Resolvents of Bochner Laplacians in the semiclassical limit
Abstract
We introduce a new class of pseudodifferential operators, called Heisenberg semiclassical pseudodifferential operators, to study the space of sections of a power of a line bundle on a compact manifold, in the limit where the power is large. This class contains the Bochner Laplacian associated to a connection of the line bundle, and when the curvature is nondegenerate, its resolvent and some associated spectral projections, including generalised Bergman kernels.
1 Introduction
The spectral analysis of the Bochner Laplacians acting on sections of a line bundle with a large curvature, has many applications ranging from complex geometry to mathematical physics: holomorphic Morse inequalities and Bergman kernels [20], dynamical systems [13], geometric quantization [2] or large magnetic field limit of Schrödinger operators [23], [22], [17] to quote just a few references. In this paper we introduce an algebra of pseudodifferential operators, shaped to study the bottom of the spectra of these Laplacian at small scale.
To understand how the scales matter, let us state two Weyl laws corresponding to two different regimes. Let be a closed Riemannian manifold and a Hermitian line bundle with a connection . For any integer , the Bochner Laplacian acting on sections of is an elliptic differential operator. Hence with domain , is essentially self-adjoint. Its spectrum is a subset of and consists only of eigenvalues with finite multiplicity.
When is large, the structure of this spectrum depends essentially on the curvature of . Since is assumed to preserve the Hermitian structure, is a real closed -form of . For the first regime we will need the twisted symplectic form of defined by
(1) |
where is the projection . For the second one, we will assume that and are compatible in the sense that for an (almost) complex structure . The Weyl laws at the energy scales and are respectively:
-
1.
For any , the number of eigenvalues of smaller than and counted with multiplicities satisfies
(2) with the volume computed with respect to the Liouville form .
-
2.
if and are compatible, then for any there exists such that for any ,
(3) and for any ,
(4)
The estimate (2) does not appear in the literature, but it is actually a small variation of the Weyl law of semiclassical pseudodifferential operators on a compact manifold with semiclassical parameter , as we will explain below. The cluster structure (3) and the estimate (4) of the number of eigenvalues in each cluster have been proved in [13]. This eigenvalue number is actually given by a Riemann-Roch formula when is sufficiently large [6], [7].
These results rely on a good description of the resolvents , which allows to study the for a smooth compactly supported function, where or according to the regime. In the first case, and are semiclassical twisted pseudodifferential operators, a class of operators which was introduced in [4, Chapitre 4] and used recently in [14]. The local theory of these operators is exactly the same as the one of the standard semiclassical pseudodifferential operators with , whereas the global theory involves the twisted symplectic form (1). Similar operators have been studied as well on under the name of magnetic pseudodifferential operators, cf. [19] for an introduction and many references.
For the second regime, the theory is much less developed. The proof of (3) is based on an approximation of the resolvent of , which is obtained by gluing local resolvents of some model operators deduced from by freezing the coordinates in an appropriate way. The main difficulty in this construction is that the number of terms we have to glue increases with . Still these approximations have been used successfully to prove (3) and later to describe the spectral projections onto the various clusters as generalizations of Bergman kernels [6], [7], [18].
In this paper, we introduce a new class of pseudodifferential operators, and we prove that it contains the resolvent of when is nondegenerate, as well as the spectral projector associated to the cluster (3). This operator class is in a sense a semiclassical version of the class of Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators, which has been developed for the study of the -complex [1], [12]. For this reason, we call our operators semiclassical Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators.
Just as the usual Heisenberg operators have a symbol of type , the semiclassical ones have an exotic symbol of type : at each derivative, a power of is lost. Recall that the semiclassical operators with a symbol of type form a limit class: they are closed under product, the usual operator norm estimates hold, but the standard expansions in the symbolic calculus do not hold because all the terms in these expansions have the same magnitude, cf. for instance [10, Proposition 7.7, Theorem 7.9 and Theorem 7.11]. As we will see in the sequel [3] of this paper, the semiclassical Heisenberg operators are closed under product. However the composition of their principal symbols, which are functions on , is not the usual product. Instead it is a fiberwise product, whose restriction to each fiber depends on the curvature : when is nondegenerate, it is essentially the Weyl product whereas when , this is the usual function product. So in general the principal symbol composition is not commutative.
