Chern-Simons form
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In mathematics, the Chern-Simons forms are certain secondary characteristic classes. They have been found to be of interest in gauge theory, and they (especially the 3-form) define the action of Chern-Simons theory. The theory is named for Shiing-Shen Chern and James Harris Simons, co-authors of a 1974 paper entitled "Characteristic Forms and Geometric Invariants," from which the theory arose.
[edit] Definition
Given a manifold and a Lie algebra valued 1-form,
over it, we can define a family of p-forms:
In one dimension, the Chern-Simons 1-form is given by
.
In three dimensions, the Chern-Simons 3-form is given by
.
In five dimensions, the Chern-Simons 5-form is given by
where the curvature F is defined as
.
The general Chern-Simons form ω2k − 1 is defined in such a way that
,
where the wedge product is used to define Fk.
See gauge theory for more details.
In general, the Chern-Simons p-form is defined for any odd p. See gauge theory for the definitions. Its integral over a p-dimensional manifold is a homotopy invariant. This value is called the Chern number.
![{\rm Tr} \left[ \bold{F}\wedge\bold{F}\wedge\bold{A}-\frac{1}{2}\bold{F}\wedge\bold{A}\wedge\bold{A}\wedge\bold{A} +\frac{1}{10}\bold{A}\wedge\bold{A}\wedge\bold{A}\wedge\bold{A}\wedge\bold{A} \right]](../../../../math/5/c/8/5c83bdeaf85e196a5a2a8c3f9644cc9d.png)

