Toshiki Mabuchi
Japanese mathematician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Japanese mathematician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Toshiki Mabuchi (kanji: 満渕俊樹, hiragana: マブチ トシキ, Mabuchi Toshiki, born in 1950) is a Japanese mathematician, specializing in complex differential geometry and algebraic geometry.[1] In 2006 in Madrid he was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians.[2] Mabuchi is known for introducing the Mabuchi functional.
In 1972 Mabuchi graduated from the University of Tokyo Faculty of Science[1] and became a graduate student in mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley.[3] There he graduated with a Ph.D. in 1977 with thesis C3-Actions and Algebraic Threefolds with Ample Tangent Bundle and advisor Shoshichi Kobayashi[4] As a postdoc Mabuchi was from 1977 to 1978 a guest researcher at the University of Bonn. Since 1978 he is a faculty member of the Department of Mathematics of Osaka University. His research deals with complex differential geometry, extremal Kähler metrics, stability of algebraic varieties, and the Hitchin–Kobayashi correspondence.[1]
In 2006 Toshiki Mabuchi and Takashi Shioya received the Geometry Prize of the Mathematical Society of Japan.
Mabuchi is well-known for his introduction, in 1986, of the Mabuchi energy, which gives a variational interpretation to the problem of Kähler metrics of constant scalar curvature. In particular, the Mabuchi energy is a real-valued function on a Kähler class whose Euler-Lagrange equation is the constant scalar curvature equation. In the case that the Kähler class represents the first Chern class of the complex manifold, one has a relation to the Kähler-Einstein problem, due to the fact that constant scalar curvature metrics in such a Kähler class must be Kähler-Einstein.
Owing to the second variation formulas for the Mabuchi energy, every critical point is stable. Furthermore, if one integrates a holomorphic vector field and pulls back a given Kähler metric by the corresponding one-parameter family of diffeomorphisms, then the corresponding restriction of the Mabuchi energy is a linear function of one real variable; its derivative is the Futaki invariant discovered a few years earlier by Akito Futaki.[5] The Futaki invariant and Mabuchi energy are fundamental in understanding obstructions to the existence of Kähler metrics which are Einstein or which have constant scalar curvature.
A year later, by use of the ∂∂-lemma, Mabuchi considered a natural Riemannian metric on a Kähler class, which allowed him to define length, geodesics, and curvature; the sectional curvature of Mabuchi's metric is nonpositive. Along geodesics in the Kähler class, the Mabuchi energy is convex. So the Mabuchi energy has strong variational properties.
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