Six-dimensional holomorphic Chern–Simons theory


In mathematical physics, six-dimensional holomorphic Chern–Simons theory or sometimes holomorphic Chern–Simons theory is a gauge theory on a three-dimensional complex manifold. It is a complex analogue of Chern–Simons theory, named after Shiing-Shen Chern and James Simons who first studied Chern–Simons forms which appear in the action of Chern–Simons theory. The theory is referred to as six-dimensional as the underlying manifold of the theory is three-dimensional as a complex manifold, hence six-dimensional as a real manifold.
The theory has been used to study integrable systems through four-dimensional Chern–Simons theory, which can be viewed as a symmetry reduction of the six-dimensional theory. For this purpose, the underlying three-dimensional complex manifold is taken to be the three-dimensional complex projective space, viewed as twistor space.

Formulation

The background manifold on which the theory is defined is a complex manifold which has three complex dimensions and therefore six real dimensions. The theory is a gauge theory with gauge group a complex, simple Lie group The field content is a partial connection.
The action is
where
where is a holomorphic (3,0)-form and with denoting a trace functional which as a bilinear form is proportional to the Killing form.

On twistor space P3

Here is fixed to be. For application to integrable theory, the three form must be chosen to be meromorphic.