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. 2020 Oct 13;380(1):449–522. doi: 10.1007/s00220-020-03876-0

Super Quantum Airy Structures

Vincent Bouchard 1, Paweł Ciosmak 2, Leszek Hadasz 3, Kento Osuga 4,, Błażej Ruba 3, Piotr Sułkowski 5,6
PMCID: PMC7584568  PMID: 33122863

Abstract

We introduce super quantum Airy structures, which provide a supersymmetric generalization of quantum Airy structures. We prove that to a given super quantum Airy structure one can assign a unique set of free energies, which satisfy a supersymmetric generalization of the topological recursion. We reveal and discuss various properties of these supersymmetric structures, in particular their gauge transformations, classical limit, peculiar role of fermionic variables, and graphical representation of recursion relations. Furthermore, we present various examples of super quantum Airy structures, both finite-dimensional—which include well known superalgebras and super Frobenius algebras, and whose classification scheme we also discuss—as well as infinite-dimensional, that arise in the realm of vertex operator super algebras.

Introduction

In recent years we have learnt that solutions to a plethora of problems in physics and mathematics that involve some form of quantization arise from a universal system of recursive equations, referred to as the Chekhov–Eynard–Orantin topological recursion [24, 37, 38]. The topological recursion was originally discovered in the realm of matrix models as a way of solving loop equations, which enables computation of the free energy to all orders in the large N expansion, based on the information encoded in the spectral curve of the matrix model [24]. Soon after, Eynard and Orantin realized that the topological recursion can be formulated independently of matrix models, as a tool that assigns symplectic invariants to a large class of algebraic curves (which play the role of spectral curves in the context of matrix models) [37, 38]. More recently, a more general and abstract reformulation of the topological recursion was provided in the form of quantum Airy structures [4, 47, 52, 62] (see also the lecture notes [10]).

To date, the study of the topological recursion proceeded along two (of course interrelated) main lines. First, various generalizations thereof have been discovered, such as those mentioned above, as well as its β-deformed version [25], the formulation for curves with higher ramifications and the global version [14, 17], the blobbed version [13], the geometric recursion [5], etc. Second, a lot of effort has been put in identifying various systems and problems whose solutions are captured by the topological recursion. This led to the simplification or better understanding of the structure of previous solutions, or to new solutions of those problems. The topological recursion turned out to play such a role in areas such as topological strings and Gromov–Witten theory [18, 22, 34, 40, 41], the theory of quantum curves [15, 46, 58], knot theory [12, 29], Hurwitz theory [2, 16, 19, 31, 36], just to name a few.

The main aim of this paper is to follow the first line of research mentioned above, and to introduce a supersymmetric generalization of quantum Airy structures, which we call super quantum Airy structures. After defining a super quantum Airy structure, as in the original (non-supersymmetric) case we assign to it free energies, and prove their existence and uniqueness. We write down recursion relations satisfied by these free energies: these recursion relations generalize the original (non-supersymmetric) topological recursion. Among various interesting features of super quantum Airy structures, we reveal a peculiar role played by fermionic variables. We provide several finite- and infinite-dimensional examples of super quantum Airy structures, and hint how their classification could be conducted. Furthermore, we expect that super quantum Airy structures should have interesting applications in various contexts, which we briefly mention in what follows.1

In view of the matrix model origin of the (non-supersymmetric) topological recursion and its reformulation in terms of quantum Airy structures, one may expect similar connections in the supersymmetric context. However, such relations are obscure, even though corresponding supersymmetric structures in matrix models are known. Indeed, supersymmetric generalizations of matrix models, referred to supereigenvalue models, have been introduced and discussed some time ago [3, 8], and also more recently [20, 2628, 61]. By construction, loop equations for such supereigenvalue models can be rewritten in the form of super-Virasoro constraints. This generalizes the reformulation of loop equations in terms of Virasoro constraints in the non-supersymmetric case, and thus one might hope that super-Virasoro constraints for supereigenvalue models lead immediately to supersymmetric topological recursion. However, in [20, 61] it was shown that such a generalization is not automatic: one can indeed write down a recursive system that determines the partition function of a supereigenvalue model, but it is augmented by an auxiliary equation, which does not have a simple interpretation. In a sense, this makes the super quantum Airy structures that we introduce here even more interesting, and revealing their meaning in the context of supereigenvalue models is an important task.

A similar situation arises in the context of quantum curves. On the one hand, for large classes of spectral curves it was shown that the topological recursion can be used to reconstruct the wave-function associated to a given classical curve, and at the same time the corresponding quantum curve [15, 46, 58]. On the other hand, various types of supersymmetric quantum curves (also called super quantum curves) have been constructed recently in the formalism of supereigenvalue models, and reinterpreted from the conformal field theory point of view [2628]. Therefore one might expect that super quantum Airy structures provide a more general framework to construct super quantum curves, and to develop their theory further. We hope to address this issue in future work.

Super quantum Airy structures may also have interesting connections with various problems in enumerative geometry: we postpone this analysis for future work. They may be related to enumerative problems involving odd cohomology classes, such as Gromov–Witten theory of non-singular target curves. For instance, in [60] Okounkov and Pandharipande show that these invariants are encoded in a set of bosonic and fermionic operators forming a representation of a super-Virasoro algebra. These operators could potentially be related to super quantum Airy structures.

Super quantum Airy structures could also play a role in the theory surrounding Mirzakhani’s recursion relations for the Weil–Petersson volumes of the moduli spaces of Riemann surfaces [55]. In the non-supersymmetric case, it was shown that Mirzakhani’s recursion relations can be transformed into the form of the topological recursion [39, 57], which plays a fundamental role in the connection between Jackiw–Teitelboim (JT) gravity and matrix models [63]. Very recently, Stanford and Witten generalized this fascinating story to the supersymmetric realm [64]. In the process, they found a generalization of Mirzakhani’s recursion relations to the volumes of the moduli spaces of super Riemann surfaces. Those new recursion relations could presumably be related to the supersymmetric topological recursion that we present here, and the corresponding super quantum Airy structures.

We discuss many more open problems and potential applications of super quantum Airy structures in Section 5, which we believe deserve further investigation.

Outline

The plan of this paper is as follows. In Section 2 we define super quantum Airy structures, and prove the existence and uniqueness of the corresponding free energies. We also show that these free energies satisfy a recursion relation, which is a supersymmetric version of the bosonic topological recursion, and we provide its graphical interpretation. We also introduce and discuss gauge transformations and the classical limit of super quantum Airy structures.

In Section 3 we present several finite-dimensional examples of super quantum Airy structures. We also discuss a classification scheme for such finite-dimensional structures. We illustrate this discussion by presenting the osp(1|2) example, and conclude this section by constructing super quantum Airy structures from super Frobenius algebras.

In Section 4 we construct examples of infinite-dimensional super quantum Airy structures. The construction follows along the lines of [11, 54]. We construct our examples as untwisted and Z2-twisted representations for the free boson–fermion vertex operator super algebra (VOSA). In the process, we also generalize slightly the bosonic construction of [11], by considering larger families of subalgebras of the algebra of modes to construct our quantum Airy structures (from the point of view of vertex operator algebras, this should be related to the construction of Whittaker modules for the (super-)Virasoro algebra). As a byproduct, we obtain a realization of the “topological recursion without branched covers” of [4] in terms of untwisted representations for the free boson vertex operator algebra.

We conclude the paper with Section 5, where we list several open problems and potential applications of super quantum Airy structures. Finally, for completeness we provide a computational proof of existence of the free energies associated to a super quantum Airy structure in “Appendix A”.

Super Quantum Airy Structures

In this section we define super quantum Airy structures. We associate to them a unique free energy, which can be calculated recursively. We study their classical limits, and explain how super quantum Airy structures can be obtained as quantizations of super classical Airy structures. We also provide a graphical interpretation for the recursive computation of the free energy associated to a super quantum Airy structure.

Definition of Super Quantum Airy Structures

Quantum Airy structures were introduced in [4, 52] (see also [10]) as an abstract framework underlying the Chekhov–Eynard–Orantin topological recursion [24, 37, 38]. Just as the Chekhov–Eynard–Orantin topological recursion can be generalized to spectral curves with arbitrary ramification [14, 17], quantum Airy structures admit a natural generalization as higher quantum Airy structures: those were studied in [11].2 In this section, we propose a further generalization, by introducing fermionic degrees of freedom.

Background and Notation

The starting point of quantum Airy structures is a vector space V, with dimension either finite or countably infinite,3 over K=R or C. We introduce fermionic degrees of freedom by considering instead a super vector space V: that is, a Z2-graded vector space V. We denote the even and odd subspaces of V by V0 and V1, and elements of V0 and V1 will be called respectively even and odd. We write |v|=α for the parity of homogeneous elements vVα, α=0,1.

We will only use bases composed of homogeneous elements. For a basis {xi}iI in V, we denote by {yi}iI the corresponding dual set in V=HomK(V,K). Here, I={1,2,} is a (possibly countably infinite) index set. We abbreviate |i|=|xi|.

Remark 2.1

In order to distinguish the Z2-grading on V from a Z-grading of different structures that will appear in what follows, we denote the latter ones with a superscript. For instance, for any Z-graded superalgebra A we have:

A=nZAn, 2.1a
An·AmAn+m. 2.1b

We also define An=mnAm and An=mnAm. For any aA we write a=nan with anAn. Moreover we set an=mnam and an=mnam.

We define K[V,ħ] as the space of all polynomials in xi and ħ. Similarly, we let Wħ(V) be the space of differential operators which can be written as a sum of finitely many terms of the form

ħm+kxi1xinci1inj1jmj1jm, 2.2

where for each fixed j1,...,jm there exist finitely many i1,...,in such that cin...i1jm...j10.4 This condition does not depend on the choice of basis. It is equivalent to the statement that the set of coefficients c represents an element of Hom(Vm,Vn).

We introduce a Z-grading on Wħ(V) by declaring an expression of the form (2.2) to be homogeneous of degree n+m+2k. In particular we have

deg(xi)=1,deg(ħi)=1,deg(ħ)=2. 2.3

The same rule defines a grading on the space K[V,ħ].

So far we have defined the space Wħ(V) of differential operators acting on K[V,ħ]. An element of Wħ(V) may be written as a sum of finitely many terms of the form (2.2). We will also need to consider formal series in variables ħ,xi, and act on these with operators which are infinite sums of terms of the form (2.2). In order to define this precisely, we will introduce a topology on K[V,ħ].

Let R be a ring and IR an ideal. We define on R the I-adic topology by declaring the collection {In}n=0 to be the neighbourhood basis of zero. With this topology R is a topological ring.5 It satisfies the Hausdorff axiom if and only if n=0In={0}.

Using this notion we equip K[V,ħ] with a K[V,ħ]1-adic topology and denote its completion with respect to this topology by K[[V,ħ]].

Example 2.2

To see explicitly what this means, let’s take the simplest example: VK. Consider the algebra K[V] of polynomials in x together with the ideal I=K[V]1 of polynomials with vanishing constant term. The difference of two polynomials p,qK[V] belongs to In+1 if p(x) and q(x) agree up to the term of the order xn. The space K[[V]] obtained by completing K[V] with respect to the I-adic topology contains, besides polynomials, also formal power series in x.

Wħ(V) can now be regarded as a space of operators on K[[V,ħ]] and endowed with the topology of pointwise convergence. This means that a generalized sequence Tα in Wħ(V) converges to an element T if and only if for every fK[[V,ħ]] we have TαfTf in K[[V,ħ]]. We claim that with this topology, multiplication on Wħ(V) is continuous. Indeed, let Tα and Sα be two generalized sequences in Wħ(V), with TαT and SαS. Choose fK[[V,ħ]]. We have

(SαTα-ST)f=Sα(T-Tα)f+(Sα-S)Tf. 2.4

By definition, (Sα-S)Tf0. Now given an nN, there exists α0 such that (T-Tα)f belongs to K[[V,ħ]]n for αα0. Then also Sα(T-Tα)fK[[V,ħ]]n for αα0, so (SαTα-ST)f0. Since f was arbitrary, we obtain SαTαST. Continuity of multiplication on Wħ(V) guarantees that it extends uniquely to a continuous multiplication on the completion, which will be denoted by Wħ^(V). Explicitly, one has TS=limnTnSn=n=0k=0nTkSn-k for T,SWħ^(V).

Super Quantum Airy Structures

We are now ready to define super quantum Airy structures. To this end, let us introduce a little more notation. Let V be a super vector space. As above, we choose a basis {xi}iI in V, with I={1,2,}, and the corresponding dual set {yi}iI in V. Let V~=VK0|1. We let x0 be a basis for K0|1. In other words, V~ has one more fermionic dimension than V.

To clearly distinguish between V and V~, we denote indices which take value in the set {0,1,2,} by small letters from the beginning of the alphabet, i.e. a,b,c,d=0,1,2,, while the indices denoted by letters from the “middle” of the alphabet, ijk,  take values in the set I={1,2,}. Consequently, we denote by {xa}a0 a basis in V~=K0|1V.

Definition 2.3

Let V be a super vector space, and V~=VK0|1. A super quantum Airy structure is a pair (VL), with L:VWħ^(V~) an even (that is, grade-preserving) continuous linear operator such that:

  1. The left ideal LWħ^(V) generated by L(V) is involutive, i.e. [L,L]ħ·L,

  2. L(yi)1=ħi.

Here [·,·] is the super-commutator, which for two homogeneous elements v,vV is given by

[L(v),L(v)]=L(v)L(v)-(-1)|v||v|L(v)L(v). 2.5

It is convenient to abbreviate Li=L(yi). The condition (1) guarantees that

[Li,Lj]=ħfijkLk 2.6

for some elements fijkWħ^(V). Continuity of L implies that for fixed k there are only finitely many ij such that fijk0. It also follows from continuity of L that all L(ϕ) are determined by Li

L(ϕ)=limJPfin(I)jJϕ(xj)Lj, 2.7

where Pfin(I) is the set of all finite subsets of I, ordered by inclusion.

Remark 2.4

We note that in the definition of super quantum Airy structures, the domain is the super vector space V, while the image consists of differential operators acting on the space K[[V~,ħ]], where V~=VK0|1. In other words, the linear operator L acts on a space with one more fermionic dimension than V. That is, the operators {Li}i1 can depend on the extra fermionic variable x0, but there is no operator L0. This possibility is a peculiar feature of super quantum Airy structures, which is not present for traditional quantum Airy structures. It turns out to be crucial in many interesting examples of super quantum Airy structures.

Remark 2.5

We remark that in the particular case where L(V)Wħ^(V)Wħ^(V~) (i.e. the Li do not depend on the extra fermionic variable x0 in V~), and V=V0 (V is an even vector space with no fermionic dimension), Definition 2.3 becomes the standard definition of higher Airy structures of [11]. We will call such super quantum Airy structures bosonic.

The definition 2.3 is rather general, as it allows operators that are infinite sums of terms of the form (2.2), and also differential operators of infinite order. Nonetheless, in practice we will mostly consider finite order differential operators.

Definition 2.6

Let (VL) be a super quantum Airy structure. If L(ϕ)Wħ^(V~)n for some positive integer n, we call the smallest such n the order of L. If n=2, we say that the super quantum Airy structure is quadratic. If there is no such n, we say that the super quantum Airy structure has infinite order.

We will also be interested in the particular case of super quantum Airy structures where the stronger requirement that the Li themselves span a Lie superalgebra is satisfied, instead of the milder constraint (1) in Definition 2.3.

Definition 2.7

We say that a super quantum Airy structure (VL) is subalgebraic if the stronger requirement that [L(V),L(V)]ħ·L(V) is satisfied. In other words, the Li span a Lie superalgebra.

Condition [L(V),L(V)]ħ·L(V) is equivalent to existence of fijkK such that

[Li,Lj]=ħfijkLk. 2.8

Continuity of L implies that for fixed k there are finitely many ij, such that fijk0. This means that if we endow V with the discrete topology, and V with the topology of pointwise convergence, then the expression [yi,yj]=fijkyk extends uniquely to a continuous Lie bracket on V.

In some cases we will also be interested in restricting to super quantum Airy structures such that the Li can be written as finite sums of terms of the form (2.2). That is, we want to consider the particular case where the Li are in Wħ(V~).

Lemma 2.8

Let (VL) be a super quantum Airy structure with L(V)Wħ(V~). Then there exists nN such that L(V)Wħ(V~)n for some n.

Proof

Each Li is an element of Wħ(V~), so it is actually in Wħ(V~)ni for some ni. Suppose that ni are not uniformly bounded. Then for ϕV such that ϕ(xi)=1 for all i the right-hand side of (2.7) is manifestly divergent. Contradiction. Hence there is an nN such that LiWħ(V~)n for each i. Since Wħ(V~)n is closed in Wħ(V~), the result follows from the formula (2.7).

Remark 2.9

With all these definitions, we recover the original definition of quantum Airy structures in [4, 52] as the particular case of a super quantum Airy structure that is bosonic (there is no fermionic variable), quadratic (LiWħ(V)2), and subalgebraic ([L(V),L(V)]ħ·L(V)). Note that we do not require that V is finite-dimensional.

Free Energy and Partition Function

Perhaps the most important reason to study quantum Airy structures is that one can assign to them a unique free energy, which for special choice of Li turns out to be a generating function for some interesting enumerative invariants [4, 10, 11, 52]. In this section we generalize this construction to super quantum Airy structures.

To every super quantum Airy structure we assign a partition function Z(x)=eF(x)ħ, with free energy F(x)V~·K[[V~,ħ]]03, which is defined, loosely speaking, as a solution to the equation

Li·Z(x)=0. 2.9

The requirement that F(x)V~·K[[V~,ħ]]03 means that:

  • F(x) is a formal power series in the variables xa and ħ with no term independent of the xa;

  • F(x) is even with respect to the Z2-grading;

  • F(x) only has terms of degree 3 with respect to the Z-grading.

Following [52] we will demonstrate that there is a unique such Z(x). To this end it is useful to reformulate (2.9) slightly.

Every FV~·K[[V~,ħ]]03 induces a continuous automorphism

Wħ^(V~)DψF(D)=n=01n!-1ħ[F,·]n(D)Wħ^(V~). 2.10

In particular acting on topological generators6 of Wħ^(V~) one gets:

ψF(ħ)=ħ, 2.11a
ψF(xa)=xa, 2.11b
ψF(ħa)=ħa+aF. 2.11c

Since -1ħ[F,·]n(D)Wħ^(V~)n, the series in the definition of ψF(D) converges. Linearity of ψF is obvious. Continuity follows from the fact that the subspaces Wħ^(V~)n are ψF-invariant. ψF(D1D2)=ψF(D1)ψF(D2) is a consequence of -1ħ[F,·] being a derivation and ψF-1 is given explicitly as ψ-F, what proves that ψF is indeed an automorphism. We thus say that F is the free energy associated to the super quantum Airy structure (VL) if

ϕV,ψF(L(ϕ))·1=0. 2.12

We can now formulate the main result of this section:

Theorem 2.10

Every super quantum Airy structure admits a unique free energy.

Proof

Pick some FV~·K[[V~,ħ]]03 and let E(ϕ)=ψF(L(ϕ)))·1. Then E(ϕ)1=0. We make an inductive hypothesis that Fn may be chosen in a unique way so that E(ϕ)n-1=0. Acting with ψF(Li)=ħi+iF+ψF(Li2) on 1 we obtain

E(yi)n=iFn+1+Hin, 2.13

where Hin is a function of Fn. Continuity of L and ψF guarantees that for fixed n there are only finitely many i such that Hin0. Evaluating ψF[Li,Lj]-ħfijkLk·1 we get

iHjn-(-1)|i||j|jHin=0, 2.14

so the equation E(yi)n=0 can be solved for Fn+1 as

Fn+1=-(1+xii)-1xjHjn, 2.15

up to the addition of an arbitrary integration constant in the extra fermionic variable x0 in V~. But F is required to be even, and hence this integration constant must vanish. Therefore, the solution is unique, and hence Fn+1 is uniquely determined by the condition E(ϕ)n=0.

