Skip to content
/ mf Public

Computing with matrix factorisations

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

dmurfet/mf

Repository files navigation

mf

This project is a Singular library for computing with matrix factorisations, mathematical objects appearing in singularity theory and topological field theory. Features include:

  • Computing Khovanov-Rozansky knot homology (linkhom.lib)
  • Fusion of defects in Landau-Ginzburg models (blow.lib,mfweb.lib,blownew.lib)
  • Fusion of equivariant defects in Landau-Ginzburg models (blowequiv.lib)

The code was written by Nils Carqueville and Daniel Murfet as part of the paper "Computing Khovanov-Rozansky homology and defect fusion". Other contributors are most welcome! If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to get in touch.

Updates:

  • 2/11/2020 - new fusion code (blownew.lib) which computes Atiyah classes for arbitrary potentials without reduction to a system of parameters given by powers of ring variables (which was done in the old blow.lib code). Based on this there is a new library blowequiv.lib for fusing equivariant defects, see examples/blow-equiv.example.txt for demos.
  • 16/10/2020 - code and examples checked against current version of Singular (4.1.0).

Installation & Usage

First you need a working installation of the commutative algebra package Singular. Singular is available for Linux, Windows and Mac OS X and is easy to install. Then you should either clone this git repository onto your local machine, or download it as a ZIP file.

From within the folder containing this repository, run Singular. You will see a welcome screen like this:

                     SINGULAR                                 /
 A Computer Algebra System for Polynomial Computations       /   version 4.0.1
                                                           0<
 by: W. Decker, G.-M. Greuel, G. Pfister, H. Schoenemann     \   Sep 2014
FB Mathematik der Universitaet, D-67653 Kaiserslautern        \

At this point you can start cutting and pasting into the Singular shell from the files in the folder examples of this repository. In examples/examples.txt and examples/blow-example.txt you will find examples relating to defect fusion (i.e. functors between categories of matrix factorisations) while in examples/linkhom-example.txt you will find examples of Khovanov-Rozansky homology calculations.

Here is an extract from examples.txt which shows the canonical way to compute fusions using the library:

////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Example of defect fusion using webCompilePair
////////////////////////////////////////////////

// For the fusion of defects with boundary conditions, or defect-defect fusion
// (i.e. convolution of matrix factorisation "kernels") we use webCompilePair,
// which takes as input an oriented graph (called a "web") whose edges are
// decorated with potentials (i.e. the equation of an isolated singularity) and
// whose vertices are decorated with matrix factorisations. The output is a finite
// rank matrix factorisation homotopy equivalent to the "total factorisation" of
// the web. All these terms are defined more precisely in the preamble of mfweb.lib
// and the paper arXiv: 1108.1081, but let us proceed to the example.
//
// The web has two vertices (marked with X,Y) and two edges (marked x^3, y^5)
//
//    X ---- x^3 ----> Y ---- y^5 ---->
//
// Here the second edge (labelled with y^5) goes to the boundary.
//
// For this to be a valid web, Y needs to be a matrix factorisation of y^5 - x^3
// (i.e. outgoing potential minus incoming potential) while X needs to be a matrix
// factorisation of x^3. The total factorisation is Y \otimes X, as a matrix
// factorisation of y^5 over the variables y. This is infinite rank but is
// homotopy equivalent to a finite rank matrix factorisation.
//
// This finite rank matrix factorisation is, by definition, the image of
// X \in hmf(x^3) under the functor hmf(x^3) --> hmf(y^5) induced
// by the kernel Y. Let us compute this finite rank guy now. Then we will move
// onto more complicated examples.

option(noredefine);option(noloadLib);option(redSB);
LIB "mfweb.lib";
ring rr=0,(x,y),dp;

// We encode the web given above as a pair of edges, and a pair of vertices.
// Format for an edge is (source, target, variable, potential). Start indexing
// your vertices at 1, since 0 stands for the boundary.
list e1 = list(1,2,list(x),x^3);
list e2 = list(2,0,list(y),y^5);
list edgeList = list(e1,e2);

// Now define the mfs X,Y to be placed at each vertex 
matrix X[2][2] = 0, x^2, x, 0;

matrix Y0[2][2] = -x, y, -y^4, x^2;
matrix Y1[2][2] = x^2, -y, y^4, -x;
matrix z[2][2];
matrix Y = blockmat(z,Y1,Y0,z);

list mfs = X, Y;

// Define the web
list web = list(2, edgeList, mfs); // 2 for the number of vertices
webVerify(web);

// The compilation of this web is the fusion of Y with X. 
list compStrat = defaultCompStratForWeb(web);
list L = webCompilePair(web, compStrat);
print(L[1]);

// The answer is a direct sum of two copies of the Koszul factorisation (y,y^4)

For an explanation of the mathematics behind this code, see Dyckerhoff-Murfet and Murfet. There is also extensive documentation within the libraries themselves, see blow.lib, mfweb.lib and linkhom.lib.

About

Computing with matrix factorisations

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 3

  •  
  •  
  •