secondary vertex - translation to russian
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secondary vertex - translation to russian

ALGEBRAIC STRUCTURE
Vertex algebra; Vertex operator; Vertex Operator Algebra; Vertex algebras; Vertex operator superalgebra; Virasoro element; Vertex superalgebra; Vacuum module; Virasoro constraint; Virasoro vertex operator algebras; Virasoro vertex operator algebra

secondary vertex      

математика

вторичная вершина

secondary colours         
COLOR MADE BY MIXING TWO PRIMARY COLORS
Secondary colour; Secondary colors; Secondary colours; Primary and secondary color; Subtractive secondary colors
составные цвета
secondary colors         
COLOR MADE BY MIXING TWO PRIMARY COLORS
Secondary colour; Secondary colors; Secondary colours; Primary and secondary color; Subtractive secondary colors
вторичные цвета субтрактивного синтеза (красный, зелёный, синий)

Definition

secondary colour
¦ noun a colour resulting from the mixing of two primary colours.

Wikipedia

Vertex operator algebra

In mathematics, a vertex operator algebra (VOA) is an algebraic structure that plays an important role in two-dimensional conformal field theory and string theory. In addition to physical applications, vertex operator algebras have proven useful in purely mathematical contexts such as monstrous moonshine and the geometric Langlands correspondence.

The related notion of vertex algebra was introduced by Richard Borcherds in 1986, motivated by a construction of an infinite-dimensional Lie algebra due to Igor Frenkel. In the course of this construction, one employs a Fock space that admits an action of vertex operators attached to elements of a lattice. Borcherds formulated the notion of vertex algebra by axiomatizing the relations between the lattice vertex operators, producing an algebraic structure that allows one to construct new Lie algebras by following Frenkel's method.

The notion of vertex operator algebra was introduced as a modification of the notion of vertex algebra, by Frenkel, James Lepowsky, and Arne Meurman in 1988, as part of their project to construct the moonshine module. They observed that many vertex algebras that appear 'in nature' carry an action of the Virasoro algebra, and satisfy a bounded-below property with respect to an energy operator. Motivated by this observation, they added the Virasoro action and bounded-below property as axioms.

We now have post-hoc motivation for these notions from physics, together with several interpretations of the axioms that were not initially known. Physically, the vertex operators arising from holomorphic field insertions at points in two-dimensional conformal field theory admit operator product expansions when insertions collide, and these satisfy precisely the relations specified in the definition of vertex operator algebra. Indeed, the axioms of a vertex operator algebra are a formal algebraic interpretation of what physicists call chiral algebras (not to be confused with the more precise notion with the same name in mathematics) or "algebras of chiral symmetries", where these symmetries describe the Ward identities satisfied by a given conformal field theory, including conformal invariance. Other formulations of the vertex algebra axioms include Borcherds's later work on singular commutative rings, algebras over certain operads on curves introduced by Huang, Kriz, and others, D-module-theoretic objects called chiral algebras introduced by Alexander Beilinson and Vladimir Drinfeld and factorization algebras, also introduced by Beilinson and Drinfeld.

Important basic examples of vertex operator algebras include the lattice VOAs (modeling lattice conformal field theories), VOAs given by representations of affine Kac–Moody algebras (from the WZW model), the Virasoro VOAs, which are VOAs corresponding to representations of the Virasoro algebra, and the moonshine module V, which is distinguished by its monster symmetry. More sophisticated examples such as affine W-algebras and the chiral de Rham complex on a complex manifold arise in geometric representation theory and mathematical physics.

What is the Russian for secondary vertex? Translation of &#39secondary vertex&#39 to Russian