Remark 2.11

One could ask whether we cannot enlarge V~ further. For instance, one could consider L:VWħ^(VX) and FK[[VX,ħ]], for more general X. In general, the proof of Theorem 2.10 would then guarantee existence of the free energy, but not uniqueness. Existence and uniqueness are obtained only when dimX=0|1, since in this case the requirement that F is even is sufficient to guarantee that iFn+1+Hin=0 has a unique solution.

In particular, as is clear from this argument, there is no such freedom of enlarging V for bosonic quantum Airy structures. The possibility of having an extra coordinate x0 is a purely fermionic phenomenon.

A Little More Structure

In the previous section we showed that we can associate a unique free energy FV~·K[[V~,ħ]]03 to every super quantum Airy structure, by requiring that ψF(L(ϕ))·1=0 for all ϕV. However, we started the section by saying that the free energy was defined such that the partition function Z(x)=eF(x)ħ is a solution to the system of equations Li·Z(x)=0. Let us now explore the connection between the two statements more precisely. To this end, we now define a convenient ring of series.

Definition 2.12

Let R be the super K-vector space of formal series of the form

f=a=-b=0ħafa,b(x), 2.16

where fa,b(x) is a polynomial of degree b in the variables xi and fa,b=0 if 3a+b<0. Note that we allow both positive and negative powers of ħ here. Each term ħafa,b(x) is declared to be homogeneous of degree 2a+b, as is consistent with our Z-grading.7

It is easy to check that the condition 3a+b0 combined with b0 entail that 2a+b0, so the degree of each term is always non-negative. For fixed d=2a+b we have inequalities 2ad and a-d, so f may be rewritten as

f=d=0a=-d2adħafa,d-2a(x)=d=0fd, 2.17

where we introduced the homogeneous components fd of f. Notice that each fd is a polynomial in x,ħ and ħ-1 with f0 being a constant. Therefore:

Lemma 2.13

R is a supercommutative K-algebra, with a product given by

fg=d=0k=0dfkgd-k. 2.18
Remark 2.14

Since we are considering series which include both positive and negative powers of ħ, the condition fa,b=0 for 3a+b<0 is needed to make the multiplication in R well defined. Let us remark that a weaker condition fa,b=0 for 2a+b<0 would also work here, but it is insufficient to make sense of gauge transformations which will be discussed in Section 2.3.

We can go further:

Lemma 2.15

R is a local superring with maximal ideal m={fR|f0=0}.

Proof

Since the degree is non-negative, elements of m cannot be invertible. On the other hand, for any ϵm and uK×, the inverse of the element u+ϵ is given explicitly by

1u+ϵ=u-1k=0(-u-1ϵ)k. 2.19

The infinite sum on the right hand side is well-defined because only the first d terms contribute to the homogeneous component of degree d. The identity (u+ϵ)·u-1k=0(-u-1ϵ)k=1 is then quite obvious, and we conclude that all elements of R\m are invertible.

It is easy to see that R equipped with the m-adic topology is a complete Hausdorff space. In particular, for any fm and gK[[t]] we have an element g(f)R. The most important for us (perhaps except for polynomials) examples of this construction are

exp(f)=k=0fkk!, 2.20a
log(1+f)=-k=1(-f)kk. 2.20b

We note that log(exp(f))=f and exp(log(1+f))=1+f.

Since elements of each degree in R are polynomials, we can act on them by elements of the completed Weyl algebra Wħ^(V~). After projecting to homogeneous terms, this reduces to the computation of a finite sums of terms in which a differential operator of finite degree acts on a polynomial. We conclude that:

Lemma 2.16

R, equipped with the m-adic topology, is a topological Wħ^(V~)-module.

Now let us go back to the free energy and partition function associated to a super quantum Airy structure. Following [52], we defined the free energy associated to a super quantum Airy structure as an automorphism ψF=exp1ħ[F,·] with FV~·K[[V~,ħ]]03, and such that for all i the operator ψF(Li) annihilates 1. Observe now that F (and hence also Z=eFħ) is a well-defined element of the ring R. Moreover Z0=1, so Z is invertible. Simple manipulation with the involved series shows that the identity8

Z-1Li·Z=ψF(Li)·1 2.21

indeed holds, as expected. Therefore ZR is annihilated by all Li, as claimed originally.

An explicit formula for the partition function in terms of the free energy reads

Z=1+k=1a=-k2ak-1ħa{(gα,nα)}αAαAFgα,nα, 2.22

where the last sum is taken over all finite sets of pairs (g,n)N2 such that n1, αA(gα-1)=a, and αA[2(gα-1)+nα]=k. This sum is always finite.

Two remarks are in order.

Remark 2.17

In the definition of the ring R, we allow both positive and negative powers of ħ. One may then revisit the proof of existence and uniqueness of the free energy (Theorem 2.10) with slightly more general assumptions. Instead of requiring from the start that FV~·K[[V~,ħ]]03, one could consider FR3, with the requirement that F=0 for x=0. The difference here is that we allow terms with negative powers of ħ, as long as they are accompanied with sufficiently many powers of xa so that the degree of each term is 3. Then, following the same steps as in the proof of Theorem 2.10, one sees that existence and uniqueness of the free energy associated to a super quantum Airy structure is still true, and hence it must belong to V~·K[[V~,ħ]]03. In other words, the lack of negative powers of ħ in F is a result, rather than an assumption.

Remark 2.18

One may ask why we did not prove existence and uniqueness of the partition function Z directly by solving the system of equations LiZ=0 subject to the condition that Z evaluated at x=0 is equal to 1. This is certainly possible: the proof technique is exactly the same. Then one may define F=ħlogZ. In this approach however it is not clear to us how to prove directly that the free energy does not contain negative powers of ħ. (Of course, this must still be true, since it is the same unique free energy as the one obtained above.)

Recursive System

For simplicity, in this section we focus on super quantum Airy structures that are quadratic and subalgebraic, and thus can be regarded as supersymmetric analogs of the original quantum Airy structures of [4, 52]. In the spirit of [4], we derive explicit conditions for the coefficients of the operators Li such that the Li form a super quantum Airy structure. We also compute a recursive system for the coefficients of the free energy uniquely associated to a super quantum Airy structure.

Constraints on the Coefficients

As in the previous section, we choose a basis {xi}i1 for the super vector space V and denote by x0 a basis vector for K0|1. We let V~=K0|1V, and denote by {xa}a0 a basis in V~. We denote indices which take value in the set {0,1,2,} by small letters from the beginning of the alphabet, i.e. a,b,c,d=0,1,2,, while indices denoted by the letters from the “middle” of the alphabet, ijk,  take values in the set {1,2,}.

Super quantum Airy structures were introduced in Definition 2.3. To construct a quadratic super quantum Airy structure, we need to find an even continuous linear operator L:VWħ^(V~)2 such that:

  • for each i1 we have Li=L(yi)=ħi+Li2 where Li2Wħ^(V~)2;

  • [Li,Lj]=ħfijkLk for some structure constants fijkK.

Explicitly, we can write

Li=ħi-12Aiabxaxb-ħBiabxab-12ħ2Ciabab-ħDi 2.23
=:Li1+LiA+LiB+LiC+LiD, 2.24

with the coefficients Aiab,Biab,Ciab,DiK. As we have already remarked, continuity of L imposes that, if V~ is infinite-dimensional, for fixed i only finitely many Aiab are non-zero, and for fixed i and b only finitely many Biab are non vanishing. Clearly, we may assume the symmetry conditions

Aiab=(-1)|a||b|Aiba,Ciab=(-1)|a||b|Ciba. 2.25

Since L:VWħ^(V~)2 is assumed to be even, we can think of the coefficients Aiab,Biab,Ciab, and Di as components of even tensors

AVV~V~,BHom(V~,VV~),CHom(V~V~,V),DV. 2.26

In the spirit of [4], we can reformulate the Lie superalgebra requirement [Li,Lj]=ħfijkLk, as a set of constraints on the tensors ABCD. This is to be compared with Lemma 2.2 of [4].

Lemma 2.19

The differential operators Li in (2.23) form a super quantum Airy structure if and only if the following conditions are satisfied

Ajia=(-1)|i||j|Aija, 2.27a
fijk=(-1)|i||j|Bijk-Bjik, 2.27b
0=(-1)|i||j|Bij0-Bji0, 2.27c

and

BiacAjcb+(-1)|a||b|BibcAjca+(-1)|i||j|BijkAkab=(-1)|i||j|(ij), 2.28a
BiacBjcb+(-1)|a||b|CibcAjca+(-1)|i||j|BijkBkab=(-1)|i||j|(ij), 2.28b
CiacBjcb+(-1)|a||b|CibcBjca+(-1)|i||j|BijkCkab=(-1)|i||j|(ij), 2.28c
12CibaAjab+(-1)|i||j|BijkDk=(-1)|i||j|(ij). 2.28d
Proof

These conditions are very similar to those of Lemma 2.2 in [4], with appropriate signs, and range of indices to take into account the extra fermionic variable. The proof is also a straightforward computation. We simply expand the super-commutator [Li,Lj] and collect terms with respect to xa and a. Then by comparing with ħfijkLk, we obtain the set of constraints.

Topological Recursion

In Section 2.1.3 we associated a unique free energy FV~·K[[V~,ħ]]03 to every super quantum Airy structure. In this section, we show how its coefficients can be calculated recursively. In the spirit of [4], and for the sake of completeness, we also show how existence and uniqueness of the free energy can be proven computationally from the recursive structure.

Theorem 2.20

Let (VL) be a quadratic super quantum Airy structure, and let FV~·K[[V~,ħ]]03 be its associated free energy. We can expand F in the basis {xa}a0 for V~ as:

F=g0n1a1,,an0ħgn!Fg,n[a1,,an]xa1xan, 2.29

where the coefficients Fg,n[a1,,an]K are Z2-symmetric (with signs) under permutations of the indices {a1,,an}. Then the coefficients Fg,n[a1,,an] satisfy the recursive system:

Fg,n+1[i,Φ]=Aia1a2δg,0δn,2+Diδn,0δg,1+k=1nσakΦb0BiakbFg,n[b,Φ\ak]+12b,c0CibcFg-1,n+2[c,b,Φ]+12b,cg1+g2=gΦ1Φ2=ΦσΦ1ΦCibcFg1,n1+1(b,Φ1)Fg2,n2+1[c,Φ2], 2.30

with the auxiliary equation

Fg,n+1[0,a1,a2,,an]=(-1)|a1|Fg,n+1[a1,0,a2,,an]. 2.31

Here, Φ={a1,,an} is an ordered set, and σΦ1Φ denotes the sign of the permutation from Φ to Φ1(Φ\Φ1).

We remark that the recursive formula makes sense for infinite-dimensional V, since by induction one can show that for any g and n only finitely many Fg,n[a1,,an] are non-vanishing, and hence the sums on the right-hand-side are all finite.

Proof

By Theorem 2.10, there exists a unique FV~·K[[V~,ħ]]03 such that ψF(Li)·1=0. We now show that this implies the recursive system (2.30) and the auxiliary equation (2.31).

To derive (2.30) from ψF(Li)·1=0, we consider for n0

ana1·(ψF(Li)·1)|x=0=0. 2.32

Note that the order of the derivatives is important to have the correct sign. As ψF(Li) is linear, we list the computational results for each term in Li=Li1+LiA+LiB+LiC+LiD for completeness:

ana1·(ψFLi1·1)|x=0=g0ħgFg,n+1[i,a1,,an]ana1·ψFLi(A)·1|x=0=-g0ħgAia1a2δn,2δg,0ana1·(ψFLi(B)·1)|x=0=-g0ħgk=1nb0σakΦBiakbFg,n[b,Φ\ak]ana1·ψFLi(C)·1|x=0=-g0ħg2p,q0Cibc(Fg-1,n+2[c,b,Φ]+g1+g2=gΦ1Φ2=ΦσΦ1ΦFg1,n1+1[b,Φ1]Fg2,n2+1[c,Φ2])ana1·(ψFLi(D)·1)|x=0=-g0ħgDiδn,0δg,1. 2.33

Collecting terms order by order in ħ, we obtain (2.30).

As for the auxiliary equation, it is necessary because Fg,n+1[0,a1,a2,,an] is not fixed by the recursive system, since there is no L0. However, Fg,n+1[a1,0,a2,,an] is fixed, and hence Fg,n+1[0,a1,a2,,an] is uniquely fixed by symmetry as in (2.31).

Remark 2.21

We can in fact prove existence and uniqueness of the free energy from this computational point of view, in the spirit of [4]. This provides an alternative proof of Theorem 2.10. The proof proceeds in three steps:

  1. We first show that ψF(Li)·1=0 implies the recursive system (2.30) and (2.31), as in Theorem 2.20.

  2. Assuming existence of a free energy FV~·K[[V~,ħ]]03, with expansion given by (2.29), we show that (2.30) and (2.31) uniquely reconstructs it. This is clear, since (2.30) is a recursive system on 2g+n that reconstructs (in conjunction with (2.31)) all coefficients Fg,n[a1,,an] from the initial conditions
    F0,3(i,a,b)=Aiab,F0,3(0,i,a)=(-1)|i|Ai0a,F1,1(i)=Di, 2.34
    where we used (2.31) for the second condition.
  3. What remains to be proved is that the free energy F actually exists, which is the difficult part. As in [4], the idea is to start from the recursive system (2.30) and (2.31), and show that, while it is not manifestly symmetric, the coefficients Fg,n[a1,,an] that it constructs indeed are Z2-symmetric. Therefore, the recursive system does reconstruct a free energy FV~·K[[V~,ħ]]03 through its expansion (2.29). By (1), it is a solution to ψF(Li)·1=0, and by (2), it is unique, and hence we have proven existence and uniqueness. The essence of the proof of existence thus consists in showing that the recursive system (2.30) and (2.31) reconstructs Z2-symmetric coefficients. An interesting aspect of this computational proof is that it highlights the importance of the Lie superalgebra requirement. For completeness, we present this computational proof of existence in “Appendix A”.

Graphical Interpretation

The recursive system (2.30) has a nice interpretation in terms of sums of trivalent graphs, in parallel to the graphical interpretation presented for bosonic quantum Airy structures in [4, 10]. For completeness, we present this graphical interpretation in this section, focusing on quadratic super quantum Airy structures without the extra fermionic variable. We follow very closely the presentation in [10]. It remains to be seen whether the graphical interpretation can be extended to super quantum Airy structures with an extra fermionic variable.

The graphical interpretation is very similar to the one presented in Section 1.3 of [10]. In fact, the graphs are the same, but we need to change slightly the assignment of weights to the graphs to take into account the signs arising from Z2-symmetry.

Let us first define the set Gg,n+1, which is the same as Definition 1.4 of [10].

Definition 2.22

[Definition 1.4 of [10]] For g0 and n0 such that χg,n:=2g+n-20, we form the set Gg,n+1 consisting of pairs Γ=(G,T) where:

  • G is a connected trivalent graph with 2g-1+n trivalent vertices, n+1 ordered one-valent leaves, and first Betti number b1(G)=g. We single out a leave and call it the root of G.

  • TG is a spanning tree that includes the root of G, but none of the leaves.

  • The edges e={v,v} of G which are not in the spanning tree T connect parent vertices, i.e. the common ancestor of v and v in the rooted spanning tree T is either v or v.

We denote the ordered leaves by ,1,2,,n in counterclockwise order,9 with being the root. We denote by E(Γ) the set consisting of leaves (including the root) of G and edges of G that are not loops.

Definition 2.23

An automorphism of Γ=(G,T)Gg,n+1 is a permutation of the edges in G that preserves the graph structure. We denote by Aut(Γ) the set of automorphisms of Γ=(G,T).

By convention, we set G0,1=G0,2=. G0,3 and G1,1 both contain only one element, which are shown in Section 1.3 of [10].

Furthermore, as explained in [10], Gg,n+1 has a recursive structure on χg,n. If we remove from a given graph ΓGg,n+1 the vertex incident to the root with two more edges/leaves {e1,e2}, the resulting graph falls into one of the following three cases:

I

a graph ΓGg,n, if one of e1 or e2 (we call it e2 without loss of generality) is a leaf of Γ. We let e1 be the root of Γ.

I

a graph ΓGg-1,n+1. We let e1 be the root of Γ, and e2 its first leaf. Note that we need to specify which of e1 and e2 is the root and the first leaf here, unlike [10], because of Z2-symmetry.

II

a non-ordered disjoint union of Γ1Γ2 where ΓiGgi,|Φi|+1 is a graph with root ei and leaves Li such that g1+g2=g and L1L2 are leaves of Γ distinct from the root .

We would like to assign a weight to each graph Γ=(G,T)Gg,n+1. To do this, we need to equip Γ with a colouring.

Definition 2.24

A colouring of Γ=(G,T)Gg,n+1 is a map γ:E(Γ)I, where I is the index set I={1,2,3,}. In other words, it assigns a positive integer to all leaves of G and edges of G that are not loops.

To each graph ΓGg,n+1 with colouring γ, with χg,n0, we assign a weight ω(Γ,γ) as follows, using the recursive decomposition (I, I, II). First of all, we define the cases with χg,n=0 as

ω(Γ0,3,γ)=Aγ(l1)γ(l2)γ(l3),ω(Γ1,1,γ)=Dγ(l1). 2.35

For graphs with χg,n1, we recursively determine the weight in terms of the decomposition (I, I, II):

Iω(Γ,γ)=σγ(e1)γ(L)Bγ(1)γ(e1)γ(e2)ω(Γ,γ), 2.36
Iω(Γ,γ)=Cγ(1)γ(e2)γ(e1)ω(Γ,γ), 2.37
IIω(Γ,γ)=σγ(L1)γ(L)Cγ(1)γ(e1)γ(e2)ω(Γ1,γ1)ω(Γ2,γ2), 2.38

where L=(1,...,n) and γ(L)=(γ(1),...,γ(n)) is the colouring of leaves. The sign factor σ is defined in Theorem 2.20. γ denotes the colouring for the corresponding decomposed graph, that is, the restriction of γ to E(Γ). Li,γi are similarly defined. Let us emphasize that the order of edges/leaves is important, because of the sign factors.

Since this weight assignment precisely captures the recursive equation (2.30), we obtain the following lemma:

Lemma 2.25

For any g,n0, and i,i1,...,inI, we have

Fg,n+1[i,i1,...,in]=ΓGg,n+1γIE(γ)γ(j)=ijω(Γ,γ)|Aut(Γ)|. 2.39

We refer the reader to [4] and [10] for pretty pictures of the graphical representation of topological recursion.

Gauge Transformations

In this section we study gauge transformations of super quantum Airy structures.

Recall that V~=VK0|1. We consider the symplectic super vector space W=V~V~ equipped with the product topology and the symplectic form given by ω(ϕ,v)=ϕ(v) for ϕV~ and vV~.

Topology on W was chosen in such a way that the following properties hold:

  • if {an}n=0 is a sequence of distinct indices, limnyan=0,

  • if {vn}n=0V is a convergent sequence, then vn are eventually constant.

Linear Gauge Transformations

With this under our belt, we can define gauge transformations for super quantum Airy structures. We proceed as follows. Let T be a linear operator WW represented by matrices

Txa=tbaxb+babyb, 2.40a
Tya=cabxb+dabyb. 2.40b

Then for each fixed a there are finitely many b such that tba0 or cab0. Moreover T is continuous if and only if the following conditions are satisfied:

  • there are finitely many pairs ab such that10cab0,

  • for each fixed b there are finitely many a such that11dab0.

If T:WW is an even, linear and continuous symplectomorphism (TAut(W) for short), there exists a unique continuous automorphism T~ of Wħ(V~) which acts on generators as in formulas (2.40) with ya replaced by ħa and T~(ħ)=ħ. It may be extended uniquely to a continuous automorphism of Wħ^(V~). Indeed, it is obvious that proposed transformation preserves algebraic relations in Wħ(V~). By the preceding discussion, also finiteness conditions in the definition of Wħ(V~) are preserved. Continuity of T~ is easy to see.

