000945399 000__ 05267cam\a2200505Mi\4500 000945399 001__ 945399 000945399 005__ 20230306152519.0 000945399 006__ m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ 000945399 007__ cr\nn\nnnunnun 000945399 008__ 201016s2020\\\\si\\\\\\o\\\\\|||\0\eng\d 000945399 019__ $$a1201226757 000945399 020__ $$a9811555621 000945399 020__ $$a9789811555626 000945399 020__ $$z9811555613 000945399 020__ $$z9789811555619 000945399 0247_ $$a10.1007/978-981-15-5562-6$$2doi 000945399 035__ $$aSP(OCoLC)on1204151748 000945399 035__ $$aSP(OCoLC)1204151748$$z(OCoLC)1201226757 000945399 040__ $$aSFB$$beng$$cSFB$$dOCLCO$$dYDX 000945399 049__ $$aISEA 000945399 050_4 $$aQA641-670 000945399 08204 $$a516.36$$223 000945399 1001_ $$aFukaya, Kenji.$$eauthor. 000945399 24510 $$aKuranishi Structures and Virtual Fundamental Chains /$$cby Kenji Fukaya, Yong-Geun Oh, Hiroshi Ohta, Kaoru Ono. 000945399 250__ $$a1st ed. 2020. 000945399 264_1 $$aSingapore :$$bSpringer Singapore :$$bImprint: Springer,$$c2020. 000945399 300__ $$a1 online resource (XV, 638 pages) :$$billustrations. 000945399 336__ $$atext$$btxt$$2rdacontent 000945399 337__ $$acomputer$$bc$$2rdamedia 000945399 338__ $$aonline resource$$bcr$$2rdacarrier 000945399 4901_ $$aSpringer Monographs in Mathematics,$$x1439-7382 000945399 5050_ $$a1.Introduction -- 2.Notations and conventions -- 3.Kuranishi structure and good coordinate system -- 4.Fiber product of Kuranishi structures -- 5.Thickening of a Kuranishi structure -- 6.Multivalued perturbation -- 7.CF-perturbation and integration along the fiber (pushout) -- 8.Stokes' formula -- 9.From good coordinate system to Kuranishi structure and back with CF-perturbations -- 10.Composition formula of smooth correspondences -- 11.Construction of good coordinate system -- 12.Construction of CF-perturbations -- 13.Construction of multivalued perturbations -- 14.Zero and one dimensional cases via multivalued perturbation -- 15.Introduction to Part 2 -- 16.Linear K-system: Floer cohomology I: statement -- 17.Extension of Kuranishi structure and its perturbation from boundary to its neighborhood -- 18.Smoothing corners and composition of morphisms -- 19.Linear K-system: Floer cohomology II: proof -- 20.Linear K-system: Floer cohomology III: Morse case by multisection -- 21.Tree-like K-system: A1 structure I: statement -- 22.Tree-like K-system: A1 structure II: proof -- 23. Orbifold and orbibundle by local coordinate -- 24.Covering space of effective orbifold and K-space -- 25.Admissible Kuranishi structure -- 26.Stratified submersion to a manifold with corners -- 27.Local system and smooth correspondence in de Rham theory with twisted coefficients -- 28.Composition of KG and GG embeddings: Proof of Lemma 3.34 -- 29.Global quotient and orbifold. . 000945399 506__ $$aAccess limited to authorized users. 000945399 520__ $$aThe package of Gromov's pseudo-holomorphic curves is a major tool in global symplectic geometry and its applications, including mirror symmetry and Hamiltonian dynamics. The Kuranishi structure was introduced by two of the authors of the present volume in the mid-1990s to apply this machinery on general symplectic manifolds without assuming any specific restrictions. It was further amplified by this book's authors in their monograph Lagrangian Intersection Floer Theory and in many other publications of theirs and others. Answering popular demand, the authors now present the current book, in which they provide a detailed, self-contained explanation of the theory of Kuranishi structures. Part I discusses the theory on a single space equipped with Kuranishi structure, called a K-space, and its relevant basic package. First, the definition of a K-space and maps to the standard manifold are provided. Definitions are given for fiber products, differential forms, partitions of unity, and the notion of CF-perturbations on the K-space. Then, using CF-perturbations, the authors define the integration on K-space and the push-forward of differential forms, and generalize Stokes' formula and Fubini's theorem in this framework. Also, "virtual fundamental class" is defined, and its cobordism invariance is proved. Part II discusses the (compatible) system of K-spaces and the process of going from "geometry" to "homological algebra". Thorough explanations of the extension of given perturbations on the boundary to the interior are presented. Also explained is the process of taking the "homotopy limit" needed to handle a system of infinitely many moduli spaces. Having in mind the future application of these chain level constructions beyond those already known, an axiomatic approach is taken by listing the properties of the system of the relevant moduli spaces and then a self-contained account of the construction of the associated algebraic structures is given. This axiomatic approach makes the exposition contained here independent of previously published construction of relevant structures. . 000945399 650_0 $$aGeometry, Differential. 000945399 650_0 $$aGeometry, Hyperbolic. 000945399 650_0 $$aPolytopes. 000945399 7001_ $$aOh, Yong-Geun.$$eauthor. 000945399 7001_ $$aOhta, Hiroshi.$$eauthor. 000945399 7001_ $$aOno, Kaoru.$$eauthor. 000945399 830_0 $$aSpringer monographs in mathematics,$$x1439-7382 000945399 852__ $$bebk 000945399 85640 $$3SpringerLink$$uhttps://univsouthin.idm.oclc.org/login?url=http://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-981-15-5562-6$$zOnline Access$$91397441.1 000945399 909CO $$ooai:library.usi.edu:945399$$pGLOBAL_SET 000945399 980__ $$aEBOOK 000945399 980__ $$aBIB 000945399 982__ $$aEbook 000945399 983__ $$aOnline 000945399 994__ $$a92$$bISE