Mathematically, branes can be described using the notion of a
category. This is a mathematical structure consisting of
objects, and for any pair of objects, a set of
morphisms between them. In most examples, the objects are mathematical structures (such as
sets,
vector spaces, or
topological spaces) and the morphisms are
functions between these structures. One can likewise consider categories where the objects are D-branes and the morphisms between two branes \alpha and \beta are
states of open strings stretched between \alpha and \beta. In one version of string theory known as the
topological B-model, the D-branes are
complex submanifolds of certain six-dimensional shapes called
Calabi–Yau manifolds, together with additional data that arise physically from having
charges at the endpoints of strings. Intuitively, one can think of a submanifold as a surface embedded inside of a Calabi–Yau manifold, although submanifolds can also exist in dimensions different from two. In mathematical language, the category having these branes as its objects is known as the
derived category of
coherent sheaves on the Calabi–Yau. In another version of string theory called the
topological A-model, the D-branes can again be viewed as submanifolds of a Calabi–Yau manifold. Roughly speaking, they are what mathematicians call
special Lagrangian submanifolds. This means, among other things, that they have half the dimension of the space in which they sit, and they are length-, area-, or volume-minimizing. The category having these branes as its objects is called the
Fukaya category. The derived category of coherent sheaves is constructed using tools from
complex geometry, a branch of mathematics that describes geometric shapes in
algebraic terms and solves geometric problems using
algebraic equations. On the other hand, the Fukaya category is constructed using
symplectic geometry, a branch of mathematics that arose from studies of
classical physics. Symplectic geometry studies spaces equipped with a
symplectic form, a mathematical tool that can be used to compute
area in two-dimensional examples. The
homological mirror symmetry conjecture of
Maxim Kontsevich states that the derived category of coherent sheaves on one Calabi–Yau manifold is equivalent in a certain sense to the Fukaya category of a completely different Calabi–Yau manifold. This equivalence provides an unexpected bridge between two branches of geometry, namely complex and symplectic geometry. == See also ==