Now consider an even, linear and continuous symplectomorphism TsAut(W) that acts trivially on V~. In terms of generators, it takes the form

Ts(xa)=xa+sabyb, 2.41a
Ts(ya)=ya, 2.41b

where s is even and Z2-symmetric (that is sab=(-1)|a||b|sba). We think of s as sHom(V~,V~)0S2.

Let (VL) be a super quantum Airy structure, and let T~s be the continuous automorphism of Wħ^(V~) uniquely induced by Ts. Then (V,T~sL) is also a super quantum Airy structure.

Definition 2.26

We say that the super quantum Airy structure (V,T~sL) is gauge equivalent to (VL), and we call T~s a linear gauge transformation.

Remark 2.27

We note here that linear gauge transformations do not change the order of a super quantum Airy structure, since it preserves the Z-grading on Wħ^(V~).

Let us now explain the geometric meaning of gauge transformations. For any subspace LW we define its symplectic complement L={wW|ω(l,w)=0for alllL}. We say that L is Lagrangian if L=L. If L is a Lagrangian subspace, every Lagrangian subspace C such that W=LC is called a Lagrangian complement of L. There is a bijection between Hom(V~,V~)S2 and the set of Lagrangian complements of V~, given by sTs(V~).

Non-linear Gauge Transformations

There are more general gauge transformations that one can consider. Since the Li can have arbitrary order, we do not need to insist that gauge transformations preserve the order of a super quantum Airy structure. Thus we can also consider non-linear gauge transformations.

Consider a formal series in y of the form

s=k=21ksa1...akya1...yak. 2.42

We require that each term in (2.42) is even and that each sa1...ak is Z2-symmetric. The largest k such that sa1...ak0 is called the order of s. We also allow s of infinite order, since the Li can have infinite order. Then the polynomial transformation

Ts(xa)=xa+sya, 2.43a
Ts(ya)=ya, 2.43b

induces (by replacing ya with ħa) an automorphism T~s of Wħ^(V~), which leaves the defining properties of super quantum Airy structures invariant.

Definition 2.28

We say that the super quantum Airy structure (V,T~sL) is gauge equivalent to (VL), and if the order of s is greater than two, we call T~s a non-linear gauge transformation.

The Partition Functions of Gauge Equivalent Super Quantum Airy Structures

Given two gauge equivalent super quantum Airy structures, what is the relation between their partition functions? To answer this question we need to understand gauge transformations as conjugations of the differential operators Li of a super quantum Airy structure. Let DsWħ^(V~)2 be of the form

Ds=k=2ħksa1...aka1...ak, 2.44

where the s are even Z2-symmetric tensors. We claim that the Li of the super quantum Airy structure (V,T~sL) gauge equivalent to (VL) are given by the conjugated differential operators

Li=expDsħLiexp-Dsħ. 2.45

But for this we need to make sense of this expression.

Clearly Dsħ, regarded as an operator on the ring R introduced in the Section 2.1.4, satisfies:

nN,n0N,nn0Dsħn(R)mn. 2.46

Therefore expDsħ makes sense as an operator on R. More precisely, for every fR let

expDsħf=n=01n!Dsħnf. 2.47

After projecting the right-hand-side onto terms of fixed degree in ħ and x, only finitely many terms are nonzero, so this is well defined. We have expDsħexpDtħ=expDs+tħ. Moreover, for any fR we have the identity

exp[Ds,·]ħ(Li)·f=expDsħLiexp-Dsħf. 2.48

Therefore, (2.45) makes sense, and indeed reconstructs the differential operators Li of the gauge equivalent Airy structure (V,T~sL).

Now let Z be the partition function associated to the super quantum Airy structure Li, that is, Z is annihilated by the Li, and Z evaluated at x=0 is equal to 1. Then expDsħZ is annihilated by the gauge transformed operators Li. Let N be equal to expDsħZ evaluated at x=0. It is easy to check that N=1+O(ħ). Therefore N-1R exists and

Z=N-1expDsħZR 2.49

is a solution of equation LiZ=0 such that Z evaluated at x=0 is equal to 1. By the uniqueness of partition function, Z coincides with the partition function associated to the Airy structure Li. This gives us the relation between the partition function Z of the gauge transformed super quantum Airy structure (V,T~sL) to the partition function Z of the original super quantum Airy structure (VL).

Remark 2.29

In [4] an alternative formula for Z in terms of formal gaussian integrals was given. A similar formula also works also in the supersymmetric case. However, it is only valid for linear gauge transformations. We are not aware of its generalization for non-linear gauge transformations.

Classical Versus Quantum

Quantum Airy structures were originally defined in [52] in terms of quantizations of classical Airy structures. In this section we explore the parallel story for super Airy structures.

Classical Limit

We now define the classical limit of super quantum Airy structures. We introduce the algebras K[W]=Wħ(V~)ħ·Wħ(V~) and K[[W]]=Wħ^(V~)ħ·Wħ^(V~).

Definition 2.30

We denote the quotient map by Cl, and call it the classical limit.

Taking the classical limit thus amounts to replacing all ħa by ya, and setting all terms of higher order in ħ to zero. We interpret K[W] and K[[W]] as the superalgebras of polynomials and formal series respectively on some classical phase space with linear coordinate system xa,ya. The natural symplectic structure on W induces a Poisson bracket on K[W] and K[[W]], which may also be computed as

{Cl(f),Cl(g)}=Cl1ħ[f,g]. 2.50

Now let (VL) be a super quantum Airy structure. Define Licl(x,y)=Cl(Li) as being the classical limit of the operators Li. The equation Licl=0 may then be thought of as defining a “characteristic variety” Σ in phase space, even if this is slightly artificial in the presence of odd coordinates. Nevertheless, some geometric notions may still be defined, e.g. the Zariski cotangent space. It may be identified naturally with VK0|2, with K0|2 spanned by the additional Grassman variable together with its conjugate momentum. In particular, it is coisotropic (and in fact Lagrangian if there is no extra Grassman variable). The classical limit of the free energy may be interpreted as a parametrisation of Σ in terms of the variables x in a formal neighbourhood of zero. In fact, by repeating the steps performed in the proof of existence and uniqueness of the partition function associated to a super quantum Airy structure, one may show the following fact:

Theorem 2.31

There exists a unique FclK[[V~]]3 such that Licl(x,dFcl)=0. It coincides with the classical limit of the free energy associated to Li.

Super Classical Airy Structures and Quantization

In the previous subsection we defined the classical limit of super quantum Airy structures. In fact, we could have started by defining super classical Airy structures, and think of super quantum Airy structures as quantizations of classical structures, in the spirit of [52].

Definition 2.32

Let V be a super vector space, V~=VK0|1, and W=V~V~. A super classical Airy structure is a pair (V,Lcl), with Lcl:VK[[W]] an even continuous linear operator such that:

  1. The left ideal LK[[W]] generated by Lcl(V) is involutive under the Poisson bracket, i.e. {L,L}L;

  2. Lcl(yi)1=yi.

We have seen that every super quantum Airy structure determines uniquely its classical limit. But given a super classical Airy structure, does there exist a quantization that is a super quantum Airy structure? This turns out to be a difficult problem in general.

Nevertheless, it admits a simple solution in the special case of quadratic Lcl. Define L initially by replacing yaħa, with all derivatives to the right of xa. Then all L(ϕ) are well-defined elements of the Weyl algebra, but they need not satisfy correct commutation relations. Simple calculation shows that

ζ(ϕ,ψ)=1ħL([ϕ,ψ])-1ħ2[L(ϕ),L(ψ)] 2.51

is a number for each ϕ,ψV. It follows from the Jacobi identity that ζ is a Lie superalgebra cocycle (see [43] for the relevant definitions). Clearly ζ is even and continuous. Upon replacement

L(ϕ)L(ϕ)+ϕ(v),vV0, 2.52

ζ changes by a coboundary. It follows that the cohomology class [ζ]H2(V,K)0 (continuous, even Lie superalgebra cohomology) doesn’t depend on the operator ordering prescription. Moreover quantization of Lcl exists if and only if [ζ]=0. In the finite-dimensional case it is guaranteed that ζ is a coboundary, because Weyl quantization is always possible. In this ordering scheme mixed terms xayb are replaced by ħ2xab+(-1)|a||b|bxa.

Now, given a quantization, one can still ask if other quantizations may be obtained by performing transformations of the form (2.52). This is possible only if v is such that [ϕ,ψ](v)=0 for any ϕ,ψ. In other words, v has to be a cocycle. Therefore if a quantization exists, its ambiguity is measured by the cohomology group H1(V,K)0.

Bosonic Classical Airy Structures

Definition 2.33

We call a classical Airy structure Lcl:VK[[W]] bosonic, if V=V0 and Lcl does not depend on the extra fermionic variable comming from K0|1.

Given any super classical Airy structure Lcl:VK[[W]], one can always produce a bosonic one based on V0. Indeed, consider a restriction of this map to L0cl:(V0)K[[W]]. Since Lcl is even, so is its restriction. Therefore image of L0cl consists of even elements. Those elements are linear combination of monomials, which can be of two types: either have no fermionic variables or have an even number of them. Observe that both of these subsets are closed under the Poisson bracket. Let W0=V0V0 and let π0:K[[W]]K[[W0]] be the projection onto the subspace spanned by those elements which have no fermionic variables. We define a bosonic Airy structure as a composition Lcl,b=π0L0cl:(V0)K[[W0]]. The subspace spanned by those monomials in K[[W]], which have even and nonzero number of fermionic variables, is a left ideal with respect to the Poisson bracket. Therefore the condition {Licl,Ljcl}=ħfijkLkcl, for some fijkK[[W]], implies that {Licl,b,Ljcl,b}=ħπ0(fijk)Lkcl,b. This proves that Lcl,b is a classical Airy structure.

Remark 2.34

The analog of the construction outlined above doesn’t work for quantum super Airy structures in general. The reason is that the commutator of two terms with even, nonzero number of fermionic variables may contain terms with no fermionic variables. Instead one may consider the classical limit, remove fermionic variables and generators and then try to quantize again. This is always possible to carry out (but is possibly ambiguous) in the finite-dimensional case.

Finite-Dimensional Examples

In this section we study examples of finite-dimensional quadratic super quantum Airy structures. Moreover we propose a classification scheme for these objects.

Low-Dimensional Examples

Our first step is to consider super vector spaces V of low dimension. The “purely bosonic" case, with dimV1=0 and no extra fermionic variable, is not the subject of our current studies. The case with dimV1=0 but with an extra fermionic variable, i.e. V~=V0K0|1 is straightforward. Thus we will assume that dimV11. The “purely fermionic" case, with dimV0=0, is essentially trivial, since the only allowed super quantum Airy structure has the form

Li=ħθi, 3.1

with θi odd variables. Thus we may also assume that dimV01.

The Superalgebras of Dimension (1|1)

The simplest non-trivial case then consists in the superalgebras of dimension (1|1). In this section we classify all quadratic super quantum Airy structures that can be constructed from these superalgebras, assuming that we have no extra fermionic variables. We leave the case with an extra fermionic variables for future work.

Remark 3.1

We remark that from the point of view of the partition function, all examples based on superalgebras of dimension (1|1) with no extra fermionic variables are rather trivial, since the partition function is purely bosonic (i.e. does not depend on the single Grassmann variable entering in the construction). This follows directly from the requirement that the free energy is Z2-even. Nevertheless, from an algebraic viewpoint it is interesting to classify which quadratic super quantum Airy structures can be constructed based on superalgebras of dimension (1|1).

Up to isomorphism, there exist three distinct complex Lie superalgebras of dimension (1|1). We denote the bosonic generator by L and the fermionic generator by G.

  1. The abelian superalgebra, with commutation relations:
    [L,L]=0,[L,G]=0,[G,G]=0. 3.2
  2. The algebra of affine automorphisms of C0|1, with commutation relations:
    [L,L]=0,[L,G]=ħG,[G,G]=0. 3.3
  3. The N=1,d=1 supersymmetry (SUSY) algebra, with commutation relations:
    [L,L]=0,[L,G]=0,[G,G]=ħL. 3.4

Below we provide all quadratic super quantum Airy structures that can be constructed as representations of these algebras, up to changes of bases and gauge transformations. This classification can be proved directly, by brute force calculations. For the sake of brevity, we omit the details.

In the following, A,B,C,DC always stand for arbitrary constants. We denote the bosonic variable by x and the fermionic variable by θ.

  1. For the abelian superalgebra, there are three families of quadratic super quantum Airy structures. The first one takes the form:
    G=(1-x)ħθ, 3.5a
    L=ħx-12Ax2-ħ(xx+θθ)-ħD, 3.5b
    while the second one is:
    G=(1-ħx)ħθ, 3.6a
    L=ħx-ħ22Cx2-ħD. 3.6b
    The third possibility is
    G=ħθ, 3.7a
    L=L0, 3.7b
    where L0 is an arbitrary θ-independent bosonic generator.
  2. For the algebra of affine automorphisms of C0|1, there are also three families of quadratic super quantum Airy structures.The first one is:
    G=(1-x)ħθ, 3.8a
    L=ħx-12Ax2-ħxx-2ħθθ-ħD. 3.8b
    The second family reads:
    G=(1-ħx)ħθ, 3.9a
    L=ħx-ħθθ-ħ22Cxxxx2-ħD, 3.9b
    while the third one is:
    G=ħθ, 3.10a
    L=-ħθθ+L0, 3.10b
    where L0 is an arbitrary θ-independent bosonic generator.
  3. For the N=1,d=1 SUSY algebra we have L=2ħG2, so it is sufficient to provide the form of G. There are again three possibilities:
    G=ħθ+ħ2θx+xθ, 3.11a
    G=ħθ+ħ2θx-ħ2xθ, 3.11b
    G=ħθ+ħ2θx. 3.11c

Superalgebras of Dimensions (2|1) and (1|2)

The brute force classification of quadratic super quantum Airy structures that can be obtained as representations of superalgebras of dimensions (2|1) and (1|2) is already a little tedious. We will thus only present a few interesting examples here.

Example 3.2

Our first example starts with the (2|1)-dimensional N=1,d=1 SUSY algebra extended by a dilatation operator. We denote the two bosonic generators by L1,L2 and the fermionic generator by G. It has commutation relations:

[L1,L2]=ħL2,[L1,G]=ħ2G,[L2,G]=0,[G,G]=ħL2. 3.12

We construct a quadratic super quantum Airy structure with no extra fermion as a representation of this algebra. We denote the bosonic variables by xy and the fermionic variable by θ.

The quadratic super quantum Airy structure reads:

L1=ħx-12Ax2-ħ12+Bθθ-ħ(1+B)yy-ħBxx-ħD, 3.13a
L2=ħy-ħxy, 3.13b
G=ħθ+ħ2θy-ħBxθ, 3.13c

where A,B,DC are arbitrary constants.

Note that, as for the (1|1) examples, the partition function here does not depend on the fermionic variable θ, since it must be Z2-even.

Let us now study examples where the partition function depends on fermionic variables.

Example 3.3

For our next example, we start with the same (2|1)-dimensional N=1,d=1 SUSY algebra extended by a dilatation operator, with commutation relations (3.12), but we construct a quadratic super quantum Airy structures with an extra fermionic variable. We denote the bosonic variables by x1,x2 and the fermionic variables by θ0,θ1.

The representation reads:

L1=ħx1-2ħx1x1-ħx2x2-ħ2θ1θ1+3ħ2θ0θ0, 3.14a
L2=ħx2-βħx2x1-θ0θ1, 3.14b
G=ħθ1+θ0x2+ħ2θ1x2-ħ22βθ0x1, 3.14c

with βC an arbitrary constant.

The constraints L1Z=L2Z=GZ=0 uniquely fix the partition function Z. The result is

Z=exp1ħx2θ0θ1. 3.15
Example 3.4

Our last example in this section is a quadratic super quantum Airy structure with no extra fermionic variable, but such that its partition function depends on fermionic variables. To this end, we start with a superalgebra of dimension (1|2). We denote its bosonic generator by L and its fermionic generators by G1,G2, and the corresponding bosonic and fermionic variables by x and θ1,θ2 respectively.

We choose the superalgebra with commutation relations:

L,Gi=ħGi,Gi,Gj=0,i,j=1,2. 3.16

Our representation is:

L=ħx-x2-θ1θ2+ħ2x2+ħ2θ1θ2, 3.17a
G1=ħθ1-xθ2+ħxθ1-ħθ2x+ħ2xθ1, 3.17b
G2=ħθ2+xθ1+ħxθ2+ħθ1x+ħ2xθ2. 3.17c

From the constraints LZ=G1Z=G2Z=0, it is straightforward to compute the free energy perturbatively. Up to terms of order five in the variables x,θ1,θ2, we get:

F=13x3-15x5+x-x3θ1θ2-ħx2+θ1θ2+ħ2x+. 3.18

Thanks to the simplicity of the Airy structure (3.17b) the classical free energy can be in this case expressed in terms of elementary functions:

Fcl=18log2x+1+4x2+x41+4x2-x2+1+4x2+2x-11+4x2+2x+1θ1θ2. 3.19

We will use this example to illustrate the action of the gauge symmetry on the partition function. Notice that under the gauge transformation

xx+ħx,θ1θ1-ħθ2,θ2θ2+ħθ1, 3.20

the operators go to

LL=ħx-x2-2ħxx-ħ-θ1θ2-ħθ1θ1-ħθ2θ2, 3.21a
G1G1=ħθ1-xθ2-2ħθ2x, 3.21b
G2G2=ħθ2+xθ1+2ħθ1x. 3.21c

In particular, L,G1 and G2 are now all first order differential operators, and we can solve explicitly for the free energy at the quantum level. We get:

F=-14x(x+1)-18(1+4ħ)log(1-2x)+x+2ħ1-2xθ1θ2. 3.22

According to our discussion in Section 2.3—see (2.49)—we have an identity

e1ħF=k=0(-ħ)kk!12x2+12,·ke1ħF. 3.23

Using a simple Mathematica code, validity of (3.23) may be checked to any required order (at least for the explicitly known classical part of the l.h.s. of (3.23)).

Classification Scheme

So far we have studied a few examples of low-dimensional quadratic super quantum Airy structures. In this section we present a classification scheme for finite-dimensional super quantum Airy structures whose vector space V is a finite-dimensional Lie superalgebra g. We focus on finite-dimensional super quantum Airy structures, but we remark here that part of the discussion is also valid for the infinite-dimensional case.

Let g be a finite-dimensional Lie superalgebra. We denote its structure constants by f. The process of finding all quadratic super quantum Airy structures for g can be divided into three steps:

  1. Classify at most quadratic classical hamiltonians Licl up to affine automorphism.

  2. Look for points of the zero locus Licl=0 at which gradients of Licl are linearly independent in order to rewrite Licl in the form required by the definition of super classical Airy structures.

  3. Quantize the system.

Parts of this procedure are expressed as classical problems in representation theory (classify all representations of a given dimension, find all invariant symplectic forms, compute certain cohomology groups) or algebraic geometry (describe the zero locus of a given set of polynomials), whose solutions are known at least in certain special cases.

Remark 3.5

For clarity in this section we will write Li for the classical hamiltonians, dropping the superscript cl.

Purely Quadratic Hamiltonians

As a first step one has to classify all representations of g by purely quadratic hamiltonians:

{Li2,Lj2}=fijkLk2, 3.24

where {·,·} is the Poisson bracket. Li2 have to be polynomials in 2dimg variables (or with one extra Grassman variable together with its conjugate momentum) za subject to the elementary Poisson bracket relations

{za,zb}=ωab, 3.25

where ω is a symplectic form on the super vector space W with basis {za}. Hence

Li2=12zaMiabzb, 3.26

with Miab=(-1)|a||b|Miba. This symmetry condition is equivalent to demanding that the linear operator on W given by zazbMibcωca is an infinitesimal symplectomorphism. The Poisson bracket relations (3.24) are satisfied if and only if the operators Mi furnish a linear representation of g on W. Conversely, given any representation of g with an invariant symplectic form ω we may construct the space K[z], with Poisson bracket given by (3.25), and then we define the Li2 by (3.26).

