nLab
superdifferential form

Contents

Idea

The notion of superdifferential form is the generalization of the notion of differential form from manifolds to supermanifolds.

Definition

Ordinary differential forms on a manifold X may be regarded as the functions on the supermanifold called the shifted tangent bundle

Ω (X)=C (T[1]X).\Omega^\bullet(X) = C^\infty(T[1] X) \,.

The notion of shifted tangent bundle makes sense also when X itself was already a supermanifold. Superdifferential forms on a supermanifold X are similarly the algebra of functions on the shifted tangent bundle T[1]X.

Another way to think of superdifferential forms is using the perspective of Lie theory:

For X a supermanifold with function algebra C (X), the qDGCA Ω (X) of differential forms on X is the Weil algebra of C (X), (regarded as a 2-graded dg-algebra).

Examples

Let X= 11. The superalgebra of functions on X is the exterior algebra that is generated over C (R) from a single generator θ in odd degree (the canonical odd coordinate).

The algebra of superdifferential forms on 11 is the exterior algebra generated over C () from

  • a generator θ in odd degree (the canonical odd coordinate);

  • a generator dx in odd degree (the differential of the canonical even coordinate);

  • a generator dθ in even degree (the differential of the canonical odd coordinate).

Notice in particular that while dxdx=0 the wedge product dθdθ is non-vanishing, since dθ is in even degree. In fact al higher wedge powers of dθ with itself exist.

Remarks

  • Being a 2-graded locally free algebra itself, one can regard Ω (X) itself (even for X a usual manifold!) as the “algebra of functions” (more precisely inner hom, i.e. mapping space into the line) on another supermanifold. That supermanifold is called T[1]X, the shifted tangent bundle of X. By definition we have C (T[1]X)=Ω (X). From this point of view, the existence of the differential d on the graded algebra Ω (X) translates into the existence of a special odd vector field on T[1]X. This is a homological vector field in that it is odd and the super Lie bracket of it with itself vanishes: [d,d]=0.

  • In the context of NQ-supermanifolds, where one may regard C (X) as the Chevalley-Eilenberg algebra of an L -algebroid it is useful to notice that Ω (X) is the corresponding Weil algebra. If X is a Lie n-algebroid then T[1]X is a Lie (n+1)-algebroid.