space (and in particular, itsmapping class group ); for the case of simple poles, this amounts to the study of the action ofbraid groups . For the particularly important case of the sixthPainlevé equation , there has been a notable contribution byBoris Dubrovin andMarta Mazzocco , which has been recently extended to larger classes of monodromy data byPhilip Boalch .Rational solutions are often associated to special polynomials. Sometimes, as in the case of the sixth
Painlevé equation , these are well-knownorthogonal polynomials , but there are new classes of polynomials with extremely interesting distribution of zeros andinterlacing properties. The study of such polynomials has largely been carried out byPeter Clarkson and collaborators.ymplectic structure
The isomonodromy equations can be rewritten using
Hamiltonian formulations. This viewpoint was extensively pursued byKazuo Okamoto in a series of papers on thePainlevé equations in the 1980s.They can also be regarding as a natural extension of the Atiyah-Bott symplectic structure on spaces of
flat connections onRiemann surfaces to the world of meromorphic geometry - a perspective pursued byPhilip Boalch . Indeed, if we fix the positions of the poles, we can even obtaincomplete hyperkähler manifolds ; a result proved byOliver Biquard andPhilip Boalch .There is another description in terms of
moment maps to (central extensions of)loop algebras - a viewpoint introduced byJohn Harnad and extended to the case of general singularity structure byNick Woodhouse . This latter perspective is intimately related to a curiousLaplace transform between isomonodromy equations with different pole structure and rank for the underlying equations.Twistor structure
The isomonodromy equations arise as (generic) full dimensional reductions of (generalized) anti-self-dual
Yang-Mills equations . By thePenrose-Ward transform they can therefore be interpreted in terms of holomorphic vector bundles oncomplex manifolds calledtwistor spaces. This allows the use of powerful techniques fromalgebraic geometry in studying the properties of transcendents. This approach has been pursued byNigel Hitchin ,Lionel Mason andNick Woodhouse .Gauss-Manin connections
By considering data associated with families of Riemann surfaces branched over the singularities, we can consider the isomonodromy equations as nonhomogenous
Gauss-Manin connection s. This leads to alternative descriptions of the isomonodromy equations in terms ofabelian function s - an approach known to Fuchs and Painlevé, but lost until rediscovery byYuri Manin in 1996.Asymptotics
Particular transcendents can be characterized by their asymptotic behaviour. The study of such behaviour goes back to the early days of isomonodromy, in work by
Pierre Boutroux and others.Applications
Their universality as the simplest genuinely nonlinear integrable systems means that the isomonodromy equations have a extremely diverse range of applications. Perhaps of greatest practical importance is the field of
random matrix theory . Here, the statistical properties ofeigenvalues of large random matrices are described by particular transcendents.The initial impetus for the resurgence of interest in isomonodromy in the 1970s was the appearance of transcendents in
correlation functions inBose gases .They provide generating functions for
moduli spaces of two-dimensionaltopological quantum field theories and are thereby useful in the study ofquantum cohomology andGromov-Witten invariants .'Higher-order' isomonodromy equations have recently been used to explain the mechanism and universality properties of shock formation for the
dispersionless limit of theKdV equation .They are natural reductions of the
Ernst equation and thereby provide solutions to theEinstein equations of general relativity; they also give rise to other (quite distinct) solutions of the Einstein equations in terms oftheta functions .They have arisen in recent work in
mirror symmetry - both in thegeometric Langlands programme, and in work on the moduli spaces ofstability conditions onderived categories .Generalizations
The isomonodromy equations have been generalized for meromorphic connections on a general
Riemann surface .They can also easily be adapted to take values in any
Lie group , by replacing the diagonal matrices by themaximal torus , and other similar modifications.There is a burgeoning field studying discrete versions of isomonodromy equations.
References
*Citation | last1=Its | first1=Alexander R. | last2=Novokshenov | first2=Victor Yu. | title=The isomonodromic deformation method in the theory of Painlevé equations | publisher=
Springer-Verlag | location=Berlin, New York | series=Lecture Notes in Mathematics | isbn=978-3-540-16483-8 | id=MathSciNet | id = 851569 | year=1986 | volume=1191
*Citation | last1=Sabbah | first1=Claude | title=Isomonodromic deformations and Frobenius manifolds | publisher=Springer-Verlag | location=Berlin, New York | series=Universitext | isbn=978-1-84800-053-7; 978-2-7598-0047-6 | id=MathSciNet | id = 1933784 | year=2007
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