Here is my question, below that some motivation:
For G a compact abelian Lie group and Σ a surface, with MG=LocG(Σ) denoting the space of flat G-connections on Σ (the "Jacobian", itself a torus)... is there a natural map
?
Here "a natural map" may be too vague (though say if some interesting map springs to mind), but to make it more specific I first need to say the following.
Suppose we are handed a line bundle θ∈O(LocG(Σ)), thought of as the prequantum line bundle of G-Chern-Simons theory, then traditional geometric quantization constructs a projectively flat vector bundle on the Riemann moduli space MΣ -- the Hitchin connection -- whose fiber over a complex structure of Σ is the space of holomorphic sections of θ with respect to a complex structure on LocG(Σ) that is naturally induced from that of Σ.
In the perspective of Spinc-quantization this construction is understood as forming in KU-theory the push-forward of θ to the point, with respect to the KU-orientation given by the complex structure regarded as a Spinc-structure.
These traditonal constructions are time-honored, but, when one gets to the bottom of it, are somewhat ad-hoc. Something is clearly right about them, but the main reason why we choose complex structures on Σ to induce complex structures on LocG(Σ) to finally perform Kähler quantization is that it happens to work.
On the other hand, the cobordism hypothesis gives a systematic way to approach this: regarding the "Chern-Simons 3-bundle" BG→B3U(1) (the map on moduli stacks refining the cup product) as a fully dualizable object in Corr3(Sh∞(Mfd)/B3U(1)) defines a "local prequantum field theory" Bordfr3→Corr3(Sh∞(Mfd)/B3U(1)) which sends a closed surface Σ to the transgression bundle θ.
To turn this into an actual QFT with values in (3-fold) KU-modules at least in codimension 1 (that's all I will consider here) we are to naturally produce stable Spinc-structures on LocG(Σ). The cobordism hypothesis says that the "geometric moduli" on Σ that we may and have to use for this are not a priori complex structures on Σ, but are 3-framings on Σ: it asks us to construct a flat KU-module bundle on the moduli space of 3-framings of Σ.
Therefore finally the more concrete version of my question:
what might be a natural map from the moduli of 3-framings on Σ to that of stable Spinc-structures on LocG(Σ) such that for given θ the induced flat bundle on 3-framing moduli is a pullback of the Hitchin connection along a map from 3-framing moduli to complex moduli (or something close)?
This post imported from StackExchange MathOverflow at 2014-11-02 16:35 (UTC), posted by SE-user Urs Schreiber