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Modular invariance of characters of vertex operator algebras

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TLDR
In this article, it was shown that the characters of the integrable highest weight modules of affine Lie algebras and the minimal series of the Virasoro algebra give rise to conformal field theories.
Abstract
In contrast with the finite dimensional case, one of the distinguished features in the theory of infinite dimensional Lie algebras is the modular invariance of the characters of certain representations. It is known [Fr], [KP] that for a given affine Lie algebra, the linear space spanned by the characters of the integrable highest weight modules with a fixed level is invariant under the usual action of the modular group SL2(Z). The similar result for the minimal series of the Virasoro algebra is observed in [Ca] and [IZ]. In both cases one uses the explicit character formulas to prove the modular invariance. The character formula for the affine Lie algebra is computed in [K], and the character formula for the Virasoro algebra is essentially contained in [FF]; see [R] for an explicit computation. This mysterious connection between the infinite dimensional Lie algebras and the modular group can be explained by the two dimensional conformal field theory. The highest weight modules of affine Lie algebras and the Virasoro algebra give rise to conformal field theories. In particular, the conformal field theories associated to the integrable highest modules and minimal series are rational. The characters of these modules are understood to be the holomorphic parts of the partition functions on the torus for the corresponding conformal field theories. From this point of view, the role of the modular group SL2(Z) is manifest. In the study of conformal field theory, physicists arrived at the notion of chiral algebras (see e.g. [MS]). Independently, in the attempt to realize the Monster sporadic group as a symmetry group of certain algebraic structure, an infinite dimensional graded representation of the Monster sporadic group, the so called Moonshine module, was constructed in [FLM1]. This algebraic structure was later found in [Bo] and called the vertex algebra; the first axioms of vertex operator algebras were formulated in that paper. The proof that the Moonshine module is a vertex operator algebra and the Monster group acts as its automorphism group was given in [FLM2]. Notably the character of the Moonshine module is also a modular function, namely j(τ) − 744. It turns out that the vertex operator algebra can be regarded as a rigorous mathematical definition of the chiral algebras in the physical literature. And it is expected that a pair of isomorphic vertex operator algebras and their representations (corresponding to the holomorphic and antiholomorphic sectors) are the basic objects needed to build a conformal field theory of a certain type.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Local conformal nets arising from framed vertex operator algebras

TL;DR: In particular, this article gave a local conformal net corresponding to the moonshine vertex operator algebras of Frenkel-Lepowsky-Meurman and Meurman.
Journal ArticleDOI

Constraints on extremal self-dual CFTs

TL;DR: In this article, the existence of a modular differential equation implies that a certain vector vanishes in Zhu's C2 quotient space, and this connection was shown to imply that extremal self-dual conformal field theories at c=24 k cannot exist for k ≥ 42.
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Rationality of admissible affine vertex algebras in the category O

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that an irreducible highest weight representation of a nontwisted affine Kac-Moody algebra at an admissible level k is a module over the associated simple affine vertex algebra if and only if it is an affine representation whose integral root system is isomorphic to that of the vertex algebra itself.
Journal ArticleDOI

Abelianizing Vertex Algebras

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that for any vertex algebra V, C2-cofiniteness implies Cn-coherence for all n ≥ 2 and that the associated graded vector space gr(V) is naturally a vertex Poisson algebra, in particular a commutative vertex algebra.
Posted Content

Differential equations, duality and modular invariance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors solved the problem of constructing chiral genus-one correlation functions from a vertex operator algebra and established the fundamental properties of these functions, including suitably formulated commutativity, associativity and modular invariance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Infinite Conformal Symmetry in Two-Dimensional Quantum Field Theory

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an investigation of the massless, two-dimentional, interacting field theories and their invariance under an infinite-dimensional group of conformal transformations.
Journal Article

Vertex operator algebras and the Monster

TL;DR: In this paper, complex realizations of vertex operator algebraic expressions are presented, and the main theorem of complex realisation of vertices operator algebra is proved. But the complexity is not discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Operator Content of Two-Dimensional Conformally Invariant Theories

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown how conformal invariance relates many numerically accessible properties of the transfer matrix of a critical system in a finite-width infinitely long strip to bulk universal quantities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vertex algebras, Kac-Moody algebras, and the Monster.

TL;DR: An integral form is constructed for the universal enveloping algebra of any Kac-Moody algebras that can be used to define Kac's groups over finite fields, some new irreducible integrable representations, and a sort of affinization of anyKac-moody algebra.
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