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Stability of Yang–Mills Connections

Updated 28 January 2026
  • Stability of Yang–Mills connections is the study of the analytic, topological, and variational properties of connections, focusing on index stability, bubbling effects, and the structure of moduli spaces.
  • The research establishes lower semicontinuity of the Morse index and upper semicontinuity of the extended signature via bubble–tree compactness and neck region analysis in four-dimensional settings.
  • The investigation extends stability analysis to dynamic Yang–Mills flow, soliton theories, and complex geometric structures on special holonomy and Calabi–Yau manifolds.

The stability of Yang–Mills connections is a central concept in differential geometry and gauge theory, encompassing analytic, topological, and variational properties of connections that are critical points or minima of the Yang–Mills functional (and its generalizations). Stability can refer to the behavior of the second variation (Morse index), variational characterization, spectral properties, and moduli-theoretic features, and is deeply intertwined with bubbling phenomena, compactness, and the structure of the moduli space.

1. Variational Stability: Morse Index and Nullity

Given a Yang–Mills connection AA on a principal GG-bundle EM4E \to M^4, the quadratic form associated to the second variation of the Yang–Mills energy,

QA(a)=D2YMA(a,a)=LAa,a,LAa=dAdAa+[FA,a]Q_A(a) = D^2 \mathrm{YM}_A(a, a) = \langle L_A a, a \rangle, \quad L_A a = d_A^* d_A a + \star[\star F_A, a]

plays a crucial role. The key notions are:

  • Morse index indYM(A)\operatorname{ind}_{YM}(A): the maximal dimension of a subspace on which QAQ_A is negative definite, i.e.,

indYM(A)=sup{dimW:QAW<0}\operatorname{ind}_{YM}(A) = \sup\{ \dim W : Q_A|_W < 0 \}

  • Nullity nulYM(A)\operatorname{nul}_{YM}(A): the dimension of the space of infinitesimal deformations with trivial second variation and orthogonal to gauge orbits,

nulYM(A)=dim(kerQAkerdA)\operatorname{nul}_{YM}(A) = \dim (\ker Q_A \cap \ker d_A^*)

  • Extended signature ς(A)=indYM(A)+nulYM(A)\varsigma(A) = \operatorname{ind}_{YM}(A) + \operatorname{nul}_{YM}(A)

These notions govern the local structure of the moduli space near a Yang–Mills connection, and set the stage for precise compactness and bifurcation analysis (Gauvrit et al., 2024).

2. Index Stability Under Weak Convergence and Bubbling

A notable phenomenon in four-dimensional Yang–Mills theory is "bubble–tree" compactness: sequences of Yang–Mills connections with bounded energy can converge weakly away from finitely many points, with energy concentrating at points and producing "bubbles" (energy packets carried by nontrivial Yang–Mills connections on S4S^4).

Given a sequence AkA_k of Yang–Mills connections with uniformly bounded energy on a closed 4-manifold, after passing to a subsequence:

  • AkAA_k \to A_\infty in Cloc(M{p1,,pN})C^\infty_{\mathrm{loc}}(M \setminus \{p_1, \ldots, p_N\})
  • Around each pip_i, finitely many "bubbles" Ai,jA_\infty^{i,j} emerge on S4S^4
  • The energy splits: limkMFAk2=MFA2+i,jS4FAi,j2\lim_{k \to \infty} \int_M |F_{A_k}|^2 = \int_M |F_{A_\infty}|^2 + \sum_{i,j} \int_{S^4} |F_{A_\infty^{i,j}}|^2

Main stability theorems (Gauvrit et al., 2024) establish:

  • Lower semicontinuity of the Morse index:

indYM(Ak)indYM(A)+i,jindYM(Ai,j)\operatorname{ind}_{YM}(A_k) \geq \operatorname{ind}_{YM}(A_\infty) + \sum_{i,j} \operatorname{ind}_{YM}(A_\infty^{i,j})

for k1k \gg 1.

  • Upper semicontinuity of the extended signature:

ς(Ak)ς(A)+i,jς(Ai,j)\varsigma(A_k) \leq \varsigma(A_\infty) + \sum_{i,j} \varsigma(A_\infty^{i,j})

for k1k \gg 1.

The proof strategy exploits energy quantization, neck analysis (showing uniform positivity of QAQ_A on neck regions via Lorentz bounds and gauge fixing), spectral theory for self-adjoint elliptic operators, and a decomposition of the domain via weight functions localized on bubbles. This framework precludes the appearance of spurious negative or zero modes along necks, guaranteeing the precise inequality above (Gauvrit et al., 2024).

