Let M be a smooth manifold. An affine flat structure on M is a sheafTf of vector spaces that pointwisely spanTM the tangent bundle and the tangent bracket of pairs of its sections vanishes. As a local example consider the coordinate vectorfields over a chart of M. A manifold admits an affine flat structure if one can glue together such vectorfields for a covering family of charts. Let further be given a Riemannian metricg on M. It is compatible to the flat structure if g is locally constant for all flat vector fieldsX and Y. A Riemannian manifold admits a compatible affine flat structure if and only if its curvature tensor vanishes everywhere. A family of commutative products * on TM is equivalent to a section A of S2 ⊗ TM via We require in addition the property Therefore, the composition g#∘A is a symmetric 3-tensor. This implies in particular that a linear Frobenius manifold with constant product is a Frobenius algebra M. Given, a local potential Φ is a local smooth function such that for all flat vector fields X, Y, and Z. A Frobenius manifold is now a flat Riemannian manifold with symmetric 3-tensor A that admits everywhere a local potential and is associative.
Elementary properties
The associativity of the product * is equivalent to the following quadratic PDE in the local potential Φ where Einstein's sum convention is implied, Φ,a denotes the partial derivative of the function Φ by the coordinate vectorfield ∂/∂xa which are all assumed to be flat. gef are the coefficients of the inverse of the metric. The equation is therefore called associativity equation or Witten–Dijkgraaf–Verlinde–Verlinde equation.
Examples
Beside Frobenius algebras, examples arise from quantum cohomology. Namely, given a semipositive symplectic manifold then there exists an open neighborhoodU of 0 in its even quantum cohomology QHeven with Novikov ring over C such that the big quantum product *a for a in U is analytic. Now U together with the intersection formg = <·,·> is a Frobenius manifold. The second large class of examples of Frobenius manifolds come from the singularity theory. Namely, the space of miniversal deformations of an isolated singularity has a Frobenius manifold structure. This Frobenius manifold structure also relates to Kyoji Saito's primitive forms.