Our definition of the Heisenberg operators is based on the usual semiclassical pseudodifferential operators, from which we deduce easily many of their properties, except what regards their composition. In this paper, we only address the Heisenberg composition of differential operators with pseudodifferential ones, because this suffices to show that the resolvent and cluster spectral projectors of are Heisenberg operators. We have also included an exposition of the theory of twisted pseudodifferential operators, because this is not really standard material, and this helps to understand the specificity of the Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators. In the remainder of the introduction, we state our main result.
Twisted pseudodifferential operators
As the usual Laplace-Beltrami operator, has the following local expression in a coordinate chart
where for any , is the dynamical moment with the covariant derivative of with respect to .
Let be such that and let be the corresponding connection 1-form, . Identifying with through the frame ,
where . Under these local identifications, the ’s and consequently are semiclassical differential operators with , their symbols being respectively and .
These symbols become independent of if we pull-back them by the momentum shift , . The same method will be used to define the symbol of a twisted pseudodifferential operator, cf. (8). Similarly, the shift is used in classical mechanic to write the motion equations of a particle in a magnetic field in an invariant way: sends the Hamiltonian with the standard symplectic form to the usual kinetic energy with the twisted symplectic form .
Let us briefly introduce the twisted pseudodifferential operators of , the complete definition will be given in Section 2. Let us start with the residual class. An operator family
(5) |
belongs to if for each , the Schwartz kernel of is smooth, its pointwise norm is in uniformly on and the same holds for its successive derivatives. For any local data consisting of an open set of , a frame such that and a function , we define the local form of a family as in (5) as:
(6) |
A twisted pseudodifferential operator of order is a family as in (5) such that for any , with disjoint supports, belongs to and for any local data , where is a semiclassical pseudodifferential operator of order . So in terms of coordinates on the Schwartz kernel of has the form
(7) |
for some semiclassical polyhomogeneous symbol of order . The (principal) symbol of is the function such that for any local data as above
(8) |
where is the connection one-form of .
Examples of twisted (pseudo)differential operators of respective order , and are the multiplications by the functions of , the covariant derivatives where , the symbol being , and the normalised Laplacian , its symbol is .
It is not difficult to adapt the standard results [8], [27] on the resolvents of elliptic operators and their functional calculus in this setting. Denoting by the space of twisted pseudodifferential operators of order , we have
-
•
for any , the resolvent belongs to and its symbol is .
-
•
for any , belongs to and its symbol is .
In particular . The Weyl law (2) follows.
Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators
A (semiclassical) Heisenberg pseudodifferential operator of of order is by definition a family of operators of the form (5) such that for any , with disjoint supports, belongs to and for any local data as above with a coordinate set on , the Schwartz kernel of has the form
(9) |
where
-
-
is the connection one-form of defined as above and viewed as the -valued function
-
-
is a semiclassical polyhomogeneous symbols of order , so in particular and with polyhomogeneous coefficients of order .
As we see, the Schwartz kernel (9) is the product of an oscillatory factor depending on the frame with the Schwartz kernel of a semiclassical operator where the semiclassical parameter is . We will prove that this formula is consistent with change of frame and that we can define a (principal) symbol such that for any local data as above,
Let us denote by the space of Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators of order , and by the intersection .
To state our main result, we need to introduce some symbols and . Recall that for any tempered distribution , the Weyl quantization of is the operator with Schwartz kernel at :
The (quantum) harmonic oscillator is with . As an operator of with domain the Schwartz space, is essentially self-adjoint with spectrum . Then for any and , and are the tempered distributions such that
(10) |
By Weyl calculus, belongs to the symbol class and modulo . Moreover belongs to the Schwartz space, being the Weyl symbol of an orthogonal projector onto a finite dimensional subspace of . The analytic Fredholm theory can be developed in this setting and it says that the function with values in , or better the symbol space , is meromorphic on with simple poles at whose residues are the .
Theorem 1.1.
Assume and are compatible so that with . Then
-
1.
For any , there exists such that
-
-
and mod .
-
-
when is large.
-
-
the symbol of restricted to is the Weyl symbol of the resolvent of the harmonic oscillator with symbol , cf. (10).
-
-
-
2.
For any , the spectral projector family
belongs to . The restriction of its symbol to is the Weyl symbol of the spectral projector on the -eigenspace of the harmonic oscillator with symbol , cf. (10)
In this statement, we view , and as functions on as follows: choose an orthosymplectic basis of , that is is an orthonormal basis and for any , , . Let be the associated coordinates of , so and for any . Then any function identifies with the function of
(11) |
In particular because is orthonormal. The fact that and are independent of the choice of the basis follows from the symplectic invariance of the Weyl quantization.
