The standard symplectic structure Let \{v_1, \ldots, v_{2n}\} be a basis for \R^{2n}. We define our symplectic form \omega on this basis as follows: :\omega(v_i, v_j) = \begin{cases} 1 & j-i =n \text{ with } 1 \leqslant i \leqslant n \\ -1 & i-j =n \text{ with } 1 \leqslant j \leqslant n \\ 0 & \text{otherwise} \end{cases} In this case the symplectic form reduces to a simple
quadratic form. If I_n denotes the n\times n
identity matrix then the matrix, \Omega, of this quadratic form is given by the 2n\times 2n
block matrix: :\Omega = \begin{pmatrix} 0 & I_n \\ -I_n & 0 \end{pmatrix}. That is, :\omega =\mathrm{d}x_1\wedge \mathrm{d}y_1 + \dotsb + \mathrm{d}x_n\wedge \mathrm{d}y_n. It has a fibration by Lagrangian submanifolds with fixed value of y, i.e. \{\R^n \times \{y\} : y \in \R^n\}. A Liouville form for this is \lambda=\frac{1}{2} \sum_i\left(x_i d y_i-y_i d x_i\right) and \omega=d \lambda, the Liouville vector field is Y=\frac{1}{2} \sum_i\left(x_i \partial_{x_i}+y_i \partial_{y_i}\right), the radial field. Another Liouville form is \Sigma_i x_i dy_i, with Liouville vector field Y=\sum_i x_i \partial_{x_i} .
Cotangent bundles Let Q be a smooth manifold of dimension n. Then the total space of the
cotangent bundle T^* Q has a natural symplectic form, called the Poincaré two-form or the
canonical symplectic form :\omega = \sum_{i=1}^n dp_i \wedge dq^i Here (q^1, \ldots, q^n) are any local coordinates on Q and (p_1, \ldots, p_n) are fibrewise coordinates with respect to the cotangent vectors dq^1, \ldots, dq^n. Cotangent bundles are the natural
phase spaces of classical mechanics. The point of distinguishing upper and lower indexes is driven by the case of the manifold having a
metric tensor, as is the case for
Riemannian manifolds. Upper and lower indexes transform contra and covariantly under a change of coordinate frames. The phrase "fibrewise coordinates with respect to the cotangent vectors" is meant to convey that the momenta p_i are "
soldered" to the velocities dq^i. The soldering is an expression of the idea that velocity and momentum are colinear, in that both move in the same direction, and differ by a scale factor. The tautological 1-form \lambda = \sum_i p_i dq^i has Liouville vector field Y = \sum_i p_i \partial_{p_i} , the fiberwise radial field. Its flow dilates covectors: (q, p) \mapsto\left(q, e^t p\right). The zero section of the cotangent bundle is Lagrangian. For example, let :X = \{(x,y) \in \R^2 : y^2 - x = 0\}. Then, we can present T^*X as :T^*X = \{(x,y,\mathrm{d}x,\mathrm{d}y) \in \R^4 : y^2 - x = 0, 2y\mathrm{d}y - \mathrm{d}x = 0\} where we are treating the symbols \mathrm{d}x,\mathrm{d}y as coordinates of \R^4 = T^*\R^2. We can consider the subset where the coordinates \mathrm{d}x=0 and \mathrm{d}y=0, giving us the zero section. This example can be repeated for any manifold defined by the vanishing locus of smooth functions f_1,\dotsc,f_k and their differentials \mathrm{d}f_1,\dotsc,df_k.
Kähler manifolds A
Kähler manifold is a symplectic manifold equipped with a compatible integrable complex structure. They form a particular class of
complex manifolds. A large class of examples come from complex
algebraic geometry. Any smooth complex
projective variety V \subset \mathbb{CP}^n has a symplectic form which is the restriction of the
Fubini—Study form on the
projective space \mathbb{CP}^n. A symplectic manifold endowed with a
metric that is
compatible with the symplectic form is an
almost Kähler manifold in the sense that the tangent bundle has an
almost complex structure, but this need not be
integrable.
Almost-complex manifolds Riemannian manifolds with an \omega-compatible
almost complex structure are termed
almost-complex manifolds. They generalize Kähler manifolds, in that they need not be
integrable. That is, they do not necessarily arise from a complex structure on the manifold.
Special Lagrangian submanifolds The graph of a
symplectomorphism in the product symplectic manifold is Lagrangian. Their intersections display rigidity properties not possessed by smooth manifolds; the
Arnold conjecture gives the sum of the submanifold's
Betti numbers as a lower bound for the number of self intersections of a smooth Lagrangian submanifold, rather than the
Euler characteristic in the smooth case. In the case of
Kähler manifolds (or
Calabi–Yau manifolds) we can make a choice \Omega=\Omega_1+\mathrm{i}\Omega_2 on M as a holomorphic n-form, where \Omega_1 is the real part and \Omega_2 imaginary. A Lagrangian submanifold L is called
special if in addition to the above Lagrangian condition the restriction \Omega_2 to L is vanishing. In other words, the real part \Omega_1 restricted on L leads the volume form on L. The following examples are known as special Lagrangian submanifolds, • complex Lagrangian submanifolds of
hyperkähler manifolds, • fixed points of a real structure of Calabi–Yau manifolds. In
Morse theory, given a
Morse function f:M\to\R and for a small enough \varepsilon one can construct a Lagrangian submanifold given by the vanishing locus \mathbb{V}(\varepsilon\cdot \mathrm{d}f) \subset T^*M. For a generic Morse function we have a Lagrangian intersection given by M \cap \mathbb{V}(\varepsilon\cdot \mathrm{d}f) = \text{Crit}(f). The
SYZ conjecture deals with the study of special Lagrangian submanifolds in
mirror symmetry; see . The
Thomas–Yau conjecture predicts that the existence of a special Lagrangian submanifolds on Calabi–Yau manifolds in Hamiltonian isotopy classes of Lagrangians is equivalent to stability with respect to a
stability condition on the
Fukaya category of the manifold. == Generalizations ==