To summarize, the classification of purely quadratic hamiltonians (depending on a given number of variables) representing the algebra g is equivalent to classifying all symplectic representations12 of g of dimension 2dimg or 2dimg+0|2.

Affine Extensions

Now fix a representation of g by quadratic hamiltonians Li2. We ask if we can add linear and constant terms Li1,Li0 such that the commutation relations are preserved:

Li=Li2+Li1+Li0, 3.27a
{Li,Lj}=fijkLk. 3.27b

Assuming that Eq. (3.24) holds, (3.27b) reduces to the following system of equations:

{Li2,Lj1}+{Li1,Lj2}-fijkLk1=0, 3.28a
{Li1,Lj1}-fijkLk0=0. 3.28b

We observe that given any solutions of these equations, a new solution may be obtained by shifting even variables:

Li=exp{ϵ(z),·}(Li)=Li+{ϵ(z),Li1+Li2}+12{ϵ(z),{ϵ(z),Li2}}, 3.29

where ϵ(z) is an arbitrary linear combination of even za. This is equivalent to the replacement:

Li1Li1+{ϵ(z),Li2}, 3.30a
Li0Li0+{ϵ(z),Li1}+12{ϵ(z),{ϵ(z),Li2}}. 3.30b

Shifting even variables is an isomorphism of the Poisson algebra. Solutions related by such transformations should be regarded as equivalent at this stage.

Definition 3.6

We say that two solutions of (3.27b) are equivalent if they are related by a shift of even variables as in (3.30).

Our plan to classify solutions of equations (3.28) up to equivalence is as follows: first solve the constraint (3.28a), then find solutions of (3.28b) for a given Li1.

Lemma 3.7

Given Li2 that satisfy (3.24), the space of all solutions to (3.28a) up to equivalence coincides with the even subspace of the cohomology group H1(g,W).

Proof

Observe that equation (3.28a) is linear in L1. Moreover it has the form of a 1-cocycle condition for g valued in the module W. Solutions of the form Li1={ϵ(z),Li2} for some linear combination of even variables ϵ(z) may be identified with coboundaries. Therefore the space of all solutions up to equivalence coincides with the even subspace of the cohomology group H1(g,W).

Let us now turn to (3.28b). Equation (3.28b) is quadratic in L1. If L1 is already chosen such that (3.28a) is satisfied, (3.28b) is a linear equation for L0. For some L1 it may turn out that there are no solutions at all.

Definition 3.8

We call linear terms Li1 such that there exists some solution to (3.28b) admissible.

Admissibility depends only on the equivalence class of L1. Indeed, if L1 is such that a consistent L0 can be chosen, then for any L1 of the form Li1=Li1+{ϵ(z),Li2}, a consistent L0 can be found in the form of (3.30b).

Lemma 3.9

Given an admissible Li1 that satisfies (3.28a), the space of all solutions to refeq:L0spsconstraint) is an affine space over g[g,g]0.

Proof

Suppose that L1 is admissible and pick one L0 satisfying (3.28b). Then L0 is another solution if and only if

fijkLk0-Lk0=0. 3.31

This equation means that the even linear functional L0-L0g0 vanishes on the commutator ideal [g,g]. Therefore it may be regarded as an element of g[g,g]0.

Choice of the Origin and a Lagrangian Complement

Suppose that we have chosen a set of at most quadratic hamiltonians Li satisfying (3.27b). Now we look for hamiltonians in the same equivalence class that are in the form required by the definition of super classical Airy structures. In other words, we want to perform a shift (3.29) to bring the hamiltonians in a form such that Li0=0 and the Li1 are linearly independent. After such shift, Li0 changes according to (3.30b). Requiring that the new Li0 vanishes, we get an equation for ϵ(z):

Li0+{ϵ(z),Li1}+12{ϵ(z),{ϵ(z),Li2}}=0. 3.32

Its set of all solutions may be identified with the zero locus Σ={zW0|(Li)0(z)=0} (here the subscript 0 means that we ignore odd variables and odd generators of g). Not all solutions are admissible, because we must ensure that after the shift, the linear terms Li1 are linearly independent. This means that we must keep only those points for which the matrix of partial derivatives

Dia=zaLiz=0 3.33

has rank dim(g). The set of all elements of Σ satisfying this condition will be denoted by Σs. It is a Zariski open subset of Σ. In [52] elements of Σs were called the smooth points of Σ. We note that this is not completely consistent with the standard terminology. For example the zero locus Z(f) of the polynomial f(x,y)=x2K[x,y] is nonsingular, even though we have dfZ(f)=0.

Once a point of Σs is chosen and the generators Li are put in a form with Li0=0 with linearly independent Li1, we define

yi=Li1. 3.34

Equation (3.28b) combined with Li0=0 gives

{yi,yj}=0. 3.35

Therefore the variables yi span an isotropic subspace in W. If there is no “extra” odd variable, that is dimW=2dimg, this subspace is Lagrangian. For simplicity, for the remainder of this section we restrict attention to this special case. The analysis in the situation with an additional fermion has to be slightly adjusted. The linear span of yi will be denoted by V.

We may now find elements xi such that

{yi,xj}=δij, 3.36a
{xi,xj}=0. 3.36b

The set of all solutions to these conditions is in one-to-one correspondence with the set of Lagrangian complements V of the subspace VW spanned by yi. Once the Li are expressed in terms of the yi and xi, we have a super classical Airy structure.

Let us end this section by specifying how the super classical Airy structures constructed by the procedure outlined above depend on a number of arbitrary choices made along the way.

First of all, there is an ambiguity in the choice of xi, or equivalently, in the choice of the Lagrangian complement V of the subspace VW. As described earlier, this ambiguity is precisely the so-called gauge freedom. We regard Airy structures related by a gauge transformation as equivalent. Indeed, not only gauge-transformed generators are related by an explicit automorphism of the Poisson algebra, but also (after quantization) partition functions are related by a formal gaussian smearing transformation.

Secondly, we have chosen a point of Σs. We can get more such points by exponentiating the action of g0 on K[z]0. This is possible, because action of a Lie algebra on a finite-dimensional vector space exponentiates to an action of the corresponding Lie group, and each {Li,·} preserves a filtration of K[z] by finitely-dimensional subspaces {K[z]n}nN of all polynomials of degree at most n. Clearly hamiltonians related by G-transformations give rise to isomorphic Airy structures. It may happen that the set Σs is disconnected. Then it is possible that several non-isomorphic Airy structures may be obtained from the same set of hamiltonians.

Since the dimension of Σs coincides with the dimension of g0 and the stabilizer of each point of Σs in G is discrete, G acts locally transitively on Σs. Therefore G-orbits are open in Σs (with respect to the analytic topology). Since set Σs is semialgebraic, it has finitely many connected components. Therefore its connected components are clopen. Combining these two facts we conclude that the orbits of the G-action on Σs are precisely the connected components of Σs. Notice that this is not necessarily true for the G-action on the whole Σ, since the G-orbits in Σ are in general not open in Σ. For example if Li are homogeneous of degree 2, then z=0 is always a solution which is a fixed point for G, hence an orbit. Except for some trivial cases it is not a discrete point of Σ, hence we have orbits of G in Σ which are proper subsets of their connected components. For any orbit OΣs the stabiliser Γ of any pO is discrete. This means that O may be identified with the homogeneous space GΓ and that G is the universal covering space of O. In particular, we conclude that the homotopy groups of O are given by π1(O)Γ and πk(O)πk(G) for k2. Finally, we observe that the hamiltonian vector fields generated by Li provide a global framing for the tangent bundle of O, so TOO is trivial.

Quantization

Suppose that we have constructed a quadratic super classical Airy structure through the procedure outlined above. We then ask whether this classical Airy structure may be lifted to the quantum level. We will see that, in the finite-dimensional case, the answer is always affirmative. (In the infinite-dimensional case, there is a possible cohomological obstruction). Moreover it turns out that the set of all consistent quantizations is an affine space over g[g,g]0.

Lemma 3.10

Let the Li form a quadratic super classical Airy structure, and define

ζij=1ħ2[Li,Lj]-ħfijkLk, 3.37

which is a constant, independent of xi, yi and ħ. Then the Li can be lifted to a quadratic super quantum Airy structure if and only if the cohomology class [ζ]H2(g,K)0 vanishes. If this is the case, the space of all consistent quantizations is an affine space over g[g,g]0.

Proof

To quantize Li, we need to replace all yi by ħxi. The meaning of this operation is ambiguous for mixed terms, i.e. for products xiyj, which supercommute on the classical level but not after quantization. Due to this ambiguity, in general we need to introduce constants of order ħ in our quantum hamiltonians. These terms are invisible at the classical level.

Note that it is always possible to replace xiyj by the “normally-ordered" expressions ħxixi, but unfortunately this ordering prescription does not lead to differential operators satisfying the commutation relations of the algebra g in general. However, a simple calculation shows that this is almost true, in the sense that the quantity

ζij=1ħ2[Li,Lj]-ħfijkLk 3.38

does not depend on x, y or ħ. By the Jacobi identity, it satisfies the 2-cocycle condition

ζk[ifjl]k=0, 3.39

where square bracket denotes Z2-graded skew-symmetrization. One may try to get rid of the problematic ζ by shifting the generators by constants proportional to ħ:

LiLi+ħDi, 3.40

with Di=0 for |i|=1. This transformation has the following effect on ζ:

ζijζij=ζij-fijkDk. 3.41

This means that ζ changes by a coboundary. In other words, the cohomology class of ζ depends only on the classical generators and not on the choice of the ordering prescription. In order to get the commutation relations of g at the quantum level, we have to impose the condition ζij=0. By the preceding discussion, this is possible if and only if the cohomology class [ζ]H2(g,K)0 vanishes. Now suppose that we have found a particular solution Di such that ζij=0. We ask if other choices Di are possible. It follows from the formula (3.41) that Di is a consistent constant term for Li if and only if

fijkDi-Di=0. 3.42

This condition means that the functional Dg0 vanishes on the commutator ideal [g,g]. Therefore the space of all consistent constant terms is affine over g[g,g]0.

The situation is simpler when g is finite-dimensional, in which case there is no cohomological obstruction to quantization.

Lemma 3.11

If g is finite-dimensional, then [ζ]=0, and all quadratic super classical Airy structures can be quantized.

Proof

If g is finite-dimensional, there exists a simpler quantization procedure, namely Weyl quantization. In this scheme every term of the form xiyj in the classical hamiltonians is replaced by ħ2xixj+xjxi at the quantum level. This has the advantage that the commutation relations between quantum Li are automatically satisfied. Thus a quantization always exists: it not necessary to shift further with Di-terms (although it is still possible to construct other quantizations as in the previous Lemma). Since the space of consistent quantizations now has a distinguished origin, it is a vector (rather than affine) space. This has the corollary that the cohomology class [ζ] described in the previous paragraph vanishes identically, since Weyl quantization guarantees existence of a quantization for finite-dimensional quadratic super classical Airy structures.

Remark 3.12

In the infinite-dimensional case, Weyl quantization fails in general. Indeed, in order to have well-defined operators Li, we need to be able to use commutation relations to put all xj to the right of all xi in such a way that the coefficient in front of each derivative is finite. If we insist on Weyl ordering, this may turn out to be impossible. Indeed, we would like to replace expressions of the form bijxiyj with ħ2bijxixj+xjxi=ħ2bijxixj+ħ2bii. Unfortunately, the contraction bii is meaningless in general, as it contains an infinite sum. Therefore [ζ]0 is possible.

We have claimed earlier that Weyl quantization, whenever possible, is distinguished among all quantization schemes. The main reason for this is that it is canonical, with no room for arbitrary choices. Another pleasant property is that it is covariant with respect to symplectic transformations, in the sense that classical hamiltonians expressed in different coordinates are quantized to the same (up to isomorphism) quantum operators. This is not true for all quantization schemes. We illustrate this feature with the simplest possible example.

Example 3.13

Consider the purely quadratic hamiltonian

L=12x2-12y2. 3.43

In this situation Weyl quantization and normal ordering quantizations agree. Both give

Lq=12x2-ħ22x2. 3.44

Define now a=x+y2 and b=x-y2. The classical hamiltonian takes the form

L=ab. 3.45

The Weyl quantization of this hamiltonian differs from the normal ordering quantization (and infinitely many different quantization prescriptions). It gives

Lq=ħbb+ħ2. 3.46

We introduce new generators x=b+b2, x=-b+b2. They satisfy the same algebraic relations as b,b. Reexpressing13Lq in terms of x,x we recover the hamiltonian Lq. This doesn’t happen if L is quantized with any other ordering prescription.

An Example

We now illustrate the steps outlined in the classification scheme in a specific example. Our starting point is the Lie superalgebra with a single bosonic generator H and two fermionic generators Q1,Q2, with the only nonzero commutator [Q1,Q2]=H. We note that the simply connected Lie group generated by the bosonic part of this algebra is isomorphic to C.

  1. The first step in the classification is the construction of all representations of the superalgebra by purely quadratic hamiltonians. For the sake of brevity, we will not perform this step here. Rather, we will focus on one choice of a purely quadratic representation of the superalgebra.

    Let us denote the bosonic variables by xy satisfying {y,x}=1, and the fermionic variables by θ1,θ2,ξ1,ξ2 satisfying {θi,θj}={ξi,ξj}=0 and {ξi,θj}=δij. We will choose the following purely quadratic representation of the superalgebra:
    Q12:=xθ1, 3.47a
    Q22:=yξ1, 3.47b
    H2:={Q12,Q22}=xy-θ1ξ1. 3.47c
  2. The second step consists in adding linear and constant terms in a way that preserves the Poisson brackets. We first construct the most general linear terms by solving (3.28a), up to equivalences generated by shifts of even variables (see Definition 3.6). We then solve for constant terms using (3.28b).

    In our context, (3.28a) becomes the equations:
    {Q12,Q21}+{Q11,Q22}=H1, 3.48a
    {Q12,Q11}=0, 3.48b
    {Q22,Q21}=0, 3.48c
    with Q11,Q21 odd, and H1 even. The most general solution to these equations is
    Q11=α1θ1+β1θ2+γ1ξ2, 3.49a
    Q21=α2ξ1+β2ξ2+γ2θ2, 3.49b
    H1=α2x+α1y, 3.49c
    for constants α1,α2,β1,β2,γ1,γ2C. However, the terms α1θ1 and α2ξ1 in Q11 and Q21 respectively (and the corresponding terms in H1) can be obtained by shifting the even variables xx+α1 and yy+α2. According to the classification scheme, we consider these solutions as equivalent (see Definition 3.6), and so we can set α1=α2=0 without loss of generality, and we get the linear terms
    Q11=β1θ2+γ1ξ2, 3.50a
    Q21=β2ξ2+γ2θ2, 3.50b
    H1=0. 3.50c
    We then need to add constant terms using (3.28b). First, since Q1 and Q2 are fermionic, they cannot have constant terms. From (3.28b), the equations that we have to solve are
    {Q11,Q11}={Q21,Q21}=0,{Q11,Q21}=H0. 3.51
    The first two equalities impose that β1γ1=β2γ2=0. In particular, we must have that either β1=0 or γ1=0. In the case with β1 non-zero, we can always use the transformation θ2ξ2, ξ2θ2 (which does not modify the original quadratic hamiltonians and preserves Poisson brackets) to make β1 vanish. Thus we can assume without loss of generality that β1=0. The linear terms become
    Q11=γ1ξ2, 3.52a
    Q21=β2ξ2+γ2θ2, 3.52b
    H1=0. 3.52c
    Then, from the last equality in (3.51), we get:
    H0=γ1γ2. 3.53
    As a result, up to equivalences we have found the general representation:
    Q1=γ1ξ2+xθ1, 3.54a
    Q2=β2ξ2+γ2θ2+yξ1, 3.54b
    H=γ1γ2+xy-θ1ξ1, 3.54c
    with β2γ2=0. By changing values of the coefficients γ1,β2,γ2 one may obtain several genuinely different Airy structures.
    For clarity we now pick one particular example. We remark that the “trivial” case with γ1=β2=γ2=0 is rather boring; indeed, in this case it turns out that Σs is empty. Thus we consider the slightly more complicated case with γ1=γ2=1 and β2=0. The generators take the form:
    Q1=ξ2+xθ1, 3.55a
    Q2=θ2+yξ1, 3.55b
    H=1+xy-θ1ξ1. 3.55c
  3. The third step is to shift even variables to find an equivalent representation with the generators in the form of a super quantum Airy structure (if possible). As explained in Section 3.2.3, this corresponds to finding these points of the zero locus
    (H)0=1+xy=0 3.56
    where the gradient of (H)0 is nonzero. They take the form
    x=a,y=-1a, 3.57
    with aC\{0}. We see that Σs is connected and isomorphic to C×CZ, so its fundamental group is Z. Hence the stabiliser of any point with respect to the C-action is isomorphic to Z. We can double check that this is correct by solving for the Hamiltonian flow generated by (H)0. To this end we evaluate the Poisson brackets
    {H,x}=x, 3.58a
    {H,y}=-y. 3.58b
    Therefore the solution of the Hamilton equations dfdt={H,f} takes the form
    x(t)=etx(0), 3.59a
    y(t)=e-ty(0). 3.59b
    Clearly we can obtain any element of Σs by flowing from any given initial point, say x(0)=1, y(0)=-1. The relation xy+1=0 is explicitly preserved by the flow. Moreover we have (x(t),y(t))=(x(0),y(0)) if and only if t2πiZ, confirming that the stabiliser of (x(0), y(0)) is infinite cyclic.
    Since Σs is connected, we are free to choose a=1. Performing the corresponding shifts of the even variables xx+1 and yy-1 brings the generators in the form:
    Q1=θ1+ξ2+xθ1, 3.60a
    Q2=θ2-ξ1+yξ1, 3.60b
    H=y-x+xy-θ1ξ1. 3.60c
  4. Finally, the last step in the classification is to choose a Lagrangian complement. First, we define new canonical momenta π1=Q11, π2=Q21, and p=H1 to bring the linear terms in the form of a super quantum Airy structure. More explicitly,
    π1=θ1+ξ2, 3.61a
    π2=θ2-ξ1, 3.61b
    p=y-x. 3.61c
    Then, we have to choose a Lagrangian complement, i.e. odd linear generators κ1,κ2 and an even q such that {πi,κj}=δij, {p,q}=1, {κi,κj}=0. The following choice is convenient:
    κ1=12θ2+ξ1, 3.62a
    κ2=12ξ2-θ1, 3.62b
    q=12x+y. 3.62c
    In terms of these variables, the generators become:
    Q1=π1+14(2q-p)(π1-2κ2), 3.63a
    Q2=π2+14(2q+p)(2κ1-π2), 3.63b
    H=p+q2-14p2-14(π1-2κ2)(2κ1-π2). 3.63c
    This completes the construction of the super classical Airy structure. It can be quantized as usual to get a super quantum Airy structure. For instance, using Weyl quantization, the generators become the following differential operators in the variables κ1,κ2 and q:
    Q1=ħκ1-qκ2+ħ2qκ1+ħ2κ2q-ħ24qκ1, 3.64a
    Q2=ħκ2+qκ1-ħ2qκ2+ħ2κ1q-ħ24qκ2, 3.64b
    H=ħq+q2-κ1κ2+ħ2κ1κ1-ħ2κ2κ2-ħ24q2+ħ24κ1κ2. 3.64c
    By construction, those differential operators have the form of a super quantum Airy structure, and they form a representation of the original superalgebra, with the only non-zero commutator [Q1,Q2]=H.

The osp(1|2) Example

In this section we explain how we can construct quadratic super quantum Airy structures using representation theory of Lie superalgebras, following [4]. We then apply the procedure to the particular case of the osp(1|2) Lie superalgebra.