It follows as well from the symplectic invariance of Weyl quantization and the invariance of that and are radial functions. A computation from Mehler formula leads to [9]
(12) |
We can also compute in terms of Laguerre polynomial [26] :
(13) |
and
Remark 1.2.
1. The proof of the first part of Theorem 1.1 is an adaptation of the standard parametrix construction of an elliptic pseudodifferential operator, the main change being in the symbolic calculus: if belongs to and has symbol , then belongs to and its symbol restricted to is the Weyl product of and . By Weyl product, we mean the product of symbols in Weyl quantization, and the identification of functions of with symbols is done through (11). This explains how the symbols and appear.
2. A remarkable fact is that the proof of the second assertion of Theorem 1.1 is a direct application of Cauchy formula for the spectral projector of an operator with compact resolvent. This part is much simpler than the proof that , even with the modern approach through Helffer-Sjöstrand formula.
3. The Schwartz kernel of the cluster spectral projectors was described in [18] and [7] as a generalisation of the Bergman kernel. The advantage of considering these projectors as Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators is merely that it connects them directly to the Laplacian and its resolvent. Moreover, in [3], we will explain how can use the Heisenberg calculus instead of the algebra of [6] to compute the dimension of each cluster and develop the theory of Toeplitz operators as it was done in [7]. ∎
Outline of the paper
In Section 2, we introduce notations and basic analytical tools to address the large limit of the space of sections of the -th power of , including the theory of semiclassical twisted pseudodifferential operators with their Sobolev spaces. The study of Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators starts in Section 3, from their Schwartz kernel asymptotic to their mapping properties. In Section 4, we introduce the symbol product, which is then used in Section 5 for the composition of differential operators with pseudodifferential operators. This is applied to resolvents and spectral projections in Section 6. In Section 7, we explain how we can add auxiliary bundles to the theory, which provides some important examples.
Acknowledgment
I would like to thank Clotilde Fermanian Kammerer, Colin Guillarmou and Thibault Lefeuvre for useful discussions.
2 Twisted pseudodifferential operators
Symbols
We will use the class of semiclassical polyhomogeneous symbols introduced in [11, Section E.1.2], cf. also [8, Section 6.1]. Let be an open set of and . For any , let and be the Euclidean norm and Japanese bracket, so , . Let , and be the spaces of symbols (resp. polyhomogeneous symbols, semiclassical polyhomogeneous symbols) of order . By definition
-
•
consists of the families of such that for any compact set of , , there exists such that
-
•
if , is independent on and for every , with coefficients such that when and .
-
•
if and for some coefficients .
More generally these definitions make sense for a real vector bundle instead of the product . We denote by the corresponding spaces and set for . An easy remark is that for any section of , the translation of given by preserves . When is reduced to a point, we set .
Negligible families
We say that a family of is negligible, and we write , if all its -seminorms are in . This definition is meaningful if is only defined for where is any subset of whose closure contains .
Let be a Hermitian line bundle and a complex vector bundle with rank . A family is said to be negligible if for any open set of , any with pointwise norm and any frame , on where each coefficient . We denote by the space of negligible families.
Let be a family of operators
(14) |
The Schwartz kernel of each is a section of , where we denote by the external tensor product of vector bundles, by the trivial line bundle over and by the density bundle. Since , the previous definition of a negligible family applies to the family of Schwartz kernels.
We denote by the space consisting of operator families of the form (14) such that each is smoothing with a Schwartz kernel family in . As we will see, is both the residual space of twisted pseudodifferential operators and of Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators.
Semiclassical pseudodifferential operators
Let be the space of semiclassical pseudodifferential operators of order acting on smooth functions of . By definition is a family of operators with a Schwartz kernel satisfying for any ,
-
1.
if , then is smooth and negligible.
-
2.
if where is a coordinate chart of , then on
(15) with .
Here and in the sequel, when the Schwartz kernel is written in a coordinate chart, we implicitly use the density . The principal symbol of is the function such that on .
Twisted pseudodifferential operators
Let be a Hermitian line bundle.
Definition 2.1.
A semiclassical twisted pseudodifferential operator of is a family having the form (14) such that for any ,
-
1.
if , then is smooth and negligible.
-
2.
if where is a coordinate chart of and is such that , then on
with .
To understand the dependence of the oscillatory integral with respect to the choice of the frame , consider a new frame where . Then where is such that . Using that and changing the variable into , we obtain
(16) |
So multiplying by amounts to change the amplitude to such that . This relation writes on the diagonal
Let be a connection on preserving the metric. Then , where is a real one-form of . Observe that where . So we can define the principal symbol as follows.
