Introduction to vertex operator algebras and their representations

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Introduction to vertex operator algebras and their representations

James Lepowsky, Haisheng Li

(Progress in mathematics, v. 227)

Springer Science+Business Media, c2004

  • : softcover

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

"Originally published by Birkhäuser Boston in 2004, Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1st edition 2004"--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references (p. [289]-314) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

* Introduces the fundamental theory of vertex operator algebras and its basic techniques and examples. * Begins with a detailed presentation of the theoretical foundations and proceeds to a range of applications. * Includes a number of new, original results and brings fresh perspective to important works of many other researchers in algebra, lie theory, representation theory, string theory, quantum field theory, and other areas of math and physics.

Table of Contents

1 Introduction.- 1.1 Motivation.- 1.2 Example of a vertex operator.- 1.3 The notion of vertex operator algebra.- 1.4 Simplification of the definition.- 1.5 Representations and modules.- 1.6 Construction of families of examples.- 1.7 Some further developments.- 2 Formal Calculus.- 2.1 Formal series and the formal delta function.- 2.2 Derivations and the formal Taylor Theorem.- 2.3 Expansions of zero and applications.- 3 Vertex Operator Algebras: The Axiomatic Basics.- 3.1 Definitions and some fundamental properties.- 3.2 Commutativity properties.- 3.3 Associativity properties.- 3.4 The Jacobi identity from commutativity and associativity.- 3.5 The Jacobi identity from commutativity.- 3.6 The Jacobi identity from skew symmetry and associativity.- 3.7 S3-symmetry of the Jacobi identity.- 3.8 The iterate formula and normal-ordered products.- 3.9 Further elementary notions.- 3.10 Weak nilpotence and nilpotence.- 3.11 Centralizers and the center.- 3.12 Direct product and tensor product vertex algebras.- 4 Modules.- 4.1 Definition and some consequences.- 4.2 Commutativity properties.- 4.3 Associativity properties.- 4.4 The Jacobi identity as a consequence of associativity and commutativity properties.- 4.5 Further elementary notions.- 4.6 Tensor product modules for tensor product vertex algebras.- 4.7 Vacuum-like vectors.- 4.8 Adjoining a module to a vertex algebra.- 5 Representations of Vertex Algebras and the Construction of Vertex Algebras and Modules.- 5.1 Weak vertex operators.- 5.2 The action of weak vertex operators on the space of weak vertex operators.- 5.3 The canonical weak vertex algebra ?(W) and the equivalence between modules and representations.- 5.4 Subalgebras of ?(W).- 5.5 Local subalgebras and vertex subalgebras of ?(W).- 5.6 Vertex subalgebras of ?(W) associated with the Virasoro algebra.- 5.7 General construction theorems for vertex algebras and modules.- 6 Construction of Families of Vertex Operator Algebras and Modules.- 6.1 Vertex operator algebras and modules associated to the Virasoro algebra.- 6.2 Vertex operator algebras and modules associated to affine Lie algebras.- 6.3 Vertex operator algebras and modules associated to Heisenberg algebras.- 6.4 Vertex operator algebras and modules associated to even lattices-the setting.- 6.5 Vertex operator algebras and modules associated to even lattices-the main results.- 6.6 Classification of the irreducible L?(?, O)-modules for g finite-dimensional simple and ? a positive integer.- References.

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