3. Generalizations and the Role of Relaxed Functionals

Stability of Yang–Mills connections extends beyond the classical energy to relaxed, Sacks–Uhlenbeck-type functionals. For the pp-Yang–Mills energy,

Eα(A)=M4(1+FA2)αdvolE_\alpha(A) = \int_{M^4} (1 + |F_A|^2)^\alpha\,d\mathrm{vol}

with α>1\alpha>1, one considers critical points (pseudo Yang–Mills connections) and studies the asymptotics of their Morse index. For sequences AkA_k of critical points of EαkE_{\alpha_k} with αk1\alpha_k \downarrow 1, the same index stability phenomena are valid:

  • Lower semicontinuity: m(Ak)m(A)+i,jm(Bij)m(A_k) \geq m(A_\infty) + \sum_{i,j} m(B_{ij})
  • Upper semicontinuity for index plus nullity: m(Ak)+n(Ak)m(A)+n(A)+i,j[m(Bij)+n(Bij)]m(A_k) + n(A_k) \leq m(A_\infty) + n(A_\infty) + \sum_{i,j} [m(B_{ij}) + n(B_{ij})]

These properties are crucial for constructing min–max critical points with controlled Morse index, underpinning the detection of new non-self-dual Yang–Mills connections via variational methods, and highlight a qualitative difference from harmonic map theory, where neck regions can carry negative modes and the Morse index may fail to be semicontinuous (Gauvrit et al., 25 Nov 2025).

4. Stability in Flow and Soliton Theory

The analysis of stability extends to the dynamical context, especially Yang–Mills flow and soliton models:

  • Entropy stability and shrinking solitons: The spectrum of the linearized "entropy operator" around a shrinking soliton contains only two negative eigenvalues (1-1 and 1/2-1/2), corresponding to time and translation directions; all other eigenvalues are nonnegative. This entails a gap theorem: in critical dimension n=4n=4, all entropy-stable shrinkers must be flat, forbidding type-I singularity formation by shrinkers (Kelleher et al., 2014).
  • Instability under geometric flows: In certain settings, e.g., on hyperbolic 3-space, the Yang–Mills flow admits growing modes corresponding to torsion-full perturbations, indicating linear instability of negatively curved backgrounds due to torsion degrees of freedom. The Ricci flow, lacking these, is stable in contrast (Gegenberg et al., 2012).
  • Nonlinear stability of homothetic shrinkers: For higher-dimensional equivariant Yang–Mills heat flow, explicit self-similar "shrinkers" exhibit nonlinear stability under small perturbations, with spectral analysis using weighted Schrödinger operators confirming the absence of further instabilities (Glogić et al., 2019).

5. Stability and Moduli Space: Special Holonomy and Holomorphic Bundles

On manifolds with special holonomy, additional geometric structures constrain Yang–Mills stability:

  • G2G_2-manifolds: On compact G2G_2 manifolds, energy-minimizing Yang–Mills connections (assuming harmonicity of a certain curvature 1-form) must be G2G_2-instantons; i.e., their curvature is constrained to a specific component determined by the holonomy (Huang, 2015).
  • Calabi–Yau manifolds: On Calabi–Yau 3-folds, stability (minimization) of the Yang–Mills energy, under appropriate geometric hypotheses, implies that the connection is holomorphic (typically Hermitian–Yang–Mills), linking variational stability with algebro-geometric notions of slope stability.
  • HYM connections and stability under deformation: In the context of complex geometry, continuous deformation of the polarization (Kähler or balanced class) yields continuous families of Hermitian–Yang–Mills connections, even when passing through walls of semistability. The moduli space stratifies locally into chambers (polyhedral cones) defined by linear inequalities corresponding to subsheaf slopes (Delloque, 2024, Clarke et al., 2023).

6. Stability of Generalized Yang–Mills-Type Functionals

Extensions of Yang–Mills theory to non-quadratic (e.g., FF-Yang–Mills) functionals allow further exploration of stability. For a family of functionals X(V)=CPnF(RV2)dVg\mathcal{X}(V) = \int_{\mathbb{CP}^n} F(|R^V|^2) dV_g, there exist universal criteria (sign conditions on combinations of FF'', FF', and nn) that force weak stability to imply flat connection (trivial curvature). For some functionals, a "gap theorem" shows that any FF-Yang–Mills connection whose curvature norm remains under an explicit bound is necessarily flat (Wen, 17 Jan 2025). These results extend classical rigidity and instability theorems for the standard Yang–Mills energy.


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