Definition 2.2.
The principal symbol of is the element of such that for any local data as in Definition 2.1, we have
If is another connection of preserving the metric, then with and . It is easy to extend the basic properties of pseudodifferential operators to our setting:
-
-
If , then if and only if .
-
-
.
-
-
if and , then
-
i)
belongs to and its principal symbol is the product of the principal symbols of and .
-
ii)
belongs to and its symbol is the Poisson bracket for the twisted symplectic form (1) where is the curvature of .
-
i)
It is possible to define the twisted pseudodifferential operators without using local frames. Recall that the Schwartz kernel of an operator acting on is a section of . Introduce an open neighborhood of the diagonal of and a section such that on and for any , in the sense that for any with norm . We claim that if and only if its Schwartz kernel has the form
(17) |
where is equal to on a neighborhood of the diagonal and is the Schwartz kernel family of a semiclassical pseudodifferential operator . If furthermore is a connection of such that the corresponding covariant derivative of is zero on the diagonal, then .
These facts follow from a computation similar to (16), by writing where is such that on and satisfies .
Semiclassical Sobolev norms
Let . Denote by the Sobolev space of sections of of order . Let us give three equivalent definitions of the semiclassical Sobolev norms of a section of . First the norm of is defined by
(18) |
where is a volume element of independent of .
-
1.
only for integral exponent : choose a connection of , vector fields of which generates at each , and set
where for any , .
-
2.
based on local semi-norms: for any chart of , frame such that and we set
and is the Fourier transform of . Choose a finite family of local data such that is covered by the and set .
-
3.
based on twisted pseudodifferential operators: choose which is elliptic and invertible for any , and set .
The ellipticity condition is as usual that the principal symbol satisfies for some , when . It does not depend on the choice of .
We claim that all these norms are equivalent with constants uniform in . Furthermore for any twisted pseudodifferential operator and any , there exists such that for any ,
(19) |
3 Heisenberg semiclassical operator
In the introduction, we defined the Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators by expressing locally their Schwartz kernels as oscillatory integrals. Here we will start with a global definition which has the advantage that we can deduce some basic properties of these operators directly from the ones of the semiclassical pseudodifferential operators.
Let be a Hermitian line bundle with a connection preserving the metric. The line bundle inherits from a Hermitian metric and a connection. Its restriction to the diagonal is the flat trivial bundle with a natural trivialisation obtained by sending to the scalar product of and . In the sequel we will use a particular extension of this trivialisation.
Lemma 3.1.
There exist a tubular neighborhood of the diagonal of and such that on and
for any vector field of having the form with . If satisfies the same conditions, then where vanishes to third order along the diagonal
Proof.
Consider more generally a closed submanifold of , a flat section of , and a subbundle of such that . Then we can extend to a neighborhood of in such a way that it satisfies on : and for any vector field of such that is a section of . To see this, introduce a coordinate chart of and a unitary frame such that , is a frame of and extends . Then the section we are looking for is with
where the ’s are the functions in such that . Applying this to , and instead of , , concludes the proof. ∎
Definition 3.2.
A semiclassical Heisenberg pseudodifferential operator of order is a family of operators whose Schwartz kernels have the form
(20) |
where satisfies the conditions of Lemma 3.1, is equal to on a neighborhood of the diagonal and is the Schwartz kernel family of a semiclassical pseudodifferential operator .
The principal symbol of is defined as the principal symbol of .
We denote by the space of semiclassical Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators of order . For any , for any fixed , is a pseudo-differential operator of order , so act on and on . The definition clearly does not depend on the choice of the cutoff function . It neither doesn’t depend on the choice of as will be explained below. To compare with the twisted pseudodifferential operators, observe first that the section in (17) satisfies a weaker condition than in Definition 3.2 and second in (17), the Schwartz kernel of is evaluated at , whereas in (20) we have .
By defining globally the Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators in terms of scalar pseudodifferential operators as in Definition 3.2 instead of the local oscillatory integrals (9), we avoid the usual discussions on the coordinate changes and the principal symbol and we deduce easily the following three facts:
-
-
If , then if and only if .
-
-
.
-
-
If and is such that , then the kernel is smooth and negligible.
Unfortunately, the definition 3.2 does not allow to deduce the composition properties of the Heisenberg operators from the one of the semiclassical pseudodifferential operators.