Let (V,[·,·]) be a finite dimensional Lie superalgebra. A quadratic super classical Airy structure Lcl can be understood as a Lie superalgebra homomorphism: for any ϕ,ψV, and with {·,·} denoting the canonical Poisson bracket on W=VV, we have

Lcl(ϕ),Lcl(ψ)=Lcl[ϕ,ψ]. 3.65

For a quadratic Airy structure Lcl(ϕ)=ϕ+L(ϕ),L(ϕ)K[W]2, (3.65) is equivalent to

L(ϕ),L(ψ)=L([ϕ,ψ]), 3.66a
ϕ,L(ψ)+L(ϕ),ψ=[ϕ,ψ]. 3.66b

In particular L is itself a Lie superalgebra homomorphism, and the formula

ρW(ϕ)(w)=L(ϕ),w,forϕV,wW, 3.67

defines a representation of (V,[·,·]) on W.

Following [4], we now show how one can use representation theory to construct a super classical Airy structure. Suppose that ρM is a representation of the Lie superalgebra V on a 2dimV dimensional space M equipped with a V invariant symplectic form ωM. Suppose further that there exists ΩM such that ρM(V)·Ω is a Lagrangian subspace of M. Thus, in particular, dimρM(V)·Ω=dimV and the map

I:VϕI(ϕ)=ρM(ϕ)·ΩρM(V)·Ω 3.68

is an even isomorphism. Choose a Lagrangian complement Σ of ρM(ϕ)·Ω, and define a map K:ΣVV by the formula

ϕ,K(s)=ωMρM(ϕ)·Ω,s,forϕV,sΣ. 3.69

Clearly K is also an even isomorphism and consequently

J=I-1K:M=ρM(V)·ΩΣVV=W, 3.70

is an even isomorphism as well. J is a symplectomorphism, which follows from the fact that the four (sub)spaces V,V,ρM(V)·Ω and Σ are Lagrangian, and for sΣ,ϕV we have

JρM(ϕ)·Ω,J(s)=I-1I(ϕ),K(s)=ωMρM(ϕ)·Ω,s 3.71

by (3.69). We can thus define a symplectic representation of V on W by the formula

ρW=JρMJ-1, 3.72

and consequently, via (3.67), quadratic hamiltonians L(ϕ) satisfying (3.66a).

Equation (3.66b) is also satisfied, since with our definitions (viewing ϕ,ψV via the natural embedding VV0VV=W as elements of W), we have for homogeneous ϕ and ψ,

L(ϕ),ψ+ϕ,L(ψ)=ρW(ϕ)(ψ)-(-1)|L(ψ)||ϕ|ρW(ψ)(ϕ)=JρM(ϕ)I(ψ)-(-1)|L(ψ)||ϕ|JρM(ψ)I(ϕ)=JρM(ϕ)ρM(ψ)·Ω-(-1)|L(ψ)||ϕ|JρM(ψ)ρM(ϕ)·Ω=I-1ρM([ϕ,ψ])·Ω=[ϕ,ψ]. 3.73

So to summarize, the construction goes as follows:

  1. We start with a Lie superalgebra V and a representation ρM(V) on some 2dimV-dimensional space M;

  2. We construct a symplectomorphism J:MW=VV, and a representation ρW=JρMJ-1 on W;

  3. By (3.67), this gives us a quadratic super classical Airy structure. It may be then quantized using Weyl prescription.

Let us now apply this construction to the osp(1|2) Lie superalgebra. Recall that osp(1|2) is generated by three even and two odd vectors, l0,l± and q± respectively, satisfying the relations

[l0,l±]=±l±[l+,l-]=2l0.[l0,q±]=±12q±,[l±,q]=q±,[q±,q±]=±l±,[q+,q-]=-l0. 3.74

Proposition 3.14

Let V be a (3|2)-dimensional super vector space, and let V~=VK0|1. We choose a basis {x1,x2,x3} and {θ1,θ2} for the even and odd subspaces of V respectively, with dual basis {y1,y2,y3} and {ξ1,ξ2}. We let θ0 be a basis for K0|1. Then the linear operator L:VW^(V~) defined by

L(y1)=ħx1-3θ0θ1-12x12-32ħx2x1-103ħx3x2+23ħθ1θ0+ħθ2θ1, 3.75a
L(y2)=ħx2-12ħx1x1-32ħx2x2-52ħx3x3-ħθ1θ1-2ħθ2θ2-34ħ, 3.75b
L(y3)=ħx3-163ħx1x2-32ħx2x3+32ħθ0θ1+4ħθ1θ2+316ħ2x12-3ħ2θ1θ0, 3.75c

and

L(ξ1)=ħθ1+3x1θ0-12ħθ1x1+13ħθ2x2+23ħx1θ0-32ħx2θ1+5ħx3θ2, 3.76a
L(ξ2)=ħθ2+38ħθ0x1-43ħθ1x2+12ħθ2x3+2ħx1θ1-32ħx2θ2+34ħ2θ0x1, 3.76b

is a quadratic super quantum Airy structure (with an extra fermionic variable), realized as a differential representation of the osp(1|2) Lie superalgebra under the identification

{l-,l0,l+,q-,q+}{L(y1),L(y2),L(y3),L(ξ1),L(ξ2)}. 3.77

Remark 3.15

Clearly, the operator L satisfies the second property in the definition of super quantum Airy structures (see Definition 2.3), and it is quadratic. All that remains to be checked is that it forms a representation of the osp(1|2) Lie superalgebra. This could be checked by brute force calculation. Let us instead construct this super quantum Airy structure using the general approach presented above.

Proof

We apply the construction described above for the particular case of the osp(1|2) Lie superalgebra, with generators satisfying the relations (3.74). We let V be a (3|2)-dimensional super vector space. We choose a basis {x1,x2,x3} and {θ1,θ2} for the even and odd subspaces of V respectively, with dual basis {y1,y2,y3} and {ξ1,ξ2}. We identify V with the algebra osp(1|2) by:

{y1,y2,y3,ξ1,ξ2}{l-,l0,l+,q-,q+}. 3.78

The irreducible representations of osp(1|2) are odd-dimensional. We will modify the construction above slightly, to allow our representation space M to be odd-dimensional. We enlarge W by adding an extra fermionic variable. We define V~=VK0|1, and let W~=V~V~. We will construct a symplectomorphism J as a map between the representation space M and a suitably chosen, odd-dimensional subspace of the space W~. The result of the construction will be a quadratic super classical Airy structure with an extra fermionic variable.

Since V is five-dimensional, we take M to be 11-dimensional and denote its basis vectors by fm and ek, where m=-2,-1,,2 and k=-52,-32,,52. The representation of osp(1|2) in question is given by

ρM(ξ2)fm=3+m2em+12,ρM(ξ1)fm=3-m2em-12, 3.79

and

ρM(ξ2)ek=52-k2fk+12,ρM(ξ1)ek=-52+k2fk+12, 3.80

so that ρM(ξ2)e52=ρM(ξ1)e-52=0. The action of other generators can be computed from (3.74).

The symplectic form on M,  invariant with respect to the osp(1|2) algebra, i.e. satisfying

ωMρM(yi)ek,el+ωMek,ρM(yi)el=ωMρM(yi)fm,fn+ωMfm,ρM(yi)fn=0, 3.81a
ωMρM(ξj)ek,fn+ωMek,ρM(ξj)fn=0, 3.81b

is determined uniquely up to an overall normalization. Its non-zero elements read

ωM(e12,e-12)=-ωM(e32,e-32)=ωM(e52,e-52)=1, 3.82a
ωM(f0,f0)=-ωM(f1,f-1)=ωM(f2,f-2)=1, 3.82b
ωM(fi,fj)-ωM(fj,fi)=0, 3.82c
ωM(ei,ej)+ωM(ej,ei)=0. 3.82d

The maximal isotropic subspaces of M are of dimension 5 and we can choose one of such subspaces to be generated by the action of ρm(V) on e32 (which thus plays the role of the vector Ω from the initial paragraphs of this subsection):

M+=ρM(V)e32=span{e12,f1,e32,f2,e52}. 3.83

Defining the map I:VM+ as in (3.68) we thus get

I(y1)=22e12,I(ξ1)=-2f1,I(y2)=32e32,I(ξ2)=12f2,I(y3)=5e52. 3.84

As a complement of M+, we take the space M0M-, where M0=Kf0 and

M-=span{e-12,f-1,e-32,f-2,e-12}. 3.85

Note that M- is also a maximal isotropic subspace of M. We can now define the map K:M-V as in (3.69) with the result

K(e-12)=22x1,K(f-1)=2θ1,K(e-32)=-32x2,K(f-2)=12θ2,K(e-52)=5x3. 3.86

Let us now denote the basis of the K0|1 subspace appearing in the decomposition V~=VK0|1 by θ0, and the corresponding element of the dual basis in V~ by ξ0. Taking η=ξ0+12θ0, so that

{η,η}={ξ0,θ0}=ξ0(η0)=1=ωM(f0,f0), 3.87

and defining J0(f0)=η, we construct the symplectomorphism

J=I-1J0K:M+Kf0M-VKηV 3.88

satisfying the properties required for ρW~=J-1ρMJ to define via (3.67) a quadratic super classical Airy structure on K[W~] (depending on an extra fermionic variable). Calculating the matrix elements of ρW~, and using (3.67), we get

Lcl(y1)=y1-32x2y1-103x3y2-12x12+23θ1η+θ2ξ1, 3.89a
Lcl(y2)=y2-12x1y1-32x2y2-52x3y3-θ1ξ1-2θ2ξ2-32η2, 3.89b
Lcl(y3)=y3+316y12-163x1y2-32x2y3+3ηξ1+4θ1ξ2, 3.89c

as well as

Lcl(ξ1)=ξ1-12θ1y1+13θ2y2+23x1η-32x2ξ1+5x3ξ2, 3.90a
Lcl(ξ2)=ξ2-43θ1y2+12θ2y3+34ηy1+2x1ξ1-32x2ξ2. 3.90b

Finally, applying Weyl quantization, we get

L(y1)=ħx1-3θ0θ1-12x12-32ħx2x1-103ħx3x2+23ħθ1θ0+ħθ2θ1, 3.91a
L(y2)=ħx2-12ħx1x1-32ħx2x2-52ħx3x3-ħθ1θ1-2ħθ2θ2-34ħ, 3.91b
L(y3)=ħx3-163ħx1x2-32ħx2x3+32ħθ0θ1+4ħθ1θ2+316ħ2x12-3ħ2θ1θ0, 3.91c

and

L(ξ1)=ħθ1+3x1θ0-12ħθ1x1+13ħθ2x2+23ħx1θ0-32ħx2θ1+5ħx3θ2, 3.92a
L(ξ2)=ħθ2+38ħθ0x1-43ħθ1x2+12ħθ2x3+2ħx1θ1-32ħx2θ2+34ħ2θ0x1. 3.92b

We would like to make several remarks about the constructed super quantum Airy structure:

  • It is not possible to construct an additional odd generator, say Q, which together with L(yi) and L(ξi) forms a super quantum Airy structure for some superalgebra of dimension 3|3. Indeed, suppose that such an extension exists. Writing down the Jacobi identity for the extended algebra and using the fact that the first cohomology group of osp(1|2) valued in the adjoint module vanishes, one can show that with no loss of generality Q may be assumed to be central. Similar arguments show that Q has to annihilate the whole 6|6-dimensional module MK0|1. This means that we have to take the corresponding Hamiltonian to be purely linear. The only linear variable which supercommutes with all L is ξ0-12θ0, which does not work because it is not nilpotent.

  • It is not possible to construct a super quantum Airy structure for osp(1|2) which does not involve and additional fermionic variable. The reason is that there is no 6|4-dimensional representation whose bosonic part is the irreducible 6-dimensional representation of sl(2,C), which is known [4] to be necessary to construct an Airy structure for the even subalgebra. For similar reasons, the irreducible representation that we chose is the only one which allows the construction of a super quantum Airy structure.

  • In the language of the classification scheme for super quantum Airy structures that we have outlined in Section 3.2, the fact that the Lagrangian embedding of osp(1|2) into MK0|1 may be obtained by acting with the generators on some reference vector Ω is equivalent to the statement that the linear terms of our generators are trivial, i.e. can be obtained by an affine shift of coordinates. There is no need to consider more general linear terms, because the relevant cohomology groups vanish [48].

  • We have [osp(1|2),osp(1|2)]=osp(1|2), so the quantization procedure is unique.

Super Frobenius Algebras

For our last finite-dimensional examples, we construct super quantum Airy structures from super Frobenius algebras, in the spirit of [4] (see also [10]).

We define super Frobenius algebras following [50], where a definition of G-twisted Frobenius algebras is given. We concentrate on the G=Z2 case, which corresponds to super Frobenius algebras.

Definition 3.16

A super Frobenius algebra As=A0A1 over K is a finite-dimensional Z2-graded vector space equipped with a super-commutative, associative product AgAhAgh respecting grading, and a non-degenerate bilinear form ϕ:AgAhK where ϕ=0 unless |g|+|h|=0 and g,h{0,1}.

Given a super Frobenius algebra, for any choice of even elements θA,θB,θCA0, we can construct a super quantum Airy structure as follows:

Lemma 3.17

Let {ei} be a basis for a super Frobenius algebra As, and {ej} be the dual basis, i.e.

ϕ(ei,ej)=(-1)|i||j|ϕ(ej,ei)=δij. 3.93

Then, for any even θA,θB,θCA0, the coefficients

Aijk=ϕ(θAeiejek),Bijk=ϕ(θBeiejek),Cijk=ϕ(θCeiejek), 3.94

together with an arbitrary coefficient Di, define a super quantum Airy structure on V=As with vanishing structure constants fijk=0.

Remark 3.18

We note that this super quantum Airy structure does not depend on an extra fermionic variable, i.e. the number of differential operators match with the dimension of the super vector space As.

Proof

To prove that this is a super quantum Airy structure, we will show that the coefficients satisfy the conditions of Lemma 2.19.

Note that (3.93) implies that every aAs can be written as a=ϕ(a,ei)ei. This gives

BikpAjpl=ϕ(θBeiekep)ϕ(θAejepel)=ϕ(θAejϕ(θBeiekep)epel)=ϕ(θAejθBeiekel)=ϕ(θAθBejeiekel). 3.95

Thus, we have

BikpAjpl+(-1)|k||l|BilpAjpk+(-1)|i||j|BijpApkl=ϕ(θAθBejeiekel)+(-1)|k||l|ϕ(θAθBejeielek)+(-1)|i||j|ϕ(θAθBeiejekel)=3ϕ(θAθBejeiekel)=(-1)|i||j|(ij), 3.96

and hence (2.28a) is satisfied.

Similarly, we find

BikpBjpl=ϕ(θB2ejeiekel), 3.97
CilpAjpk=ϕ(θAθCejeielek), 3.98
CikpBjpl=ϕ(θBθCejeiekel), 3.99
BijpCpkl=ϕ(θBθCeiejekel). 3.100

These ensure that all terms in the remaining conditions (2.28b), (2.28c) and (2.28d) are Z2-symmetrical under ij, and hence the conditions of Lemma 2.19 are satisfied.

A natural question then is to determine what this super quantum Airy structure associated to a super Frobenius algebra calculates. What is the meaning of the Fg,n?

In the standard, bosonic case, it is well known that a two-dimensional topological quantum field theory (2D TQFT) naturally defines the structure of a Frobenius algebra, and that, conversely, to any Frobenius algebra can be associated a unique 2D TQFT. In this case, it is shown in [4, 10] that the quantum Airy structure naturally associated to a Frobenius algebra, with the choice θA=θB=θC=1 and Di=ϕ(ei·H) for H=jejej, solves the corresponding TQFT, in the sense that its Fg,n compute the amplitudes of the 2D TQFT (up to a simple combinatorial factor).

In the general setting, it is known that a G-equivariant 2D TQFT defines the structure of a G-twisted Frobenius algebra, from which it can be recovered [44]. Super Frobenius algebras correspond to the case with G=Z2. We expect that a story analogous to the bosonic case holds here as well, namely, that the Fg,n associated to the super quantum Airy structure naturally constructed from a super Frobenius algebra with θA=θB=θC=1 and choice of Di as above, compute the amplitudes of the corresponding 2D super TQFT. This correspondence should be made precise and investigated further.

Infinite-Dimensional Examples

In this section we construct examples of infinite-dimensional, quadratic, subalgebraic, super quantum Airy structures, as representations of subalgebras of super Virasoro algebras. The construction follows along the lines of [11, 54]. In the bosonic case, many infinite-dimensional quantum Airy structures compute interesting enumerative invariants, such as intersection numbers over the moduli space of curves, Hurwitz numbers, Gromov–Witten invariants, etc. We expect the super quantum Airy structures that we construct in this section to also have interesting enumerative interpretations, which we leave for future work. In particular, they may be related to the recent supersymmetric generalization of JT gravity presented in [64].

In this section we focus on constructing quadratic super quantum Airy structures. But the construction can naturally be generalized to higher order super quantum Airy structures along the lines of [11], which we also leave for future work.

We do not review the well known definitions for vertex operator algebras (VOAs), vertex operator super algebras (VOSAs) and their representations. See [11] for relevant definitions in the context of the construction presented here, and for instance [6, 7, 9, 42, 49, 53] for more details on VOAs and VOSAs.

Quantum Airy Structures from The Free Boson VOA

Before we study super quantum Airy structures constructed as representations of subalgebras of the super Virasoro algebra, let us review the standard bosonic construction for the Virasoro algebra. In the process we will generalize the construction of [11], discovering a VOA realization of the “topological recursion without branched covers” presented in [4].

Our goal in this section is to construct quantum Airy structures as representations of subalgebras of the Virasoro algebra with central charge c=1:

[Lm,Ln]=(m-n)Lm+n+δm,-n112m(m2-1). 4.1

This algebra arises as the algebra of modes for the energy–momentum tensor of the free boson VOA, which is central in our construction. So let us start by reviewing the main features of the free boson VOA.

The Free Boson VOA

We study the free boson VOA (also called the Heisenberg VOA). It is generated by a single vector b-10V, where V is the space of states. Here 0V is the vacuum vector. The state-operator correspondence reads

b(z):=Y(b-10,z)=mZbmz-m-1, 4.2

where the modes of the bosonic field generate the Heisenberg algebra

[bm,bn]=mδm,-n. 4.3

The vacuum vector 0 is annihilated by all bk with k0, and the space of states V is the Fock space consisting of all excited modes

b-k1b-kn0,k1,,knZ>0. 4.4

Their corresponding operators are

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ229_HTML.gif 4.5

where Inline graphic denotes normal ordering, i.e., all modes bk with negative k are on the left and those with positive k are on the right.

The conformal vector ω for the free boson VOA is:

ω=12b-1b-10. 4.6

Its operator takes the form

T(z):=Y(ω,z)=mZLmz-m-2, 4.7

with its modes generating the Virasoro algebra with central charge c=1:

[Lm,Ln]=(m-n)Lm+n+δm,-n112m(m2-1). 4.8

The modes of the conformal field can be related to the Heisenberg modes as follows. From (4.5), we have:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ233_HTML.gif 4.9

and hence

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ234_HTML.gif 4.10

Untwisted and Twisted Representations of the Free Boson VOA

To construct quantum Airy structures as representations of subalgebras of the Virasoro algebra, we will start with two different representations of the free boson VOA: an untwisted representation, and a Z2-twisted representation (see for instance [11] for more details on twisted representations for VOAs in the context of Airy structures).

In both cases, we will represent the bosonic modes bm as endomorphisms of the space K[[V,ħ]], where V is an infinite-dimensional vector space. In other words, we represent the modes of the Heisenberg algebra as differential operators in W^ħ(V), which turns the Virasoro modes into differential operators in W^ħ(V) as well.

