New York Journal of Mathematics
Volume 7 (2001) 7-22

  

Stephen S. Bullock

Weighted L2 Cohomology of Asymptotically Hyperbolic Manifolds


Published: March 19, 2001
Keywords: weighted cohomology, weighted L2 cohomology, weighted Hodge theory
Subject: 53C, 14F, 53A, 57T

Abstract
The main results are summarized by Figure 1. They demonstrate the resiliency of the isomorphism constructed in [Nai99] between weighted cohomology and a variant of weighted L2 cohomology. Our attention is restricted from generic locally symmetric spaces to spaces whose ends are hyperbolic, diffeomorphic to (0,∞)×(S1)n-1, and carry exponentially warped product metrics. For weighting functions which are exponential in the Busemann coordinates of these ends, the standard w weighted L2 cohomology will be utilized in lieu of the variant defined in [Fra98]. The resulting standard w weighted L2 cohomology groups may be infinite dimensional vector spaces, but the precise weighting functions at which this undesirable behavior occurs are characterized. For the remaining exponential weights, the w weighted L2 cohomology is again an analogue of weighted cohomology. An immediate consequence of finite dimensionality of the standard w weighted L2 groups is a w weighted Hodge theory summarized by a strong w weighted Kodaira decomposition. This is outlined in the introduction.

After the asymptotically hyperbolic case is complete, the literature on weighted Hardy inequalities on the half line is used to derive certain extensions to some non-hyperbolic end metrics and non-exponential weighting functions. The two most immediate applications are as follows. First, say a function on the half line k(t) satisfies k' k-1 ≦ -c for c>0. Then one may replace the exponential in the metric of (0,∞)×(S1)n-1 by k(t) and weight by powers of k(t) rather than e-t, and Figure 1 holds. Second, the analysis allows one to consider weighting functions which on each end are w(t) = eαt2 for α ∈ R. These weighting functions compute either de Rham cohomology or compactly supported de Rham cohomology when α < 0 or α > 0, respectively.


Acknowledgements

This research was partially supported by the Clay mathematics institute liftoff program.


Author information

1846 East Hall, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1109
stephnsb@math.lsa.umich.edu
http://www.math.lsa.umich.edu/~stephnsb/