By Lemma 3.1, is uniquely defined modulo a factor with vanishing to third order along the diagonal. Write
with smooth coefficients . For any symbol , let be the oscillatory integral
Lemma 3.3.
For all , with having the asymptotic expansion
(21) |
In particular, if , then .
This proves that Definition 3.2 does not depend on the choice of . Moreover, since , the principal symbol of is also independent of .
Proof.
By integration by part, , so with given by (21). By Taylor formula, it comes that
with
Observe that is smooth and . Furthermore, since is a genuine integral for , by derivating under the integral sign, when satisfies , and for any , . Since is a symbol of order , it comes that for any , when is sufficiently large, is of class and for any , .
So for any having the asymptotic expansion (21), we have that with , and we can absorb in by modifying by a summand in . ∎
Let us explain how we recover the local expression (9) of the introduction. Let be a local chart of and such that on . Let be the connection form, . Then we easily check that the section given by
(22) |
satisfies the condition of Lemma 3.1. Consequently, the Schwartz kernel of an operator in has the form on with
(23) |
with . Of course, we can assume that does not depend on (resp. ) or that it is on the Weyl form with . In this last case, we recover exactly the expression (9).
Another interesting expression is obtained by rescaling the variable by a square root of in (23) and absorbing the factor into the amplitude:
(24) |
Assume that is on the Weyl form, , then we have that
(25) |
where . So we recognise a semiclassical pseudodifferential operator at with a Weyl symbol .
We call the effective symbol. As we will see, it satisfies some exotic estimates. Let us introduce the symbol semi-norms of ,
where is a compact subset of .
Lemma 3.4.
For any , and compact subset of , there exists such that for any , the function satisfies
for all , , with , .
Proof.
For any , we have . Furthermore, if , . So for any ,
(26) |
The derivatives of have the form with
(27) |
where the coefficients are in and don’t depend on , and we sum over the multi-indices satisfying and . So for ,
because and we conclude by setting . ∎
So belongs to the class with exponent , that is at each derivative we loose a factor . Recall that is the critical exponent: the space of pseudodifferential operators with symbol in is an algebra for , but the standard asymptotic expansions of the symbolic calculus only hold for , cf. for instance [10, Proposition 7.7]. As we will see in Section 5 and in [5], the Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators form an algebra and have an associated symbol calculus, but this can not be deduced form the usual composition rules of pseudodifferential operators. Nevertheless, Lemma 3.4 has some useful consequences, the first of them being the mapping property. Recall the definition (18) of the -norm with a volume element independent of .
Theorem 3.5.
For any , there exists such that for any , .
Proof.
Another consequence of Lemma 3.4 is the following important fact.
Lemma 3.6.
is a bilateral ideal of .
Proof.
Consider a pseudodifferential operator of with the Schwartz kernel where the amplitude is zero if and satisfies for any . Then, with the usual regularisation of oscillatory integrals by integration by part, one proves that
So for any family of operators , , if has a compactly supported smooth kernel in then the same holds for . Applying this to the of (28) proves the result. ∎
To end this section, let us extend the mapping property to the Sobolev space. We denote by the -th semiclassical Sobolev norm of sections of , defined as in Section 2.
Theorem 3.7.
For any and any , there exists such that for any ,
Since for any , is a pseudodifferential operator of order of , we already know that is continuous . Theorem 3.7 gives a uniform estimate with respect to .
Proof.
It suffices to prove that for any and one has
(29) |
For this it suffices to prove that for any chart domain of and functions , , one has
(30) |
To show that (30) implies (29), write on the form (28), with such that and similarly for , and use that is an ideal of both and .
Actually, Theorem 3.7 can be improved if we use Sobolev norms associated to the covariant derivative instead of the semiclassical Sobolev norms. For instance, for any , any and any vector fields , …, of , we will see in Proposition 5.1, that belongs to , so by Theorem 3.5,
(31) |
To compare, Theorem 3.7 only implies that the norm of in is in . The generalisation of (31) to fractional exponents not necessarily nonnegative will be given in [5].
4 A product associated to an antisymmetric bilinear form
Let be a -dimensional real vector space and . Later, we will choose with . Introduce the covariant derivative of
(32) |
The curvature of is , that is for any . We will define for any tempered distribution an operator .
We assume first that . For any , we denote by and its Fourier transform and inverse Fourier transform, with the normalisation
Let be the operator from to such that if and only if . The Schwartz kernel of is .