The untwisted representation is basically the VOA itself. The state-field correspondence for the representation is

YM(b-10,z)=mZbmMz-m-1, 4.11

with the bmM endomorphisms of K[[V,ħ]]. The Virasoro modes of the untwisted representation then take the form:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ236_HTML.gif 4.12

For the Z2-twisted representation, we consider the order two automorphism that acts on the Fock space as:

σ:VVb-k1b-kn0(-1)i=1nkib-k1b-kn0. 4.13

This automorphism preserves the vacuum vector 0 and the conformal vector ω=12b-1b-10. However, it does not preserve the fundamental vector b-10, which picks a sign.

Thus the state-field correspondence for this Z2-twisted representation takes the form

Yσ(b-10,z)=rZ+12brσz-r-1, 4.14

with fractional exponents, and twisted modes that generate the Heisenberg algebra:

[brσ,bsσ]=rδr,-s. 4.15

The Virasoro modes Lmσ of the Z2-twisted representation are related to the twisted bosonic modes brσ as follows:

Lemma 4.1

Consider the σ-twisted representation of the free boson VOA, with state-field correpondence (4.14). The conformal field

Yσ(ω,z)=12Yσ(b-1b-10,z)=mZLmσz-m-2 4.16

has Virasoro modes given by

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ241_HTML.gif 4.17
Proof

The proof goes as Lemma 4.2 of [11]. The conformal field is

Yσ(ω,z)=12Yσ(b-1b-10,z). 4.18

We want to rewrite it as a normal ordered product of twisted bosonic fields. For clarity, let us denote the twisted bosonic field by bσ(z):=Yσ(b-10,z).

For this we can use the product formula for twisted representations (see for instance Definition 3.18 in [11]):

Yσ(b-1b-10,z)=122z12(z1-z2)2bσ(z1)bσ(z2)z1=z2=z. 4.19

We have:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ244_HTML.gif 4.20

Substituting back in (4.19), we get:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ245_HTML.gif 4.21

where the second line follows from a straightforward calculation. Therefore,

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ246_HTML.gif 4.22

Combining with (4.14), we extract the relation between the modes for the Z2-twisted representation:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ247_HTML.gif 4.23

Quantum Airy Structures from Untwisted Representations of the Free Boson VOA

Let us now construct quantum Airy structures using these representations of the free boson VOA. We proceed in three steps:

  1. We choose a representation (untwisted or twisted) of the free boson VOA to obtain a differential representation for the Virasoro modes: LnW^ħ(V). As we will see, the operators ħLn have degree 2 (with the notion of degree defined in (2.3)). We thus have constructed a representation of the Virasoro algebra by quadratic differential operators ħLi.

  2. We pick a subalgebra of the Virasoro algebra. Our quantum Airy structure will be obtained as a representation of this particular Virasoro subalgebra.

  3. We shift some of the bosonic modes to create linear terms to the operators ħLi, without changing the algebra, so that the second condition of Definition 2.3 is satisfied. This constructs a representation of the chosen Virasoro subalgebra in the form of a quantum Airy structure.

For convenience, let us define the following notation. For any integer R, we define

δiR=1ifiR0ifi>R. 4.24

From untwisted representations of the free boson VOA, we construct the following three classes of quantum Airy structures:

Proposition 4.2

We represent the Heisenberg algebra as

kZ1,bkM=ħk,b-kM=1ħkxk,b0M=ħ0. 4.25

Let {x0,x1,x2,} be a basis for V, with dual set {y0,y1,y2,}. Define the differential operators HiW^ħ(V), iZ0:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ250_HTML.gif 4.26

which form a representation of the Virasoro subalgebra

[Hi,Hj]=ħ(i-j)Hi+j+N-1. 4.27
  1. Let N be any integer N0. The linear operator H:VW^ħ(V) defined by:
    iZ0,H(yi)=Hi+ħDiδiN-1, 4.28
    for arbitrary constant Di, i=0,,N-1, forms a quantum Airy structure as a representation of the Virasoro subalgebra (4.27).
  2. Let N be any integer N-1. The linear operator H:VW^ħ(V) defined by
    iZ1,H(yi)=Hi+ħDiδiN+1, 4.29a
    H(y0)=ħ0+ħ22C002+ħD0, 4.29b
    for arbitrary constants Di, i=0,,N+1 and C0, forms a quantum Airy structure as a representation of the Virasoro subalgebra (4.27) extended by:
    [H(y0),H(yi)]=0. 4.30
  3. Let N be any integer N-1. Let us now formally set the bosonic zero mode b0M=0. Consider the subspace VredV spanned by {x1,x2,}. The linear operator H:VredW^ħ(Vred) defined by
    iZ1,H(yi)=Hi|b0M=0+ħDiδiN+1, 4.31
    for arbitrary constants Di, i=1,,N+1, forms a quantum Airy structure as a representation of the Virasoro subalgebra (4.27).
Proof

We start with the untwisted representation of the free boson VOA. For our first two classes of quantum Airy structures, we represent the bosonic modes as endomorphisms on the space M=K[[V,ħ]], where V is an infinite-dimensional vector space with basis {x0,x1,x2,}, as:

kZ1,bkM=ħk,b-kM=1ħkxk,b0M=ħ0, 4.32

which form a representation of the Heisenberg algebra. From (4.12), the Virasoro modes read:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ258_HTML.gif 4.33

We multiplied the Virasoro modes by ħ here so that they have degree 2 according to the grading (2.3) on W^ħ(V). This rescales the Virasoro algebra by ħ.

We now choose the following infinite sequence of subalgebras of the Virasoro algebra:

[LmM,LnM]=(m-n)Lm+nM,m,nN, 4.34

for arbitrary fixed integer N-1. We will construct quantum Airy structures for each choice of such subalgebra, using the representation of the Virasoro algebra (4.33). To do so, we need to bring the operators ħLmM in the form of quantum Airy structures by creating appropriate linear terms.

For our first class of quantum Airy structures, we shift indices so that for any choice of subalgebra (choice of N) our operators are indexed by integers i=0,1,2,. Thus, given an integer N-1, we define the quadratic hamiltonians:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ260_HTML.gif 4.35

which have commutation relations:

[Hi2,Hj2]=ħ(i-j)Hi+j+N2. 4.36

To create appropriate linear terms, we do the shift bNbN+1ħ, which creates a linear term Hi1=ħbi=ħi in the hamiltonians without changing the commutation relations. It however also creates an unwanted constant term HN0=12, but since HN never appears in the right-hand-side of the commutation relations (4.36), we can get rid of this constant term without changing the algebra. We thus obtain hamiltonians:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ262_HTML.gif 4.37

which have the form of a quantum Airy structure. However, this quantum Airy structure has no “A” or “D” terms (see (2.23)), and hence its associated partition function Z is trivial: that is, Z=1 (see (2.30)). For N=-1, there is not much that we can do. However, for N0 we can make the partition function non-trivial. Looking at the commutation relations (4.36), we see that the operators Hi, i=0,,N never appear on the right-hand-side of the commutation relations. Thus we can add quadratic “D” terms of the form ħDi to those operators without changing the commutation relations (since these terms commute with all Hi). We thus obtain our first class of quantum Airy structures. For convenience, in this case we redefine NN-1, so that the operators take the same form as for the other cases. We then have N0. We obtain the quantum Airy structure (4.28), as a representation of the algebra (4.27).

For our second class of quantum Airy structures, we shift indices so that for any N our operators are indexed by integers i=1,2,:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ263_HTML.gif 4.38

with commutation relations:

[Hi2,Hj2]=ħ(i-j)Hi+j+N-12. 4.39

To create linear terms, we do the shift bN-1bN-1+1ħ, which creates a linear term Hi1=ħbi=ħi in the hamiltonians without changing the commutation relations. We get rid of the unwanted constant term HN-10=12 as above, and introduce non-trivial D-terms ħDi for i=1,,N+1, since the corresponding Hi, i=1,,N+1 do not appear on the right-hand-side of the commutation relations. This is not quite an Airy structure though, since the hamiltonians depend on the variable x0, which does not appear in the linear terms. We notice however that the Hi only depend on the derivative 0 through the bosonic zero mode b0M, they do not depend on the variable x0 itself. Thus, we can introduce an auxiliary operator

H0=ħ0+ħ22C002+ħD0, 4.40

which commutes with all Hi, i0, to get a quantum Airy structure. The result is the quantum Airy structure (4.29), as a representation of the algebra (4.30).

For our third class of quantum Airy structures, we modify the representation of the Heisenberg algebra slightly, and set the bosonic zero mode b0M=0. That is, we consider a “momentum zero” representation. To get a quantum Airy structure, we do the same manipulations as for the second class above. We end up with the quantum Airy structure (4.31), as a representation of the algebra (4.27).

Before we proceed, a few remarks are in order.

Remark 4.3

Note that from the point of view of partition functions, the third class can be understood as a special case of the second class. Indeed, consider the second class of quantum Airy structures with C0=D0=0. The constraint H0Z=0 implies that Z does not depend on the variable x0. Then any term in the constraints HiZ=0 that involves b0M identically vanishes, and hence the constraints HiZ=0 become identical to the constraints of the third class of quantum Airy structures. Therefore, the partition function of the third class is equal to the partition function of the second class with C0=D0=0.

Remark 4.4

In the construction above we introduced the shifts ħDi as defining a new representation for the Virasoro subalgebra. We could however take a different viewpoint. We could stick with the representation without the added D-terms, and then, instead of solving the constraints HiZ=0 to define the partition function, we could solve the constraints

HiZ=-ħDiZ, 4.41

with possibly non-vanishing Di in the allowed range (for instance i=0,,N-1 in the first class). This is entirely equivalent to what we did above, but from the point of view of vertex operator algebras, by solving these constraints we would be constructing so-called “Whittaker modules” for the Virasoro algebra. We are currently investigating this connection further.

It turns out that the quantum Airy structures in the third class of Proposition 4.2 have appeared in the literature before, in a different form. Indeed, in Section 10 of [4], a variant of the Eynard–Orantin topological recursion was constructed, the so-called “topological recursion without branched covers”. We now show that the quantum Airy structures of Proposition 4.2 are examples of this topological recursion without branched covers. We thus obtain a realization of the topological recursion without branched covers in terms of representations of the free boson VOA, which sheds light on its origin. It remains to be seen however whether the associated partition functions compute interesting enumerative invariants, and whether the other quantum Airy structures of Proposition 4.2 have similar realizations.

Proposition 4.5

The data of a spectral curve for the topological recursion without branched covers of Section 10 of [4] is given by:

  • A Riemann surface Σ;

  • A meromorphic one-form ω0,1 on Σ;

  • A bilinear differential ω0,2 on Σ2;

  • A finite subset rΣ such that ω0,1 has at most simple zeros on r;

  • A meromorphic one-form ω1,1 on Σ such that for any point pr, z2ω1,1(z)ω0,1(z) is holomorphic at p, where z is a local coordinate near p.

Consider the spectral curve given by the data:

Σ=P1,ω0,1(z)=-dzzN,ω0,2(z1,z2)=dz1dz2(z1-z2)2,r={0},ω1,1(z)=-k=1N+1Dkdzzk+1, 4.42

where z is a coordinate on P1 and NZ0. Then, for any N0, the quantum Airy structure associated to the topological recursion without branched cover on this spectral curve, which was constructed in Section 10 of [4], precisely corresponds to the quantum Airy structure in the third class of Proposition 4.2.

Proof

Following [4], we define, for kZ1,14

ξk(z)=dzzk+1,ξk(z)=zk,θ(z):=1ω0,1(z)=-zNdz. 4.43

According to the recipe of Section 10 in [4] (see also Proposition 8.13), the coefficients of the quantum Airy structure associated to topological recursion without branched covers can be calculated as follows. The D-coefficients can be obtained by expanding the one-form ω1,1(z) in the basis of differentials ξk(z):

ω1,1(z)=-k=1N+1Dkξk(z). 4.44

As for ABC, they can be calculated as:

Aijk=Resz0(ξi(z)dξj(z)dξk(z)θ(z)), 4.45
Bijk=Resz0(ξi(z)dξj(z)ξk(z)θ(z)), 4.46
Cijk=Resz0(ξi(z)ξj(z)ξk(z)θ(z)). 4.47

Substituting (4.43) in these equations, we obtain:

Aijk=0,Bijk=-jδi+j+N-1,k,Cijk=-δi+N-j-1,k. 4.48

Thus, the resulting differential operators are, for iZ1,

Hi=ħxi+ħk-l=-i-N+1kxkl+ħ22k+l=i+N-1kl+ħDiδiN+1, 4.49

with k,lZ1, which can be rewritten as

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ275_HTML.gif 4.50

with

bkM=ħk,b-kM=1ħkxk,b0M=0, 4.51

for all kZ1. Those are precisely the differential operators Hi of Proposition 4.2.

Quantum Airy Structures from Z2-Twisted Representations of the Free Boson VOA

We now construct another class of quantum Airy structures obtained from the σ-twisted representation of the free boson VOA (see Lemma 4.1). This is an example of the general construction of [11] for W-algebras, although only the cases with N=-1 and N=0 (and their generalizations to W-algebras) were considered there.

Proposition 4.6

Let N be any fixed integer N-1. We represent the Heisenberg algebra for the twisted bosonic modes as:

rZ0+12,brσ=ħr+12,b-rσ=rħxr+12. 4.52

Let {x1,x2,x3,} be a basis for V, with dual set {y1,y2,y3,}. The linear operator H:VW^ħ(V) defined by:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ278_HTML.gif 4.53

for arbitrary constants Di, i=1,,N+1, forms a quantum Airy structure as a representation of the Virasoro subalgebra

[Hi,Hj]=ħ(i-j)Hi+j+N-1. 4.54
Proof

We start with the σ-twisted representation of the free boson VOA. The twisted bosonic modes, see (4.14), form the Heisenberg algebra [brσ,bsσ]=rδr,-s, where r,sZ+12. We represent the twisted bosonic modes as endomorphisms on the space K[[V,ħ]] as:

rZ0+12,brσ=ħr+12,b-rσ=rħxr+12. 4.55

Note that there is no choice of bosonic zero mode here, because the bosonic field is twisted by the Z2 automorphism. From (4.23), the Virasoro modes take the form:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ281_HTML.gif 4.56

Now as in Proposition 4.2, we choose the subalgebra

[Lmσ,Lnσ]=(m-n)Lmσ,m,nN, 4.57

for an arbitrary fixed integer N-1. We now shift indices so that our operators are indexed by integers i=1,2,3, for any N. For any N-1, we define the quadratic hamiltonians:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ283_HTML.gif 4.58

Those have commutation relations:

[Hi2,Hj2]=ħ(i-j)Hi+j+N-12. 4.59

To add linear terms, we consider the shift bN-12bN-12+1ħ, which creates linear terms Hi1=ħbi-12σ=ħi. It also creates a constant term HN0=12, but as usual we get rid of it without changing the algebra since HN does not appear on the right-hand-side of the commutation relations. We also add D-terms ħDi for i=1,,N+1 to the operators Hi, i=1,,N+1, since they do not appear on the right-hand-side of the commutation relations. The resulting quantum Airy structures are (4.53), as representations of the algebra (4.54).

These quantum Airy structures are known to produce interesting enumerative invariants:

  • For N=-1, the quantum Airy structure takes the explicit form
    iZ1,Hi=ħi+ħ22j=1i-2ji-1-j+ħ2j=i-1(2j-2i+3)xj-i+2j+18(x1)2δi,1+ħ16δi,2, 4.60
    where the second sum is understood to vanish for terms with j<1. This the quantum Airy structure associated to the Eynard–Orantin topological recursion on the Airy spectral curve (up to trivial rescaling of the variables xi) [37, 38]. The constraints HiZ=0 reproduce the well-known Virasoro constraints for the Kontsevich–Witten tau-function of the KdV hierarchy, and Z is a generating function for intersection numbers on the moduli space of curves [30, 51, 65].
  • For N=0, the quantum Airy structure takes the form:
    iZ1,Hi=ħi+ħ22j=1i-1ji-j+ħ2j=i(2j-2i+1)xj-i+1j+ħ16δi,1+ħD1δi,1. 4.61
    For D1=0, this is the quantum Airy structure associated to the Eynard–Orantin topological recursion on the Bessel spectral curve (up to rescaling of variables xi) [32]. In this case, the constraints HiZ=0 reproduce the Virasoro constraints for the Brézin–Gross–Witten tau-function of the KdV hierarchy [1, 23, 45, 56]. Z is now a generating function for intersection numbers on the moduli space of curves involving Norbury’s cohomology class [33, 59].
  • For arbitrary N1, the quantum Airy structure reads (iZ1):
    Hi=ħi+ħ22j=1i+N-1ji+N-j+ħ2j=i+N(2j-2i-2N+1)xj-i-N+1j+ħDiδiN+1. 4.62
    It is at the moment unknown whether the partition function that it computes has an interesting enumerative interpretation. Remark that for N1, the partition function is non-trivial only if the Di do not all vanish. In this case, is it a generating function for some intersection numbers on the moduli space curves? Is Z a tau-function for the KdV hierarchy? These questions certainly deserve further investigation.

Super Quantum Airy Structures from the Free Boson–Fermion VOSA

Along the same lines as the bosonic construction of the previous section, we now construct classes of examples of infinite-dimensional, quadratic, super quantum Airy structures as representations of subalgebras of the super Virasoro algebra with central charge c=32:

[Lm,Ln]=(m-n)Ln+m+δm,-n18m(m2-1),[Ln,Gr]=n2-rGn+r,{Gr,Gs}=2Lr+s+δr,-s12r2-14. 4.63

We will construct super quantum Airy structures as representations of subalgebras of the super Virasoro algebra in both the Neveu-Schwarz (NS) sector (where rs are half-integers) and the Ramond sector (where rs are integers).

Our main tool is the free boson–fermion vertex operator super algebra (VOSA), which has N=1 supersymmetry. We will construct our super quantum Airy structures from untwisted and twisted representations of the free boson–fermion VOSA. So let us first review the main features of this theory. We refer the reader to [6, 42, 49] for more details.

Remark 4.7

In this section we construct classes of super quantum Airy structures as representations of subalgebra of the super Virasoro algebra in the NS and Ramond sectors. A natural question then is whether the associated partition functions Z compute interesting enumerative invariants. This is unclear at the moment, and certainly deserves further investigation. For instance, it would be very interesting to see whether these super quantum Airy structures are related to the supersymmetric generalization of JT gravity and Mirzakhani’s recursion presented in [64].

We also remark that we only consider the free boson–fermion VOSA here, which has N=1 supersymmetry. But it would interesting to investigate whether super quantum Airy structures can be constructed as representations of VOSAs with N=2 supersymmetry as well.

The Free Boson–Fermion VOSA

The free boson VOA was introduced in Section 4.1.1. Let us now introduce the free fermion VOSA. It is again generated by a single vector ψ-120Vf, where Vf is the space of states. Here 0Vf is the vacuum vector. The state-operator correspondence reads:

Y(ψ-120,z)=mZψm+12z-m-1=rZ+12ψrz-r-12, 4.64

where the modes ψr generate the Clifford algebra {ψr,ψs}=δr,-s.

The vacuum vector 0 is annihilated by all ψk with k>0, and the space of states Vf is the Fock space of all excited states

ψ-k1ψ-kn0,k1,,knZ0+12. 4.65

Define a normal ordering on the fermionic modes as:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ291_HTML.gif 4.66

Then the operators corresponding to the states in the Fock space are:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ292_HTML.gif 4.67

The conformal vector ω for the free fermion VOSA reads:

ω=12ψ-32ψ-120. 4.68

Its operator takes the form

Y(ω,z)=mZLmz-m-2, 4.69

with its modes generating the Virasoro algebra with central charge c=12:

[Lm,Ln]=(m-n)Lm+n+124m(m2-1)δm,-n. 4.70

The Virasoro modes are related to the modes of the fermionic field as follows. From (4.67), we have:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ296_HTML.gif 4.71

Thus

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ297_HTML.gif 4.72

where the second equality follows from a straightforward calculation.

Now let Vb be a free boson VOA, and Vf be a free fermion VOSA. Let us consider their tensor product V=VbVf. More precisely, the vector space is a Fock space of all states excited by bosonic modes b-n and fermionic modes ψ-r, where we assume [bn,ψr]=0 for any nZ and rZ+12. The state-operator correspondence YV satisfies YV(uv,z)=YVb(u,z)YVf(v,z) for uVb and vVf.

