« first day (4545 days earlier)      last day (93 days later) » 

07:48
A new tag . On MO they have a tag called calabi-yau, I would take this as partial evidence that this could be a reasonable tag.
0
Q: Calabi-Yau: Structure Group of $TM$ reduces to $SU(n)$

Nuke_GunrayI have a (maybe trivial) problem concerning the first definition of Calabi-Yau manifolds on Wikipedia: Among others, it says that for a Kähler manifold $M$, the two properties The structure group of $TM$ can be reduced from $U(n)$ to $SU(n)$ $M$ has a Kähler metric with global holonomy contained...

> Calabi-Yau manifolds are higher dimensional generalizations of elliptic curves and K3 surfaces. They can be defined as the compact complex Kähler manifolds with trivial canonical bundle, and play a central role in mirror symmetry. This tag can also be used for Calabi-Yau algebras and categories. These algebraic notions are inspired by the properties of the derived categories of coherent sheaves on Calabi-Yau manifolds.
In algebraic and differential geometry, a Calabi–Yau manifold, also known as a Calabi–Yau space, is a particular type of manifold which has certain properties, such as Ricci flatness, yielding applications in theoretical physics. Particularly in superstring theory, the extra dimensions of spacetime are sometimes conjectured to take the form of a 6-dimensional Calabi–Yau manifold, which led to the idea of mirror symmetry. Their name was coined by Candelas et al. (1985), after Eugenio Calabi (1954, 1957), who first conjectured that such surfaces might exist, and Shing-Tung Yau (1978), who proved...
Shouldn't some tag covering a larger area of mathematics be added to that question? Perhaps or ?
08:11
1
Q: Calabi-Yau: Structure Group of $TM$ reduces to $SU(n)$

Nuke_GunrayI have a (maybe trivial) problem concerning the first definition of Calabi-Yau manifolds on Wikipedia: Among others, it says that for a Kähler manifold $M$, the two properties The structure group of $TM$ can be reduced from $U(n)$ to $SU(n)$ $M$ has a Kähler metric with global holonomy contained...

@MartinSleziak I removed the tag for now. I am not sure if this tag is needed.
Yes, I've noticed. :-)
Thanks for stopping by - this room is mostly rather empty.
Probably people who are active in the related areas could judge better whether or not the tag is needed. (I only mentioned MO as one possible datapoint.)
Questions where the tag was added/removed (including the editors): data.stackexchange.com/math/query/1105163/… data.stackexchange.com/math/query/1038474/…
The above queries do not return anything.
One problem with this tag is that the subject lies in the intersection of algebraic geometry, riemannian geometry, symplectic geometry and mathematical physics, and we already have tags for all that. I am not sure if we have more tag space for calabi yau, especially for Qs which really lies in the intersection.
For this particular question, it is related only to one aspect (in Riemannian geometry), so I add just that tag.

« first day (4545 days earlier)      last day (93 days later) »