Then for any antisymmetric bilinear form of , define as the operator with Schwartz kernel
(33) |
Since is a tempered distribution of , the same holds for , so is continuous from to . We claim that this definition has an intrinsic meaning for if we consider that and is an operator . One way to see this is to write for and in
(34) |
and to notice that the product is well-defined for , , and the measure can be interpreted as the canonical volume form of .
Assume again that , and let
(35) |
where is the matrix of , so with the canonical basis of .
Lemma 4.1.
For any , we have where
(36) |
Proof.
The reason for the notation is that when is a monomial, is merely a symmetrization of covariant derivatives. The precise result is the following proposition which is not really needed in the sequel. Notice first that for , as a direct consequence of the definition.
Proposition 4.2.
For any and , if with , then
where is the group of permutations of .
Proof.
Let be the filtered algebra generated by the covariant derivatives where . More explicitly, with
Let be the space of complex polynomial functions of with degree less than or equal to . By Lemma 4.1 and Proposition 4.2,
(38) |
By Lemma 4.1 again, the left composition by any element of preserves . This defines the product
(39) |
In the sequel we will use the basis of , defined by , . Clearly
(40) |
where we have not written the dependence to lighten the notations. Furthermore, if ,
(41) |
where the coefficients depends smoothly (even polynomially) on , which follows from Lemma 4.1 again. Actually there is a closed formula for , cf. (42), but (41) is enough for our purpose.
Introduce the space . We have
the second assertion being a consequence of (41). This is all what we need to define in the next section the symbolic calculus corresponding to the composition of differential Heisenberg operators with Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators. In the case where , is the usual pointwise product of functions. In Lemma 6.1, we will see that when is nondegenerate so that , is an algebra isomorphic to the Weyl algebra of .
In the companion paper [5], we will prove that for any , is a filtered algebra, that is . Moreover
(42) |
So is isomorphic with the algebra called the -isotropic algebra in [12, Chapter 4, section 2].
Recall the standard and Weyl quantization maps which associate to any the operators and with Schwartz kernels
respectively.
Lemma 4.3.
Proof.
By the same computation as in (24),
being antisymmetric, , which proves that . The same proof by using this time that shows that . ∎
5 Heisenberg differential operators
The algebra of Heisenberg differential operators consists of families of differential operators
(43) |
satisfying some conditions given below. It includes the multiplications by any in , the normalised covariant derivatives where is any vector field of and the multiplication by . It is actually generated by these operators but it will be easier to use the following definition.
For any , consists of the families of differential operators of the form (43) such that for any coordinate chart and frame with , we have on ,
(44) |
where , and
(45) |
Set
In the sequel to lighten the notations, we omit and write , . Since and , we see that
Notice that has two filtrations: one ascending and the other descending , . The generators , and have orders , , for the former and , , for the latter.
By the next proposition, is contained in and acts on it. Being Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators, the elements of have a principal symbol, cf Definition 3.2. As we will see, the product of symbols is the fiberwise product of defined from . Precisely, we denote by the product
(46) |
associated to defined in (39). We will need as well the polynomials defined in (40).
Proposition 5.1.
-
-
for any ,
-
-
the principal symbols of the operators of are the functions such that for any . If (44) holds on , then .
-
-
for any , if and only if .
-
-
for any and , . Furthermore
for any , .
Proof.
We start with the computation of where is the operator with Schwartz kernel (24). Using (45), we get first that with
where . Taylor expanding along , we get
with . Integrating by part, with
Notice that if , then the same holds for . Furthermore, if , then .
We claim that everything can be deduced easily from these preliminary observations. Starting from the fact that is the identity, we deduce by induction on that with . The first two assertions follow. The third assertion is a consequence of the fact that the , are linearly independent so that implies that . Last assertion follows again from the preliminaries by induction on . ∎
6 Resolvent
Let be a real symplectic vector space with dimension . The Weyl product of the Schwartz space is defined by
where is the Liouville measure of . For with , it is the composition law of the Weyl symbols of pseudodifferential operators of , cf. for instance [16, page 152].
This product extends continuously from to by preserving the subspaces of polyhomogeneous symbols. So the corresponding pseudodifferential operators, , with , form an algebra, called sometimes the Shubin class or isotropic class. This algebra is one of the most studied in microlocal analysis, cf. [24, Chapter IV], [15], [21, Chapter 4], [12, Chapter 4], [25, Appendix A] for lecture note references.
The Weyl product appears naturally in our context as the product of the operators defined in Section 4 when is nondegenerate.
