In this section we recall the objects of interest in the nonabelian Hodge theorem.
Higgs bundles A
Higgs bundle over a compact Kähler manifold (X,\omega) is a pair (E,\Phi) where E\to X is a
holomorphic vector bundle and \Phi: E\to E\otimes \boldsymbol{\Omega}^1 is an \operatorname{End}(E)-valued holomorphic (1,0)-form on X, called the
Higgs field. Additionally, the Higgs field must satisfy \Phi\wedge\Phi = 0. A Higgs bundle is
(semi-)stable if, for every proper, non-zero
coherent subsheaf \mathcal{F}\subset E which is preserved by the Higgs field, so that \Phi(\mathcal{F})\subset \mathcal{F}\otimes \boldsymbol{\Omega}^1, one has \frac{\deg (\mathcal{F})}{\operatorname{rank}(\mathcal{F})} This rational number is called the
slope, denoted \mu(E), and the above definition mirrors that of a
stable vector bundle. A Higgs bundle is
polystable if it is a direct sum of stable Higgs bundles of the same slope, and is therefore semi-stable.
Hermitian Yang–Mills connections and Hitchin's equations The generalisation of Hitchin's equation to higher dimension can be phrased as an analog of the
Hermitian Yang–Mills equations for a certain connection constructed out of the pair (E,\Phi). A
Hermitian metric h on a Higgs bundle (E,\Phi) gives rise to a
Chern connection \nabla_A and curvature F_A. The condition that \Phi is holomorphic can be phrased as \bar \partial_A \Phi = 0. Hitchin's equations, on a compact Riemann surface, state that \begin{cases} &F_A + [\Phi, \Phi^*] = \lambda \operatorname{Id}_E\\ &\bar\partial_A \Phi = 0 \end{cases} for a constant \lambda = -2\pi i \mu(E). In higher dimensions these equations generalise as follows. Define a connection D on E by D = \nabla_A + \Phi + \Phi^*. This connection is said to be a
Hermitian Yang–Mills connection (and the metric a
Hermitian Yang–Mills metric) if \Lambda_{\omega} F_D = \lambda \operatorname{Id}_E. This reduces to Hitchin's equations for a compact Riemann surface. Note that the connection D is not a Hermitian Yang–Mills connection in the usual sense, as it is not unitary, and the above condition is a non-unitary analogue of the normal HYM condition.
Representations of the fundamental group and harmonic metrics A representation of the fundamental group \rho\colon \pi_1(X) \to \operatorname{GL}(r,\Complex) gives rise to a vector bundle with flat connection as follows. The
universal cover \hat{X} of X is a
principal bundle over X with structure group \pi_1(X). Thus there is an
associated bundle to \hat{X} given by E = \hat{X} \times_{\rho} \Complex^r. This vector bundle comes naturally equipped with a flat connection D. If h is a Hermitian metric on E, define an operator D_h'' as follows. Decompose D=\partial + \bar \partial into operators of type (1,0) and (0,1), respectively. Let A' be the unique operator of type (1,0) such that the (1,0)-connection A'+\bar \partial preserves the metric h. Define \Phi = (\partial - A')/2, and set D_h
= \bar \partial + \Phi. Define the pseudocurvature of h to be G_h = (D_h)^2. The metric h is said to be
harmonic if \Lambda_{\omega} G_h = 0. Notice that the condition G_h=0 is equivalent to the three conditions \bar\partial^2 = 0, \bar\partial \Phi = 0, \Phi \wedge \Phi = 0, so if G_h=0 then the pair (E,\Phi) defines a Higgs bundle with holomorphic structure on E given by the
Dolbeault operator \bar\partial. It is a result of Corlette that if h is harmonic, then it automatically satisfies G_h=0 and so gives rise to a Higgs bundle.
Moduli spaces To each of the three concepts: Higgs bundles, flat connections, and representations of the fundamental group, one can define a
moduli space. This requires a notion of isomorphism between these objects. In the following, fix a smooth complex vector bundle E. Every Higgs bundle will be considered to have the underlying smooth vector bundle E. •
(Higgs bundles) The group of complex
gauge transformations \mathcal{G}^{\Complex} acts on the set \mathcal{H} of Higgs bundles by the formula g\cdot (E,\Phi) = (g\cdot E, g\Phi g^{-1}). If \mathcal{H}^{ss} and \mathcal{H}^s denote the subsets of semistable and stable Higgs bundles, respectively, then one obtains moduli spaces M_{Dol}^{ss} := \mathcal{H}^{ss} // \mathcal{G}^{\mathcal{C}},\qquad M_{Dol}^{s} := \mathcal{H}^s / \mathcal{G}^{\mathcal{C}} where these quotients are taken in the sense of
geometric invariant theory, so orbits whose closures intersect are identified in the moduli space. These moduli spaces are called the
Dolbeault moduli spaces. Notice that by setting \Phi = 0, one obtains as subsets the moduli spaces of semi-stable and stable holomorphic vector bundles N_{Dol}^{ss} \subset M_{Dol}^{ss} and N_{Dol}^s \subset M_{Dol}^s. It is also true that if one defines the moduli space M_{Dol}^{ps} of polystable Higgs bundles then this space is isomorphic to the space of semi-stable Higgs bundles, as every gauge orbit of semi-stable Higgs bundles contains in its closure a unique orbit of polystable Higgs bundles. •
(Flat connections) The group complex gauge transformations also acts on the set \mathcal{A} of flat connections \nabla on the smooth vector bundle E. Define the moduli spaces M_{dR} := \mathcal{A}//\mathcal{G}^{\mathcal{C}},\qquad M_{dR}^* := \mathcal{A}^* / \mathcal{G}^{\mathcal{C}}, where \mathcal{A}^* denotes the subset consisting of irreducible flat connections \nabla which do not split as a direct sum \nabla = \nabla_1 \oplus \nabla_2 on some splitting E=E_1\oplus E_2 of the smooth vector bundle E. These moduli spaces are called the
de Rham moduli spaces. •
(Representations) The set of representations \operatorname{Hom}(\pi_1(X), \operatorname{GL}(r, \Complex)) of the fundamental group of X is acted on by the general linear group by conjugation of representations. Denote by the superscripts + and * the subsets consisting of
semisimple representations and
irreducible representations respectively. Then define moduli spaces M_{B}^+ = \operatorname{Hom}^+(\pi_1(X), \operatorname{GL}(r, \Complex)) // G,\qquad M_{B}^* = \operatorname{Hom}^*(\pi_1(X), \operatorname{GL}(r, \Complex)) / G of semisimple and irreducible representations, respectively. These quotients are taken in the sense of
geometric invariant theory, where two orbits are identified if their closures intersect. These moduli spaces are called the
Betti moduli spaces. == Statement ==