On Poisson structures arising from a Lie group action
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 15:40 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Lie group actions on manifolds induce Poisson brackets on functions over M times g star that form a class strictly larger than the Darboux symplectic and classical Lie-Poisson brackets.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
A Lie group G acting on a manifold M induces two Lie algebra structures on the space of smooth maps from M to the Lie algebra g, each of which is a Lie algebroid. Applying the construction that yields a Poisson structure from such an algebroid gives a Poisson bracket on smooth functions on M times g star. This produces a family of Poisson brackets that includes the standard Darboux symplectic structure and the classical Lie Poisson brackets on g star but is strictly larger, as shown by explicit examples and computations of the associated Hamiltonian flows and invariants.
What carries the argument
The construction associating a Poisson bracket to each of the two Lie algebroids on the space of maps from M to g
If this is right
- Hamiltonian flows and their invariants can be studied explicitly for the resulting brackets.
- Canonical maps induced by the Lie group action preserve the Poisson structure.
- Compatible Poisson structures arise on the same manifold.
- Central extensions of the Lie algebras produce additional infinite-dimensional Poisson brackets.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The broader class may allow modeling of systems where standard Poisson structures do not suffice.
- The alternate derivation of the bracket could extend to settings without a metric.
- The computational examples point toward applications in concrete problems in mechanics and geometry.
Load-bearing premise
Both Lie algebra structures on the space of smooth maps from the manifold to the Lie algebra must qualify as Lie algebroids.
What would settle it
Computing the Jacobi identity for the bracket in a specific example derived from a Lie group action and finding it does not hold would show that the construction does not always produce a Poisson bracket.
Figures
read the original abstract
We investigate some infinite dimensional Lie algebras and their associated Poisson structures which arise from a Lie group action on a manifold. If $G$ is a Lie group, $\g$ its Lie algebra and $M$ is a manifold on which $G$ acts, then the set of smooth maps from $M$ to $\g$ has at least two Lie algebra structures, both satisfying the required property to be a Lie algebroid. We may then apply a {construction} by Marle to obtain a Poisson bracket on the set of smooth real or complex valued functions on $M\times \g^*$. In this paper, we investigate these Poisson brackets. We show that the set of examples include the standard Darboux symplectic structure and the classical Lie Poisson brackets, but is a strictly larger class of Poisson brackets than these. Our study includes the associated Hamiltonian flows and their invariants, canonical maps induced by the Lie group action, and compatible Poisson structures. Our approach is mainly computational and we detail numerous examples. The Lie brackets from which our results derive, arose from the consideration of connections on bundles with zero curvature and constant torsion. We give an alternate derivation of the Lie bracket which will be suited to applications to Lie group actions for applications not involving a Riemannian metric. We also begin a study of the infinite dimensional Poisson brackets which may be obtained by considering a central extension of the Lie algebras.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript constructs Poisson brackets on C^∞(M × g*) from a Lie group G acting on M by equipping C^∞(M, g) with two Lie algebra structures, each asserted to be a Lie algebroid, then applying Marle's construction. It recovers the standard Darboux symplectic structure and classical Lie-Poisson brackets as special cases, claims the resulting family is strictly larger, and studies the associated Hamiltonian flows, invariants, canonical maps induced by the action, and compatible Poisson structures. The approach is primarily computational with numerous examples; an alternate derivation of one Lie bracket is given from flat connections with constant torsion, and a preliminary study of central extensions is begun.
Significance. If the Lie algebroid axioms hold and the examples confirm genuinely new structures, the work supplies a systematic, action-based method for generating Poisson brackets that properly contains the Darboux and Lie-Poisson cases. The computational verification, alternate derivation suited to applications without a Riemannian metric, and examination of flows and invariants constitute concrete strengths that would be useful in geometric mechanics and symmetric dynamical systems.
major comments (2)
- [Construction of the Lie algebra structures (near the definition of the two brackets)] The assertion that both Lie algebra structures on C^∞(M, g) are Lie algebroids (anchor map, Leibniz rule, and Jacobi identity) is load-bearing for the application of Marle's construction, yet the manuscript only states the property without an explicit verification of the axioms in the main text; this verification must be supplied before the central claim can be accepted.
- [Examples and comparison with Darboux/Lie-Poisson] § on examples: the claim that the family is strictly larger than Darboux and Lie-Poisson requires at least one concrete example whose Poisson tensor is shown to be inequivalent (e.g., by rank, Casimir functions, or cohomology class) to both standard cases; the current computational survey must isolate such an instance explicitly.
minor comments (2)
- Notation for the two distinct Lie brackets on C^∞(M, g) should be introduced with separate symbols (e.g., [·,·]_1 and [·,·]_2) rather than relying on context alone.
- The statement that the Lie brackets 'arose from the consideration of connections on bundles with zero curvature and constant torsion' would benefit from a one-sentence reminder of the precise relation before the alternate derivation is presented.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We are grateful to the referee for the thorough review and for highlighting areas where the manuscript can be strengthened. We respond to the major comments point by point below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Construction of the Lie algebra structures (near the definition of the two brackets)] The assertion that both Lie algebra structures on C^∞(M, g) are Lie algebroids (anchor map, Leibniz rule, and Jacobi identity) is load-bearing for the application of Marle's construction, yet the manuscript only states the property without an explicit verification of the axioms in the main text; this verification must be supplied before the central claim can be accepted.
Authors: We agree with the referee that an explicit verification of the Lie algebroid axioms is essential. Although the structures were constructed to satisfy these properties (as indicated by the alternate derivation from flat connections with constant torsion), the main text does not include the full check. In the revised version, we will add a subsection providing the detailed verification of the anchor, Leibniz identity, and Jacobi identity for both brackets. revision: yes
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Referee: [Examples and comparison with Darboux/Lie-Poisson] § on examples: the claim that the family is strictly larger than Darboux and Lie-Poisson requires at least one concrete example whose Poisson tensor is shown to be inequivalent (e.g., by rank, Casimir functions, or cohomology class) to both standard cases; the current computational survey must isolate such an instance explicitly.
Authors: We accept this point. While the manuscript includes numerous examples and asserts that the family is strictly larger, it does not isolate a single instance with an explicit comparison of invariants. We will revise the examples section to include a dedicated example (such as the action on a sphere or a specific matrix group action) where we compute the Poisson tensor, its rank, and identify Casimir functions that differ from those in the Darboux and Lie-Poisson cases. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation is self-contained
full rationale
The paper constructs Poisson brackets on M × g* by applying Marle's construction to two Lie algebra structures on C^∞(M, g) that are asserted to be Lie algebroids. It recovers the Darboux and Lie-Poisson cases explicitly and exhibits additional structures via direct computation and examples. An alternate derivation of the brackets is supplied without dependence on prior self-citations for the core claims. No equation or result is shown to reduce to its inputs by definition, fitted parameters renamed as predictions, or load-bearing self-citation chains; the central claim of a strictly larger class rests on explicit verification rather than tautology.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Maps from M to g admit two Lie algebra structures that are Lie algebroids.
Reference graph
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