We define the vacuum vector of the combined theory as 0=0Vb0Vf. From now on we will omit the tensor product symbols for clarity. The conformal vector ω for V reads:

ω=12b-1b-1+ψ-32ψ-120. 4.73

Its modes are given by the sum of (4.10) and (4.72):

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ299_HTML.gif 4.74

Those generate the Virasoro algebra with central charge c=3/2:

[Lm,Ln]=(m-n)Lm+n+18m(m2-1)δm,-n. 4.75

It turns out that this theory has N=1 supersymmetry. This means that it has a superconformal vector τ, whose modes, together with the Virasoro modes, generate a super Virasoro algebra in the NS sector. For the free boson–fermion VOSA, the superconformal vector is [6]:

τ=b-1ψ-120. 4.76

Its operator reads:

Y(τ,z)=mZGm-12z-m-1=rZ+12Grz-r-32, 4.77

with the modes Gr given by

Gr=mZψr-mbm. 4.78

These Gr, together with the Lm of (4.74), generate an N=1 super Virasoro algebra in the NS sector with central charge 3/2:

[Lm,Ln]=(m-n)Ln+m+δm,-n18m(m2-1),[Ln,Gr]=n2-rGn+r,{Gr,Gs}=2Lr+s+δr,-s12r2-14. 4.79

We call this theory the free boson–fermion VOSA.

Untwisted and Twisted Representations for the Free Boson–Fermion VOSA

Our goal is now to construct super quantum Airy structures as representations of subalgebras of the super Virasoro algebra (in both NS and Ramond sectors). To this end, we will construct untwisted and twisted representations for the free boson–fermion VOSA.

We will construct four different representations. The first one is the untwisted one, which is obtained directly from the natural representation of the super Heisenberg algebra. The super Virasoro modes take the form (4.74) and (4.78) in terms of the representation of the bosonic and fermionic modes.

For the three twisted ones, we will use three distinct Z2 automorphisms of the VOSA:

  1. The σ-twisted representation is obtained using the Z2 automorphism σ:VV that we already studied in Lemma 4.1, extended trivially to the fermionic sector. It acts on the Fock space of the free boson–fermion VOSA as follows:
    σ:b-k1b-kmψ-r1ψ-rn0(-1)i=1mkib-k1b-kmψ-r1ψ-rn0. 4.80
    In other words, it acts on the bosons as before, but leaves the fermions invariant. It preserves the vacuum vector 0 and the conformal vector ω. However, it twists the boson b-10, and also the superconformal vector τ=b-1ψ-120. Therefore, the σ-twisted representation will product a representation of the super Virasoro algebra in the Ramond sector.
  2. The μ-twisted representation is obtained using the parity Z2 automorphism μ:VV, which sends odd vectors to minus themselves and keeps even vectors invariant. On the Fock space, it acts as:
    μ:b-k1b-kmψ-r1ψ-rn0(-1)nb-k1b-kmψ-r1ψ-rn0. 4.81
    It preserves the vacuum vector 0 and the conformal vector ω, but it twists the fermion ψ-120 and the superconformal vector τ=b-1ψ-120. We will then again obtain a representation of the super Virasoro algebra in the Ramond sector.
  3. Our last twisted representation is the ρ-twisted representation, with ρ=σμ:VV, where we combine both automorphisms. The combined Z2 automorphism acts on the Fock space as:
    σμ:b-k1b-kmψ-r1ψ-rn0(-1)n+i=1mkib-k1b-kmψ-r1ψ-rn0. 4.82
    As usual, it keeps the vacuum and the conformal vectors invariant. While it twists both the boson vector b-10 and the fermion vector ψ-120, it keeps the superconformal vector τ=b-1ψ-120 invariant. Thus we will get a representation of the super Virasoro algebra in the NS sector.

Let us now calculate the super Virasoro modes for all three Z2-twisted representations.

Lemma 4.8
  • For the σ-twisted representation, the super Virasoro modes (in the Ramond sector) take the form
    graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ308_HTML.gif 4.83a
    Gmσ=rZ+12bm-rσψrσ, 4.83b
    with mZ, in terms of the twisted bosonic modes and untwisted fermionic modes:
    Yσ(b-10,z)=rZ+12brσz-r-1,Yσ(ψ-120,z)=rZ+12ψrσz-r-12. 4.84
  • For the μ-twisted representation, the super Virasoro modes (in the Ramond sector) take the form
    graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ311_HTML.gif 4.85a
    Gmμ=iZbm-iμψiμ, 4.85b
    with mZ, in terms of the untwisted bosonic modes and twisted fermionic modes:
    Yμ(b-10,z)=mZbmμz-m-1,Yμ(ψ-120,z)=nZψnμz-n-12. 4.86
  • For the ρ=σμ-twisted representation, the super Virasoro modes (in the NS sector) take the form:
    graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ314_HTML.gif 4.87a
    Grρ=sZ+12bsρψr-sρ, 4.87b
    with mZ and rZ+12, in terms of the twisted bosonic modes and twisted fermionic modes:
    Yρ(b-10,z)=rZ+12brρz-r-1,Yρ(ψ-120,z)=nZψnρz-n-12. 4.88
Proof

For the σ-twisted representation, the boson is twisted, while the fermion is not:

Yσ(b-10,z)=rZ+12brσz-r-1,Yσ(ψ-120,z)=rZ+12ψrσz-r-12. 4.89

The calculation of the conformal field Yσ(ω,z) is the same as in Lemma 4.1, since only the boson is twisted. The superconformal field Yσ(τ,z) is twisted, and we get:

Yσ(τ,z)=mZGmσz-m-32=Yσ(b-10,z)Yσ(ψ-12,z)=r,sZ+12brσψsσz-r-s-32. 4.90

For the μ-twisted representation, the boson is untwisted, while the fermion is:

Yμ(b-10,z)=mZbmμz-m-1,Yμ(ψ-120,z)=nZψnμz-n-12. 4.91

The bosonic part of the conformal field is untwisted. For the fermionic part, the calculation follows along the same lines as in Lemma 4.1. We will omit it for brevity. The superconformal field Yμ(τ,z) is twisted, and we get:

Yμ(τ,z)=mZGmμz-m-32=Yμ(b-10,z)Yμ(ψ-12,z)=i,jZbiμψjμz-i-j-32. 4.92

For the ρ=σμ-twisted representation, both boson and fermion are twisted:

Yρ(b-10,z)=rZ+12brρz-r-1,Yρ(ψ-120,z)=nZψnρz-n-12. 4.93

The conformal field is calculated by combining the calculations for the σ-twisted and μ-twisted representation. As for the superconformal field, it is untwisted, and we get:

Yρ(τ,z)=rZ+12Grρz-r-32=Yρ(b-10,z)Yρ(ψ-12,z)=sZ+12mZbsρψmρz-m-s-32. 4.94

Let us now construct classes of super quantum Airy structures using these four representations.

Super Quantum Airy Structures from Untwisted Representations of the Free Boson–Fermion VOSA

We first construct super quantum Airy structures from the untwisted representation of the free boson–fermion VOSA.

Proposition 4.9

We represent the super Heisenberg algebra of untwisted bosonic and fermionic modes as:

mZ1,bmM=ħxm,b-mM=mħxm,b0M=ħx0,rZ0+12,ψrM=ħθr+12,ψ-rM=1ħθr+12. 4.95

Let {x0,x1,} (even) and {θ1,θ2,} (odd) be a basis for the super vector space V, with dual sets {y0,y1,} and {η1,η2,}. Define the operators Hi,FrW^ħ(V) for iZi0 and rZ0+12:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ324_HTML.gif 4.96a
Fr=ħθr+12+ħmZψr+N-1-mMbmM, 4.96b

which generate the following subalgebra of the super Virasoro algebra in the NS sector:

[Hm,Hn]=(m-n)Hm+n+N-1,[Hm,Fr]=m-N+12-rFm+r+N-1,{Fr,Fs}=2Hr+s+N-1. 4.97
  1. Let N be any integer N0. The linear operator H:VW^ħ(V) defined by, for all iZ0 and rZ0+12,
    H(yi)=Hi+ħDiδiN-1,H(ηr+12)=Fr, 4.98
    for arbitrary constants Di, i=0,,N-1, forms a super quantum Airy structure as a representation of the algebra (4.97).
  2. Let N be any integer N1. The linear operator H:VW^ħ(V) defined by, for all iZ1 and rZ0+12,
    H(yi)=Hi+ħDiδiN-1,H(ηr+12)=Fr,H(y0)=ħx0+ħ22C02(x0)2+ħD0, 4.99
    for arbitrary constants Di, i=0,,N-1 and C0, forms a super quantum Airy structure as a representation of the algebra (4.97) extended by
    [H(y0),H(yi)]=[H(y0),H(ηr+12)]=0. 4.100
  3. Let N be any integer N-1. Let VredV be the subspace spanned by {x0,x1,} and {θ2,θ3,}. The linear operator H:VredW^ħ(V) defined by, for all iZ1 and rZ1+12,
    H(yi)=Hi+ħDiδiN+1,H(ηr+12)=Fr,H(y0)=ħx0+ħ22C02(x0)2+ħD0, 4.101
    for arbitrary constants Di, i=0,,N+1, and C0, form a super quantum Airy structure as a representation of the algebra (4.97) extended by
    [H(y0),H(yi)]=[H(y0),H(ηr+12)]=0. 4.102
    This is a super quantum Airy structure with an extra fermionic variable, θ1.

We remark that we could have considered as separate cases setting the bosonic zero mode b0M=0. But since the result will be equivalent to the cases with an auxiliary operator H0 with C0=D0=0, we did not consider it separately.

Proof

We start with the untwisted representation, see Lemma 4.8. We represent the Heisenberg algebra for untwisted bosonic and fermionic modes as:

mZ1,bmM=ħxm,b-mM=mħxm,b0M=ħx0,rZ0+12,ψrM=ħθr+12,ψ-rM=1ħθr+12. 4.103

The super Virasoro generators (in the NS sector) take the form:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ333_HTML.gif 4.104a
GrM=mZψr-mMbmM. 4.104b

We consider the closed subalgebras {LmM,GrM} with mN-1 and rN-12 for any N0, which have no central term. We shift indices to index the bosonic generators with 0,1,2, and the fermionic ones with 12,32,. We define the quadratic hamiltonians:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ335_HTML.gif 4.105
Fr2:=ħGr+N-1M=ħmZψr+N-1-mMbmM, 4.106

which have the commutation relations

[Hm2,Hn2]=(m-n)Hm+n+N-12,[Hm2,Fr2]=m-N+12-rFm+r+N-12,{Fr2,Fs2}=2Hr+s+N-12. 4.107

We shift the bosonic mode bN-1MbN-1M+1ħ to get linear terms Hi1=ħbiM=ħxi and Fr1=ħψrM=ħθr+12. We also get a constant term HN-10=12, which we get rid of without changing the algebra. We add D-terms ħDi to the operators Hi with i=0,,N-1. This gives our first class of super quantum Airy structures.

We may want to consider θ1 as being an extra fermionic variable. For this we would like to consider the smaller algebra {LmM,GrM} with mN and rN+32. This is closed only for N0. Then we proceed as in the previous case, and the D-terms that we can add are the same. Thus, the operators are precisely the same as in the previous case, minus the operator F12. By uniqueness of the partition function, it follows that the solution to the constraint is the same as in the previous case, and hence, in particular, it also satisfies the constraint F12Z=0. Therefore it is the same super quantum Airy structure.

The next thing that we can try is add an auxiliary operator H0 as in Proposition 4.2. For this, we consider the subalgebra {LmM,GrM} with mN and rN-12, which is closed for N1. We then shift indices to index the bosonic operators with 1,2, (without the 0) and the fermionic operators with 12,32,. To do this, we use the same quadratic hamiltonians as (4.105), with commutation relations (4.107). We shift the bosonic mode bN-1MbN-1M+1ħ to create linear terms Hi1=ħbiM=ħxi and Fr1=ħψrM=ħθr+12. We also get a constant term HN-10=12 which we get rid of as usual. We add D-terms ħDi for i=1,,N-1. To get a quantum Airy structure, we need to supplement with the auxiliary operator

H0=ħx0+ħ22C02(x0)2+ħD0, 4.108

which commutes with all other operators. This is our second class of super quantum Airy structures.

For the third class, we want to keep using H0, but we would like to think of θ1 as an extra fermionic variable. For this, we consider the subalgebra {LmM,GrM} with mN and rN+12 for any N-1. We want to shift indices so that bosonic generators are indexed with 1,2, and fermionic ones with 32,52,. The same hamiltonians (4.105) will do the job, with commutation relations (4.107). To create appropriate linear terms, we shift the bosonic mode bN-1MbN-1M+1ħ as usual. We add D-terms ħDi for i=1,,N+1, and the auxiliary operator (4.108). This gives our third class of super quantum Airy structures.

We note that we could also consider separately the cases where we set the bosonic zero mode b0M=0, but in the end it is equivalent to the special case of the auxiliary operator H0 with C0=D0=0, and thus we do not consider it separately.

Super Quantum Airy Structures from σ-Twisted Representations of the Free Boson–Fermion VOSA

We now consider the σ-twisted representation of the free boson–fermion VOSA. We construct the following two classes of super quantum Airy structures:

Proposition 4.10

Let N be any integer N0. We represent the super Heisenberg algebra for the twisted bosonic modes and untwisted fermionic modes as:

rZ0+12,brσ=ħxr+12,b-rσ=rħxr+12,rZ0+12,ψrσ=ħθr+12,ψ-rσ=1ħθr+12. 4.109

Let {x1,x2,} (even) and {θ1,θ2,} (odd) be a basis for the super vector space V, with dual sets {y1,y2,} and {η1,η2,}. Define the differential operators Hi,FiW^ħ(V), for iZ1,

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ340_HTML.gif 4.110a
Fi=ħθi+ħrZ+12bi+N-1-rσψrσ, 4.110b

which form a representation of the following subalgebra of the super Virasoro algebra in the Ramond sector:

[Hm,Hn]=(m-n)Hm+n+N-1,[Hm,Fn]=m-N+12-nFm+n+N-1,{Fm,Fn}=2Hm+n+N-1. 4.111
  1. The linear operator H:VW^ħ(V) defined by, for all iZ1,
    H(yi)=Hi+ħDiδiN,H(ηi)=Fi, 4.112
    for arbitrary constants Di, i=1,,N, forms a super quantum Airy structure as a representation of the algebra (4.111)
  2. Let VredV be the subspace spanned by {x1,x2,} and {θ2,θ3,}. The linear operator H:VredW^ħ(V) defined by, for all iZ1 and jZ2,
    H(yi)=Hi+ħDiδiN+1,H(ηj)=Fj, 4.113
    for arbitrary constants Di, i=1,,N+1, forms a super quantum Airy structure with an extra fermionic coordinate θ1, as a representation of the algebra (4.111)
Proof

We start with the σ-twisted representation, see Lemma 4.8. We represent the twisted bosonic modes and untwisted fermionic modes as:

rZ0+12,brσ=ħxr+12,b-rσ=rħxr+12,rZ0+12,ψrσ=ħθr+12,ψ-rσ=1ħθr+12. 4.114

Here there is no bosonic or fermionic zero mode. From Lemma 4.8, the super Virasoro generators take the form (4.83):

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ346_HTML.gif 4.115a
Gmσ=rZ+12bm-rσψrσ. 4.115b

The super Virasoro algebra is in the Ramond sector.

For our first class of super quantum Airy structures, we consider the closed subalgebra {Lmσ,Gnσ} with m,nN, for any N0. It takes the form:

[Lmσ,Lnσ]=(m-n)Lm+nσ,[Lmσ,Gnσ]=m2-nGm+nσ,{Gmσ,Gnσ}=2Lm+nσ-18δm,0δn,0. 4.116

To get rid of the central term, we redefine L0σL0σ-116, which does not change the rest of the algebra. We shift indices as usual to define the quadratic hamiltonians, for iZ1:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ349_HTML.gif 4.117

which satisfy the commutation relations:

[Hm2,Hn2]=(m-n)Hm+n+N-12,[Hm2,Fn2]=m-N+12-nFm+n+N-12,{Fm2,Fn2}=2Hm+n+N-12. 4.118

To create appropriate linear terms, we shift the bosonic modes bN-12σbN-12σ+1ħ, which creates terms Hi1=ħbi-12σ=ħxi and Fi1=ħψi-12σ=ħθi. This also creates a constant term HN0=12 which we get rid of without changing the algebra. We can also add D-terms ħDi to Hi for i=1,,N without changing the algebra, which gives our first class of super quantum Airy structures.

For the second class, we consider a smaller closed subalgebra {Lmσ,Gnσ} with mN, nN+1, for any N0. The algebra is still (4.116) but with no central term now. We shift indices as above: now Fi starts with i=2,3,. We then shift the same bosonic modes to create appropriate linear terms, and introduce D-terms ħDi to Hi for i=1,,N+1. Note that we can add one more D-term, since HN+1 does not appear anymore on the right-hand-side of the commutation relations. This gives a super quantum Airy structure, where θ1 is considered as an extra fermionic variable (since it does not appear in the linear terms). Note that in (4.113) we absorbed the term ħ16δi,1-N, which only appears for N=0, into the arbitrary constant ħD1.

Remark 4.11

Note that the case with N=0 for the second class of super quantum Airy structures in Proposition 4.10 is interesting. Setting D1=116 to its natural value, we get a non-trivial partition function. The pure bosonic part of the Virasoro generators Hi is in this case equivalent to the Virasoro operators that annihilate the Brézin–Gross–Witten tau-function of the KdV hierachy (see (4.61) and the discussion around there). This suggests that the partition function associated to this super quantum Airy structure may be a supersymmetric analog of the BGW tau-function, which would be worth investigating further.

Remark 4.12

We also remark that for the second class of super quantum Airy structures in Proposition 4.10, if the last arbitrary constant DN+1 is set to zero, then we recover the same differential operators as the super quantum Airy structure in the first class, minus F1. Then, by uniqueness of the partition function, we conclude that they share the same partition function, and that F1 must also annihilate the partition function of the second class. Thus the super quantum Airy structures in the second class differ from for the first class only when DN+10.

Super Quantum Airy Structures from μ-Twisted Representations of the Free Boson–Fermion VOSA

We now consider the μ-twisted representation of the free boson–fermion VOSA.

Proposition 4.13

We represent the super Heisenberg algebra for the untwisted bosonic and twisted fermionic modes as:

mZ1,bmμ=ħxm,b-mμ=mħxm,b0μ=ħx0,mZ1,ψmμ=ħθm,ψ-mμ=1ħθm,ψ0μ=12ħθ0+ħθ0. 4.119

Let {x0,x1,} (even) and {θ1,θ2,} (odd) be a basis for the super vector space V, with dual sets {y0,y1,} and {η1,η2,}. Let V~=VK0|1, with {θ0} a basis for K0|1. Let us define the differential operators Hi,FjW^ħ(V~), for iZ0 and jZ1:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ352_HTML.gif 4.120a
Fj=ħθj+kZbj+N-1-kμψkμ, 4.120b

which form a representation of the subalgebra of the super Virasoro algebra in the Ramond sector:

[Hm,Hn]=(m-n)Hm+n+N-1,[Hm,Fn]=m-N+12-nFm+n+N-1,{Fm,Fn}=2Hm+n+N-1. 4.121
  1. Let N be any integer N1. The linear operator H:VW^ħ(V~) defined by, for all iZ0 and jZ1:
    H(yi)=Hi+ħDiδiN-1,H(ηj)=Fj, 4.122
    for arbitrary constants Di, i=0,,N-1, forms a super quantum Airy structure as a representation of the algebra (4.121)
  2. Let N be any integer N0. The linear operator H:VW^ħ(V~) defined by, for all iZ1:
    H(yi)=Hi+ħDiδiN,H(ηi)=Fi,H(y0)=ħx0+ħ22C02(x0)2+ħD0, 4.123
    for arbitrary constants Di, i=0,,N and C0, forms a super quantum Airy structure as a representation of the algebra (4.121) extended by:
    [H(y0),H(yi)]=[H(y0),H(ηi)]=0. 4.124

We note that both of these super quantum Airy structures have an extra fermionic coordinate θ0. We remark that we could also consider a third case, where we set the bosonic zero mode b0μ=0, as in Proposition 4.2. But as it will be equivalent to the special case of case (2) with C0=D0=0 we do not consider it separately.

