Mathematical Physics
[Submitted on 7 Apr 2018 (v1), last revised 30 Jun 2018 (this version, v2)]
Title:Hodge and Prym tau functions, Jenkins-Strebel differentials and combinatorial model of $\mathcal M_{g,n}$
View PDFAbstract:The principal goal of the paper is to apply the approach inspired by the theory of integrable systems to construct explicit sections of line bundles over the combinatorial model of the moduli space of pointed Riemann surfaces based on Jenkins-Strebel differentials. The line bundles are tensor products of the determinants of the Hodge or Prym vector bundles with the standard tautological line bundles $\mathcal L_j$ and the sections are constructed in terms of tau functions. The combinatorial model is interpreted as the real slice of a complex analytic moduli space of quadratic differentials where the phase of each tau-function provides a section of a circle bundle. The phase of the ratio of the Prym and Hodge tau functions gives a section of the $\kappa_1$-circle bundle.
By evaluating the increment of the phase around co-dimension $2$ sub-complexes, we identify the Poincaré\ dual cycles to the Chern classes of the corresponding line bundles: they are expressed explicitly as combination of Witten's cycle $W_5$ and Kontsevich's boundary. This provides combinatorial analogues of Mumford's relations on $\mathcal M_{g,n}$ and Penner's relations in the hyperbolic combinatorial model. The free homotopy classes of loops around $W_5$ are interpreted as pentagon moves while those of loops around Kontsevich's boundary as combinatorial Dehn twists.
Throughout the paper we exploit the classical description of the combinatorial model in terms of Jenkins--Strebel differentials, parametrized in terms of {\it homological coordinates}; we also show that they provide Darboux coordinates for the symplectic structure introduced by Kontsevich. We also express the latter in clear geometric terms as the intersection pairing in the odd homology of the canonical double cover.
Submission history
From: Marco Bertola [view email][v1] Sat, 7 Apr 2018 03:09:47 UTC (619 KB)
[v2] Sat, 30 Jun 2018 06:15:28 UTC (620 KB)
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