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In [[mathematics]], '''twistor space''' is the [[complex number|complex]] [[vector space]] of solutions of the twistor equation <math>\nabla_{A'}^{(A}\Omega^{B)}=0 </math>. It was described in the 1960s by [[Roger Penrose]] and MacCallum.<ref>R. Penrose and M. A. H. MacCallum, Twistor theory: An approach to the quantisation of fields and space-time. {{doi|10.1016/0370-1573(73)90008-2}}</ref> According to [[Andrew Hodges]], twistor space is useful for conceptualizing the way photons travel through space, using four [[complex number]]s. He also posits that twistor space may aid in understanding the [[asymmetry]] of the [[weak nuclear force]].<ref>Hodges, Andrew, "One to Nine" 2009</ref>
 
For [[Minkowski space]], denoted <math>\mathbb{M}</math>, the solutions to the twistor equation are of the form
 
:<math>
\Omega(x)=\omega^A-ix^{AA'}\pi_{A'}
</math>
 
where <math>\omega^A</math> and <math>\pi_{A'}</math> are two constant [[Weyl spinor]]s and <math>x^{AA'}=\sigma^{AA'}_\mu x^{\mu}</math> is a point in Minkowski space. This twistor space is a four-dimensional complex vector space, whose points are denoted by <math>Z^{\alpha}=(\omega^{A},\pi_{A'})</math>, and with a hermitian form
 
:<math>
\Sigma(Z)=\omega^{A}\bar\pi_{A}+\bar\omega^{A'}\pi_{A'}
</math>
 
which is invariant under the group SU(2,2) which is a quadruple cover of the conformal group C(1,3) of compactified Minkowski spacetime.
 
Points in Minkowski space are related to subspaces of twistor space through the incidence relation
 
:<math>
\omega^{A}=ix^{AA'}\pi_A.
</math>
 
This incidence relation is preserved under an overall re-scaling of the twistor, so usually one works in projective twistor space, denoted '''PT''', which is isomorphic as a complex manifold to <math>\mathbb{CP}^3</math>.
 
Given a point <math>x\in M</math> it is related to a line in  projective twistor space where we can see the incidence relation as giving the linear embedding of
a <math>\mathbb{CP}^1</math> parametrized by <math>\pi_{A'}</math>.
 
The geometric relation between projective twistor space and complexified compactified Minkowski space is the same as the relation between lines and two-planes in twistor space; more precisely, twistor space is
 
'''T''' := '''C'''<sup>4</sup>. It has associated to it the [[double fibration]] of [[flag manifold]]s '''P''' ←<sub>μ</sub> '''F''' <sub>ν</sub>→ '''M''', where
:projective twistor space
::'''P''' := '''F'''<sub>1</sub>('''T''') = '''P'''<sub>3</sub>('''C''') = '''P'''('''C'''<sup>4</sup>)
:compactified complexified Minkowski space
::'''M''' := '''F'''<sub>2</sub>('''T''') = '''G'''<sub>2</sub>('''C'''<sup>4</sup>) = '''G'''<sub>2,4</sub>('''C''')
:the correspondence space between '''P''' and '''M'''
::'''F''' := '''F'''<sub>1,2</sub>('''T''')
In the above, '''P''' stands for [[projective space]], '''G''' a [[Grassmannian]], and '''F''' a [[flag manifold]]. The double fibration gives rise to two [[correspondence (mathematics)|correspondences]], ''c'' := ν . μ<sup>&minus;1</sup> and ''c''<sup>&minus;1</sup> := μ . ν<sup>&minus;1</sup>.
 
'''M''' is embedded in '''P'''<sub>5</sub> ~=~ '''P'''(Λ<sup>2</sup>'''T''') by the [[Plücker embedding]] and the image is the [[Klein quadric]].
 
== Rationale ==
In the (translated) words of [[Jacques Hadamard]]: "the shortest path between two truths in the real domain passes through the complex domain."  Therefore when studying '''R'''<sup>4</sup> it might be valuable to identify it with '''C'''<sup>2</sup>. However, since there is no [[Archetype|canonical]] way of doing so, instead all [[isomorphism]]s respecting orientation and metric between the two are considered. It turns out that complex projective 3-space '''P'''<sub>3</sub>('''C''') parametrizes such isomorphisms together with complex coordinates. Thus one complex coordinate describes the identification and the other two describe a point in '''R'''<sup>4</sup>. It turns out that vector bundles with self-dual connections on '''R'''<sup>4</sup>([[instanton]]s) [[bijection|correspond bijectively]] to holomorphic bundles on complex projective 3-space '''P'''<sub>3</sub>('''C''').
 
==See also==
*[[Roger Penrose]]
*[[Twistor theory]]
 
==References==
{{reflist}}
*Ward, R.S. and [[Raymond O. Wells, Jr.|Wells, Raymond O. Jr.]], ''Twistor Geometry and Field Theory'', Cambridge University Press (1991). ISBN 0-521-42268-X.
*Huggett, S. A. and Todd, K. P., ''An introduction to twistor theory'', Cambridge University Press (1994). ISBN 978-0-521-45689-0.
 
{{Topics of twistor theory}}
 
[[Category:Complex manifolds]]

Latest revision as of 21:07, 11 January 2015

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