Lemma 6.1.
If is nondegenerate, then for any , in ,
where is the symplectic form of dual to .
Proof.
Introduce a symplectic basis of and denote by the associated linear coordinates, so that . Then the operators
satisfy the same commutation relations as the operators , , , of . So the linear isomorphism ,
is a symplectomorphism. Its metaplectic representation satisfies for any , cf. [16, Theorem 18.5.9]. Applying this to , we obtain
and by Lemma 4.3, . The result follows. ∎
From now on, we assume that is nondegenerate. By Lemma 6.1, at any , the product defined in (46) extends continuously
Recall that is elliptic if when for some positive . We say that is invertible if at any , is invertible in .
Lemma 6.2.
-
1.
endowed with the fibered product is a filtered algebra.
-
2.
For any which is both elliptic and invertible, the pointwise inverse of belongs to .
Proof.
This holds more generally for where is any symplectic vector bundle with base . When is a point, is isomorphic with the Weyl algebra , and the result is well-known as we already mentioned it. In general, we can assume that is the trivial symplectic bundle over an open subset of . Viewing symbols in as smooth maps from to the Fréchet space , and using that the Weyl product is continuous , we deduce with a little work that the fibered Weyl product is continuous
(47) |
which proves the first assertion.
Let be elliptic and invertible. Let us prove that its pointwise inverse is in . Multiplying by , we may assume that . Since is a filtered algebra, cf. (47), and by Borel lemma, has a parametrix . Let us prove that . We have , with and in . So . By (47) again, . It remains to prove that .
By Calderon-Vaillancourt theorem, the Weyl quantization is continuous. being the inverse of for any , . Moreover, the multilinear map
defined by , being continuous, we obtain with a little work that belongs to . ∎
Consider now having an elliptic symbol. Then for any fixed , is an elliptic differential operator of , so for any , extends to a Fredholm operator of . If we assume that the symbol of is invertible, then by the following Theorem, is invertible when is large, and its inverse is a Heisenberg pseudodifferential operator.
Theorem 6.3.
Assume that is nondegenerate. Let having an elliptic and invertible symbol . Then there exists such that
-
-
and are in
-
-
when is sufficiently large,
-
-
the symbol of is the inverse of for the product .
Proof.
This follows merely from the previous results, by the standard techniques for elliptic operators. First, using Lemma 6.2, we construct a parametrix of , so and with in the residual algebra . Then, by the Sobolev continuity (19), and belongs to and their operator norms are in . So when , is invertible from to , which implies by the Fredholm properties of elliptic operators [24, Theorem 8.1], that is an invertible operator of the distribution space .
Assume and consider having an elliptic symbol such that for some , is invertible. Then by Theorem 6.3, when is sufficiently large, has an inverse, which is continuous . So the restriction of to is a closed unbounded operator of having a compact resolvent. So its spectrum is a discrete subset of and it consists only of eigenvalues with finite multiplicity, the generalised eigenvectors being smooth [24, Theorem 8.4].
To state the next theorem, we need some spectral properties of the symbols themselves. Later we will explain these properties in terms of Weyl quantization, but since this quantization is only auxiliary in what we do, we prefer first to discuss everything intrinsically in terms of the algebra where is a symplectic vector space as above.
The spectrum of is defined by: if and only if is invertible in . A family of is holomorphic if is an open set of , and . By the analytic Fredholm theory for the isotropic algebra exposed in [21, Chapter 3], for any elliptic with , the spectrum of is or a discrete subset of . In the latter case, the resolvent is a holomorphic family of and for any , we have on a neighborhood of for some
(49) |
where is a holomorphic family of and , …, are in .
Theorem 6.4.
Assume that is nondegenerate. Let be elliptic with and symbol . Let be the closed set . Then
-
1.
if is a compact subset of disjoint from , then the spectrum of does not intersect when is large enough.
-
2.
if is an open bounded subset of with a smooth boundary disjoint from , then there exists such that when is large. Furthermore the principal symbol of is at
(50) -
3.
if for any , is formally self-adjoint for some volume element of , then for any with , belongs to .
Observe that the symbol is the sum of the residues of the poles in of the resolvent of . As we will see in the proof, the third assertion is a particular case of the second one, the symbol being the sum of the residues of the poles in .
In [5], we will prove that . So in the second assertion, being idempotent, it belongs to .
Proof.
First, is closed because the Weyl quantization is continuous from to , so that the characterization of the spectrum given below implies that if then when is sufficiently close to .
