(with acting
as a multiplication by a quaternion , ) is
hypercomplex, but not Kähler,
hence not hyperkähler either.
To see that the Hopf surface is not Kähler,
notice that it is diffeomorphic to a product
hence its odd cohomology
group is odd-dimensional. By Hodge decomposition,
odd cohomology of a compact Kähler manifold
are always even-dimensional. In fact Hidekiyo Wakakuwa proved
[2] that on a compact hyperkähler manifold.
Misha Verbitsky has shown that any compact
hypercomplex manifold admitting a Kähler structure is also hyperkähler.[3]
In 1988, left-invariant hypercomplex structures on some compact Lie groups
were constructed by the physicists Philippe Spindel, Alexander Sevrin, Walter Troost, and Antoine Van Proeyen. In 1992, Dominic Joyce
rediscovered this construction, and gave a complete classification of
left-invariant hypercomplex structures on compact Lie groups.
Here is the complete list.
where denotes an -dimensional compact torus.
It is remarkable that any compact Lie group becomes
hypercomplex after it is multiplied by a sufficiently
big torus.
Basic properties
Hypercomplex manifolds as such were studied by Charles Boyer in 1988. He also proved that in real dimension 4, the only compact hypercomplex
manifolds are the complex torus , the Hopf surface and
the K3 surface.
Much earlier (in 1955) Morio Obata studied affine connection associated with almost hypercomplex structures (under the former terminology of Charles Ehresmann[4] of almost quaternionic structures). His construction leads to what Edmond Bonan called the Obata connection[5][6] which is torsion free, if and only if, "two" of the almost complex structures are integrable and in this case the manifold is hypercomplex.
Twistor spaces
There is a 2-dimensional sphere of quaternions
satisfying .
Each of these quaternions gives a complex
structure on a hypercomplex manifold M. This
defines an almost complex structure on the manifold
, which is fibered over
with fibers identified with .
This complex structure is integrable, as follows
from Obata's theorem (this was first explicitly proved by
Dmitry Kaledin[7]). This complex manifold
is called the twistor space of .
If M is , then its twistor space
is isomorphic to .
^Manev, Mancho; Sekigawa, Kouei (2005). "Some Four-Dimensional Almost Hypercomplex Pseudo-Hermitian Manifolds". In S. Dimiev and K. Sekigawa (ed.). Contemporary Aspects of Complex Analysis, Differential Geometry and Mathematical Physics. Vol. 2005. Hackensack, NJ: World Sci. Publ. pp. 174–186. arXiv:0804.2814. doi:10.1142/9789812701763_0016. ISBN978-981-256-390-3.
Obata, Morio (1955), "Affine connections on manifolds with almost complex, quaternionic or Hermitian structure", Japanese Journal of Mathematics, 26: 43–79.
Spindel, Ph.; Sevrin, A.; Troost, W.; Van Proeyen, A. (1988), "Extended supersymmetric -models on group manifolds", Nuclear Physics, B308: 662–698.