Proof

We start with the μ-twisted representation, see Lemma 4.8. We represent the untwisted bosonic modes and twisted fermionic modes as:

mZ1,bmμ=ħxm,b-mμ=mħxm,b0μ=ħx0,mZ1,ψmμ=ħθm,ψ-mμ=1ħθm,ψ0μ=12ħθ0+ħθ0. 4.125

We have both bosonic and fermionic zero modes. In particular, we expect to get only super quantum Airy structures with an extra fermionic coordinate, namely θ0.

From Lemma 4.8, the super Virasoro generators (in the Ramond sector) take the form:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ359_HTML.gif 4.126a
Gmμ=iZbm-iμψiμ. 4.126b

For our first class of super quantum Airy structures, we consider the subalgebra {Lm,Gn} with mN-1, nN, for any N1. We shift indices so that bosonic operators are indexed by {0,1,2,} and fermionic operators by {1,2,3,}. Thus we define quadratic hamiltonians:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ361_HTML.gif 4.127

with commutation relations:

[Hm2,Hn2]=(m-n)Hm+n+N-12,[Hm2,Fn2]=m-N+12-nFm+n+N-12,{Fm2,Fn2}=2Hm+n+N-12. 4.128

To create appropriate linear terms, we shift the bosonic modes bN-1μbN-1μ+1ħ, which creates linear terms Hi1=ħbiμ=ħxi and Fi1=ħψiμ=ħθi. It also creates a constant term HN-10=12 which we get rid of without changing the algebra. We also add D-terms ħDi, i=0,,N-1 without changing the algebra. This creates a super quantum airy structure with the extra fermionic variable θ0. Note that in (4.122), we absorbed the term ħ16δi,-N+1, which only appears for N=1, into the arbitrary constant D0.

For our second class, we consider the larger subalgebra {Lm,Gn} with m,nN, for any N0. As in Proposition 4.10, to get rid of the central term in the algebra we redefine L0μL0μ-116. We shift indices as in (4.127), but now we consider Hi and Fi with i=1,2,3,. We shift the bosonic modes bN-1μbN-1μ+1ħ as before, which creates the right linear terms. We can add D-terms ħDi, i=1,,N without changing the algebra.

This is not however a super quantum Airy structure, since x0 does not appear in the linear terms (H0 is not include in the algebra). But, as in Proposition 4.2, we notice that the Hm and Fm only depend on x0 through the bosonic zero mode, i.e. through x0. Thus we can introduce an auxiliary bosonic operator

H0=ħx0+ħ22C02(x0)2+ħD0, 4.129

which commutes with all Hm, Fm, m1. The result is a super quantum Airy structure with an extra fermionic variable θ0.

We could consider a third class, where we set the bosonic zero mode b0μ=0. But this will end up being equivalent to the second class with C0=D0=0, and hence we do not consider it separately.

Super Quantum Airy Structures from ρ-Twisted Representations of the Free Boson–Fermion VOSA

We finally consider the ρ-twisted representation of the free boson–fermion VOA. We get:

Proposition 4.14

Let N be any integer N-1. We represent the super Heisenberg algebra for the twisted bosonic and fermionic modes as:

rZ0+12,brρ=ħxr+12,b-rρ=rħxr+12,mZ1,ψmρ=ħθm,ψ-mρ=1ħθm,ψ0ρ=12ħθ0+ħθ0. 4.130

Let {x1,x2,} (even) and {θ1,θ2,} (odd) be a basis for the super vector space V, with dual sets {y1,y2,} and {η1,η2,}. Let V~=VK0|1, with {θ0} a basis for K0|1. The linear operator H:VW^ħ(V~) defined by, for all iZ1 and rZ0+12:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ365_HTML.gif 4.131a
Fr:=H(ηr+12)=ħθr+12+sZ+12bsρψr+N-sρ, 4.131b

with arbitrary constants Di, i=1,,N+1, forms a super quantum Airy structure as a representation of the subalgebra of the super Virasoro algebra in the NS sector:

[Hm,Hn]=(m-n)Hm+n+N-1,[Hm,Fr]=m-N-12-rFm+r+N-1,{Fr,Fs}=2Hr+s+N+1. 4.132

Note that this is a super quantum Airy structure with an extra fermionic variable θ0.

Proof

We start with the ρ-twisted representation, see Lemma 4.8. We represent the twisted bosonic modes and twisted fermionic modes as:

rZ0+12,brρ=ħxr+12,b-rρ=rħxr+12,mZ1,ψmρ=ħθm,ψ-mρ=1ħθm,ψ0ρ=12ħθ0+ħθ0. 4.133

There is no bosonic zero mode here, but there is a fermionic one. Hence we expect to get only super quantum Airy structures with an extra fermionic coordinate, namely θ0.

From Lemma 4.8, the super Virasoro generators (in the NS sector) take the form:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ369_HTML.gif 4.134a
Grρ=sZ+12bsρψr-sρ. 4.134b

We consider the closed subalgebras {Lmρ,Grρ} with mN and rN+12, for any N-1, which have no central term. We shift indices to index the bosonic generators with 1,2, and the fermionic ones with 12,32,. We define the quadratic hamiltonians, for iZ1 and rZ0+12:

graphic file with name 220_2020_3876_Equ371_HTML.gif 4.135

which satisfy the commutation relations:

[Hm2,Hn2]=(m-n)Hm+n+N-12,[Hm2,Fr2]=m-N-12-rFm+r+N-12,{Fr2,Fs2}=2Hr+s+N+12. 4.136

To create the appropriate linear terms, we shift the bosonic modes bN-12ρbN-12ρ+1ħ, which creates terms Hi1=ħbi-12ρ=ħxi and Fr1=ħψr+12ρ=ħθr+12. It also creates a constant term HN0=12 which we get rid of as usual without changing the algebra. We can add D-terms ħDi to Hi for i=1,,N+1, and we get our class of super quantum Airy structures. Note that for all of those, θ0 appears as an extra fermionic variable.

Remark 4.15

The cases with N=-1 and N=0 of Proposition 4.14 are interesting. In the case N=-1, the bosonic part of the Virasoro generators Li is almost the same as the N=-1 case of Proposition 4.6, which reproduces the Virasoro constraints satisfied by the Kontsevich–Witten tau function of KdV. The only difference is in the term ħ8, which is twice that of the bosonic case.

For N=0 and D1=0, the bosonic part of Li also recovers almost exactly the N=0 case of Proposition 4.6, which gives the Virasoro constraints satisfied by the BGW tau function of KdV. Again, the only difference is in the term ħ8 which is twice its bosonic counterpart, but given that there is an arbitrary constant D1 it could be adjusted accordingly.

Thus both cases may be thought of as supersymmetric generalizations of Kontsevich–Witten and BGW, which deserves further investigation.

Conclusion and Open Questions

In this paper we have defined super quantum Airy structures, as a natural supersymmetric generalization of quantum Airy structures. We showed existence and uniqueness of the associated free energy, which is computed by a topological recursion that can be understood as a supersymmetric generalization of the Chekhov–Eynard–Orantin (CEO) topological recursion. We constructed a number of examples of finite-dimensional and infinite-dimensional quadratic super quantum Airy structures.

There are many open questions that deserve further investigation. Here we propose a few, in random order:

  • For quantum Airy structures that come from the CEO topological recursion, it is well known that the free energies are related to intersection numbers over the moduli space of curves [34, 35]. Is there an analogous statement for some classes of super quantum Airy structures? Do they provide invariants of moduli spaces of supersymmetric algebraic curves or super-Riemann surfaces?

  • Super-Virasoro constraints have appeared in enumerative geometry in the context of invariants that involve odd cohomology classes, such as Gromov–Witten invariants for higher genus target curves [60]. Perhaps the appearance of odd cohomology classes is key to uncovering the enumerative meaning of super quantum Airy structures?

  • Stanford and Witten very recently proposed a supersymmetric generalization of Mirzakhani’s recursion relation, in the context of JT gravity [64]. Since Mirzakhani’s recursion relation can be formulated as an example of a quantum Airy structure [39], are super quantum Airy structures related to the work of Stanford and Witten?

  • The CEO topological recursion was originally discovered as a solution of the loop equations for matrix models [24, 37, 38]. Is the supersymmetric generalization that we propose in this paper related to supereigenvalue models?

  • In the case of the Airy and Bessel spectral curves, the partition functions calculated by the associated quantum Airy structures construct the Kontsevich–Witten and Brézin–Gross–Witten tau functions for the KdV hierarchy [33]. Can an analogous statement be made for some of the examples of Section 4, perhaps with respect to the super KdV hierarchy?

  • Super quantum Airy structures are Z2-graded quantum Airy structures. Can G-graded quantum Airy structures be defined for more general finite groups G?

  • While the CEO topological recursion can be understood as an example of a quantum Airy structure, it was originally formulated in terms of complex analysis of a spectral curve. Is there a similar class of super quantum Airy structures that can be understood as coming from “super spectral curves”? If so, what is the formulation of the corresponding topological recursion in terms of the geometry of super spectral curves?

  • In this spirit, for a large class of spectral curves, the CEO topological recursion can be used to reconstruct the quantum curve and its associated wave-function [15, 46]. Can our supersymmetric generalization of topological recursion be used to study super quantum curves [2628] ?

  • Can examples of infinite-dimensional super quantum Airy structures be constructed as representations of N=2 vertex operators super algebras? Or as representations of VOSAs more generally?

  • In this paper we focused on constructing examples of quadratic super quantum Airy structures. Are there interesting examples of higher order, finite-dimensional, super quantum Airy structures? In the infinite-dimensional case, it would certainly be interesting to generalize the higher order construction of [11] in terms of representations of W-algebras to the supersymmetric realm.

  • In Section 3.2 we proposed a classification scheme for quadratic, finite-dimensional super quantum Airy structures. Can this classification be carried out?

This list is certainly not exhaustive. But what is clear is that super quantum Airy structures are interesting conceptually, and that many questions remain. The time is ripe to understand their properties and applications.15

Acknowledgements

We thank Gaëtan Borot, Nitin Chidambaram, Thomas Creutzig, and Motohico Mulase for inspiring discussions. This work was supported by the ERC Starting Grant No. 335739 “Quantum fields and knot homologies” funded by the European Research Council under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme, and the TEAM programme of the Foundation for Polish Science co-financed by the European Union under the European Regional Development Fund (POIR.04.04.00-00-5C55/17-00). V.B. and K.O. acknowledge the support of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada. The work of KO is also supported in part by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council under Grant Agreement Ref. EP/S003657/1. The work of P.C. is also supported by the NCN Preludium Grant No. 2016/23/N/ST1/01250 “Quantum curves and Schrödinger equations in matrix models” funded by National Science Centre in Poland. The work of B.R. was supported by the Faculty of Physics, Astronomy and Applied Computer Science Grant MSN 2019 (N17/MNS/000040) for young scientists and PhD students.

Appendix A: Computational Proof of Existence

To prove existence of the free energy associated to a super quantum Airy structure, we need to show that the recursive formulae (2.30) and (2.31) produce Fg,n[a1,...,an] that are Z2-symmetric under permutations of indices.

Since Z2-symmetry for permutations among indices in Φ for Fg,n+1[i,Φ] is obvious from (2.30), the only nontrivial symmetry is for the permutation of i and any other index in Φ. We thus have to show that

Fg,n+2(i,j,Φ)=(-1)|i||j|Fg,n+2(j,i,Φ). A.1

Let us prove (A.1) by induction on 2g+n1. For 2g+n=1, we have F0,3(i,j,a)=Aija, hence (A.1) holds thanks to (2.27a). For 2g+n=2 there are two cases: F0,4(i,j,a1,a2) and F1,2(i,j). It follows from (2.30) that F0,4(i,j,a1,a2) becomes

F0,4(i,j,a1,a2)=Bij0F0,3(0,a1,a2)+(-1)|i||j|(-1)|i||j|BijkAka1a2+Bia1bAjba2+(-1)|a1||a2|Bia2bAjba1=(-1)|i||j|Bji0F0,3(0,a1,a2)+(-1)|i||j|BjikAka1a2+Bja1bAiba2+(-1)|a1||a2|Bja2bAiba1=(-1)|i||j|F0,4(j,i,a1,a2), A.2

where we used (2.27c) and (2.28a) for the third equality. Similarly, for F1,2(i,j) we have:

F1,2(i,j)=(-1)|i||j|12CibcAjcb+(-1)|i||j|BijcDc=(-1)|i||j|(-1)|i||j|12CjbcAicb+(-1)|i||j|BjicDc=(-1)|i||j|F1,2(j,i), A.3

where we used F1,1(0)=0 and (2.27c) for the second equality and (2.28d) for the fourth equality. Therefore, the Fg,n+2(i,j,Φ) are Z2-symmetric for 2g+n=2 as well.

Now let us assume Z2-symmetry for Fh,m+2(i,j,Φ) up to 12h+m<2g+n. (2.30) can be rewritten as:

Fg,n+2(i,j,Φ)=c0BijcFg,n+1(c,Φ)+k=1nσak{j,Φ}c0BiakcFg,n+1(c,j,Φ\ak)+12b,c0CibcFg-1,n+3(c,b,j,Φ)+b,c0Cibcg1+g2=gΦ1Φ2=ΦσΦ1ΦFg1,n1+1(b,j,Φ1)Fg2,n2+1(c,Φ2)=Bij0Fg,n+1(0,Φ)+q=1dBijqFg,n+1(q,Φ)+k=1n(-1)|i||j|σakΦc0BiakcFg,n+1(j,c,Φ\ak)+12(-1)|i||j|b,c0CibcFg-1,n+3(j,c,b,Φ)+b,c0Cibc(-1)|j||b|g1+g2=gΦ1Φ2=ΦσΦ1ΦFg1,n1+1(j,b,Φ1)Fg2,n2+1(c,Φ2). A.4

The first term in (A.4) is Z2-symmetric in (ij) thanks to (2.27c). For the second term, we apply (2.30) to Fg,n+1(q,Φ). For the other terms, we substitute (2.30) into Fh,m+1(j,Φ) for any h,Φ whenever j is the first index. The computation becomes rather tedious; the final result after simplification is summarized below. The terms highlighted in red are Z2-symmetric in (ij) thanks to Lemma 2.19, while the other terms are manifestly Z2-symmetric. Therefore, Z2-symmetry of the Fg,n[a1,...,an] produced by (2.30) and (2.31) is proved by induction, and hence the unique free energy associated to a super quantum Airy structure exists.

Fg,n+2(i,j,Φ)=Bij0Fg,n+1(0,Φ)+(-1)|i||j|Bia1bAjba2+(-1)|a1||a2|Bia2bAjba1+(-1)|i||j|BijlAla1a2δn,2δg,0+(-1)|i||j|12CibcAjcb+(-1)|i||j|BijlDlδn,0δg,1+(-1)|i||j|k=1nc0σakΦFg,n(c,Φ\ak)BiakbBjbc+(-1)|c||ak|CicbAjbak+(-1)|i||j|BijpBpakc+12(-1)|i||j|d,c0Fg-1,n+2(d,c,Φ)(CicbBjbd+(-1)|c||d|CidbBjbc+(-1)|i||j|BijpCpcd)+12(-1)|i||j|g1+g2=gΦ1Φ2=Φc,d0σΦ1ΦFg1,n1+1(c,Φ1)Fg2,n2+1(d,Φ2)×(CicbBjbd+(-1)|c||d|CidbBjbc+(-1)|i||j|BijpCpcd)+12k,l=1nb,c0σ{ak,al}Φ(-1)|b||al|Fg,n(c,b,Φ\{ak,al})(-1)|i||j|BiakbBjalc+BjakbBialc+12k=1ng1+g2=gΦ1Φ2=Φ\akb,c,d0σ{ak,Φ1}ΦFg1,n1+2(c,b,Φ1)Fg2,n2+1(d,Φ2)×BjakbCicd+(-1)|j||i|BiakbCjcd+12k=1nb,c,d0σakΦFg-1,n+2(b,d,c,Φ\ak)CicdBjakb(-1)|i||b|+(-1)|j||i|BiakbCjcd(-1)|j||b|+12g1+g2+g3=gΦ1Φ2Φ3=Φb,c,d,e0σ{Φ1,Φ2}ΦFg1,n1+2(b,d,Φ1)Fg2,n2+1(c,Φ2)Fg3,n3+1(e,Φ3)×CideCjbc(-1)|j||e|+(-1)|i||j|CjdeCibc(-1)|i||e|+b,c,d,e0((-1)|i||j|CideCjbc+CjdeCibc)×(18Fg-2,n+4(c,b,e,d,Φ)+12g1+g2=g-1Φ1Φ2=ΦσΦ1ΦFg1,n1+3(b,e,d,Φ1)Fg2,n2+1(c,Φ2)+14g1+g2=g-1Φ1Φ2=Φ(-1)|e||b|σΦ1ΦFg1,n1+2(b,d,Φ1)Fg2,n2+2(c,e,Φ2)). A.5

Footnotes

1

For the subsequent progress in this context see [21].

2

In the nomenclature used in this paper, higher quantum Airy structures would be simply quantum Airy structures, while the original quantum Airy structures would be particular quantum Airy structures that are quadratic.

3

In fact this restriction is not essential, but it simplifies the notation a bit. It is satisfied in all interesting examples explored until now.

4

Here and henceforth we use the Einstein summation convention, in which repeated indices are summed over.

5

This means that R is equipped with a topology such that addition and multiplication, regarded as maps R×RR (with R×R given the product topology), are continuous.

6

For a topological ring R, subset SR is said to be a set of topological generators if the smallest closed subring of R containing S coincides with R.

7

This is not a typo: we use both combinations 2a+b and 3a+b in our considerations.

8

After projecting to terms of given total degree we always get finite sums, so this is a purely combinatorial problem. It boils down to identity [A,·]n(B)=k=0nnkAkB(-A)n-k for even A.

9

In [10] the counterclockwise requirement is not specified, because the assigned weights are symmetric, whereas in our case we need to be a little more careful because the weights are only Z2-symmetric.

10

In other words cabxaxbV~V~.

11

This means that dab represents the transpose of some operator VV.

12

Two symplectic representations W1,W2 are regarded as equivalent if there exists an even g-intertwiner W1W2 which is also a symplectomorphism.

13

This transformation may be implemented by an automorphism of the Weyl algebra.

14

Note that our definition for ξk and ξk+1 is rescaled by (k+1)-1 and k respectively with respect to [4].

15

During the review process of this manuscript, (parts of) the third, fourth, fifth, and seventh open questions in the list above were subsequently addressed in [21]. In particular, it was realized that (suitably polarized) super quantum Airy structures could be used to compute (parts of the) correlation functions for a variety of examples related to 2d supergravity. [21] also showed a relation between certain families of super quantum Airy structures and non-super quantum Airy structures, which provides an interpretation of the work of Stanford and Witten [64] in terms of super quantum Airy structures. We are hoping to solve other open questions in the near future.

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Contributor Information

Vincent Bouchard, Email: vincent.bouchard@ualberta.ca.

Paweł Ciosmak, Email: p.ciosmak@mimuw.edu.pl.

Leszek Hadasz, Email: leszek.hadasz@uj.edu.pl.

Kento Osuga, Email: K.Osuga@sheffield.ac.uk.

Błażej Ruba, Email: blazej.ruba@doctoral.uj.edu.pl.

Piotr Sułkowski, Email: psulkows@fuw.edu.pl.

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