Assume that is a compact subset of disjoint from . When , satisfies the assumptions of Theorem 6.3, so there exists such that when . This proves at least that has a compact resolvent as explained above when is large. Moreover we claim that everything in the proof of Theorem 6.3 can be done continuously with respect to (even holomorphically with respect to in a neighborhood of ). More precisely, the Schwartz kernel of is locally of the form (25) where the dependence in in only in the symbol , which is continuous in . This proves first that we can choose independent of , which shows the first assertion. Second, if satisfies the assumptions of the second assertion of the Theorem, we can apply the previous consideration to and it follows that belongs to with a symbol given by (50). When is large enough, is the resolvent, so by Cauchy formula, . This concludes the proof of the second assertion.
For the last assertion, by assumption, for any fixed , is a formally self-adjoint elliptic differential operator on a compact manifold, so its spectrum is a discrete subset of and is a finite rank projector onto a subspace of , [24, Theorem 8.3]. Moreover is real valued so . So there exists satisfying the previous assumptions and such that . So belongs to .
For any odd , and , which implies by the previous argument that belongs to , so . ∎
Let us discuss briefly the convertibility and resolvent of elliptic elements of from the point of view of Weyl quantization. Let be the space of pseudodifferential operators of with a symbol in . Any acts continuously , and , where is the isotropic Sobolev spaces
When is elliptic, the following Fredholm property holds: and are finite dimensional subspaces of ,
and the generalised inverse such that and are the orthogonal projectors onto and respectively, belongs to . So is invertible in the algebra if and only if if and only if is invertible as an operator in if and only if is invertible in .
When , any elliptic defines by restriction a closed unbounded operator of with domain . By the previous characterization of invertibility, the spectrum of is the same as the spectrum of its symbol defined above. Assume it is not empty, then has a compact resolvent, and as it was already explained, is a discrete subset of and the resolvent is a holomorphic family of . Furthermore, for , the residues defined in (49) have finite rank and is a projector onto the space of generalised eigenvectors of for the eigenvalue , which is a subspace of .
7 Auxiliary bundles
Let us first define symbols taking values in an auxiliary bundle. Recall the spaces introduced in Section 2 for a real vector bundle and , , . Let be a complex vector bundle over . By definition is the space of sections such that for any frame of over an open set of , we have over ,
with coefficients in . Since is a -submodule of , this definition is compatible with the frame changes. Similarly, we define for or by requiring that the coefficients belong to . More precisely, in the case of semiclassical symbols where the section and its local coefficients depend on , we only choose frames independent of .
Let and be two complex vector bundles over and let us define the pseudodifferential operator spaces , and . For , being both the trivial line bundle, these are the spaces we introduced previously. In general, set . Then
-
•
consists of the families , satisfying the same conditions as before except that the amplitude appearing in (15) belongs to .
- •
- •
The symbol of is defined as before. Since the restriction of to the diagonal is isomorphic with , in the three cases, the symbol identifies with an element of .
The space of Heisenberg differential operators consists of the families (51) of differential operators such that for any coordinate chart of , we have on
(52) |
where , with . Here we use a connection of , which induces with the connection of a covariant derivative of . Proposition 5.1 still holds: Heisenberg differential operators are Heisenberg pseudodifferential operators, the symbol of (52) is ,
and the product of symbols is the fiberwise product tensored by the composition It is easy to see that the definition of the Heisenberg differential operators and of their symbols do not depend on the choice of the connection of .
In the sequel we assume that and is equipped with a Hermitian metric. We use the notation instead of and similarly for the other operator spaces. Our goal is to generalize Theorem 6.4 for having a symbol of the form
(53) |
where is the norm of for a Riemannian metric of not necessarily compatible with and is Hermitian at each point. Example of such operators include Schrödinger operators with magnetic field and electric potential, holomorphic Laplacians or semiclassical Dirac operators, cf. [7, Section 3]. Besides of the numerous examples, the interest of these operators is that we can compute explicitly the spectrum of the symbols
where are the eigenvalues of with respect to and are the eigenvalues of . Moreover, we have
where and are the linear coordinates of associated to a symplectic basis. So the analysis of boils down to the standard quantum harmonic oscillator or the Landau Hamiltonian .
Theorem 7.1.
Let having a symbol of the form (53) and such that for each , is formally selfadjoint for a volume element of . Assume is nondegenerate and let . Then
-
-
For any , there exists such that and when is large.
-
-
For any , belongs to .
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