Differential geometry of collective models

The classical astrophysical theory of Riemann ellipsoids and the quantum nuclear theory of Bohr and Mottelson share a common mathematical foundation in terms of the differential geometry of a principal bundle ${\cal P}$ and its associated vector bundle E, respectively. The bundle ${\cal P}=GL_+(3,R)...

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Main Author: George Rosensteel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIMS Press 2019-03-01
Series:AIMS Mathematics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.aimspress.com/article/10.3934/math.2019.2.215/fulltext.html
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spelling doaj-dd8d5592d2fa410b9459aaae21ca3d142020-11-24T21:57:37ZengAIMS PressAIMS Mathematics2473-69882019-03-014221523010.3934/math.2019.2.215Differential geometry of collective modelsGeorge Rosensteel0Department of Physics, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 70123, USAThe classical astrophysical theory of Riemann ellipsoids and the quantum nuclear theory of Bohr and Mottelson share a common mathematical foundation in terms of the differential geometry of a principal bundle ${\cal P}$ and its associated vector bundle E, respectively. The bundle ${\cal P}=GL_+(3,R)$ is the connected component of the general linear group, the structure group G=SO(3) is the vorticity group, and the base manifold is the space of positive-definite real $3\times 3$ symmetricmatrices, identified geometrically with the space of inertia ellipsoids. The bundle is a Riemannian manifold whose metric is inherited from three-dimensional Euclidean space. A nonholonomic constraint force, like irrotational flow, determines a connection on the bundle.Wave functions of the Bohr-Mottelson model are sections of the associated vector bundle E = ${\cal P}\times_\rho$V, where $\rho$ denotes an irreducible representation of the vorticity group on the vector space V. Using the de Rham Laplacian $\triangle = \star d_\nabla \star d_\nabla$ for the kinetic energy introduces a "magnetic" term due to the connection between base manifold rotational and fiber vortex degrees of freedom. A class of Ehresmann connections creates a new model of nuclear rotation that predicts moments of inertia in agreement with experiment.https://www.aimspress.com/article/10.3934/math.2019.2.215/fulltext.htmlbundleconnexionvorticityde Rham Laplacianastrophysicsnuclear structure
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author George Rosensteel
spellingShingle George Rosensteel
Differential geometry of collective models
AIMS Mathematics
bundle
connexion
vorticity
de Rham Laplacian
astrophysics
nuclear structure
author_facet George Rosensteel
author_sort George Rosensteel
title Differential geometry of collective models
title_short Differential geometry of collective models
title_full Differential geometry of collective models
title_fullStr Differential geometry of collective models
title_full_unstemmed Differential geometry of collective models
title_sort differential geometry of collective models
publisher AIMS Press
series AIMS Mathematics
issn 2473-6988
publishDate 2019-03-01
description The classical astrophysical theory of Riemann ellipsoids and the quantum nuclear theory of Bohr and Mottelson share a common mathematical foundation in terms of the differential geometry of a principal bundle ${\cal P}$ and its associated vector bundle E, respectively. The bundle ${\cal P}=GL_+(3,R)$ is the connected component of the general linear group, the structure group G=SO(3) is the vorticity group, and the base manifold is the space of positive-definite real $3\times 3$ symmetricmatrices, identified geometrically with the space of inertia ellipsoids. The bundle is a Riemannian manifold whose metric is inherited from three-dimensional Euclidean space. A nonholonomic constraint force, like irrotational flow, determines a connection on the bundle.Wave functions of the Bohr-Mottelson model are sections of the associated vector bundle E = ${\cal P}\times_\rho$V, where $\rho$ denotes an irreducible representation of the vorticity group on the vector space V. Using the de Rham Laplacian $\triangle = \star d_\nabla \star d_\nabla$ for the kinetic energy introduces a "magnetic" term due to the connection between base manifold rotational and fiber vortex degrees of freedom. A class of Ehresmann connections creates a new model of nuclear rotation that predicts moments of inertia in agreement with experiment.
topic bundle
connexion
vorticity
de Rham Laplacian
astrophysics
nuclear structure
url https://www.aimspress.com/article/10.3934/math.2019.2.215/fulltext.html
work_keys_str_mv AT georgerosensteel differentialgeometryofcollectivemodels
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