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FMLB_JChannel_Revised_Bahayou_polished.tex
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Role and Objective
You are an elite academic mathematician, specializing in Lie theory, Poisson geometry, and deformation quantization, acting as a senior revising author for a top-tier Q1 mathematical journal (e.g., Communications in Mathematical Physics or Journal of Differential Geometry).

Your objective is to execute a comprehensive revision of the provided LaTeX manuscript, addressing every critique and question raised in the attached peer review. You must enhance the mathematical rigor, expand proofs where requested, generate the missing explicit examples, and output the final result strictly as a complete, error-free, and publication-ready LaTeX document.

Input Materials

  1. Source Manuscript: [Insert/Attach original LaTeX code]
  2. Peer Review: [Insert/Attach AI Review Document]

Execution Protocol
You must systematically implement the following revisions directly into the LaTeX source:

1. Mathematical Expansions & Proof Refinements

  • Strict Invariance: Formalize "strict \afr\afr-invariance" at the cochain level. Clarify whether the survival result (Proposition 4.7) extends to classes that are only \afr\afr-invariant in cohomology (i.e., up to d\ufrd_{\ufr}-coboundary).
  • Rank and Dimension Formulas: Introduce a new proposition detailing general rank formulas or bounds for β\beta and \cokerβ\coker \beta in terms of dim\sfr\dim \sfr, dim\zfr\dim \zfr, and mm. Specify structural conditions on AA_{\ell} required for β\beta to be surjective onto TT_{\ell}.
  • Polynomial Integration (Theorem 1.4/6.2): Expand the proof to show precisely why the right-trivialized multiplicative Poisson tensor yields polynomials of degree 2\leq 2 on N=exp(\zfr\ufr)N = \exp(\zfr \oplus \ufr). Explicitly invoke right-trivialization, the nilpotency of \ad\ad along \ufr\ufr, and the exact truncation of the Baker-Campbell-Hausdorff (BCH) formula.
  • Canonicity Proof (Theorem 4.10): Rewrite Steps A–C to eliminate typographical ambiguities. Rigorously separate the 2\sfr\wedge^2 \sfr, \sfr\zfr\sfr \wedge \zfr, and 2\zfr\wedge^2 \zfr components using explicit projectors. Prove exactly why the \sfr\zfr\sfr \wedge \zfr shift changes only AA_{\ell} and leaves WW_{\ell} and [σR][\sigma_R] invariant.
  • Simple-Pole Theorem (Theorem 7.5): Clarify the functional-analytic framework and hypotheses. Define "resonant acyclicity" rigorously.
  • Theorem 3.7 Clarification: Address whether (C1)–(C3) remain necessary and sufficient under mild resonances violating (N2) but not (N1), and specify which mixed terms enter the JJ-channel if they fail.

2. New Content Additions

  • Worked Examples Section: Substantially expand Section 9. Add a fully worked 4D example demonstrating a non-trivial obstruction (\Ob(R)0\Ob(R) \neq 0) and a corresponding resolved case (\Ob(R)=0\Ob(R) = 0). Explicitly list AA_{\ell}, JJ_{\ell}, WW_{\ell}, β(Ψ)\beta_{\ell}(\Psi), and σR\sigma_R. Provide a table of weights for clarity.
  • Notation Table: Insert a concise notation table early in the manuscript to standardize symbols (e.g., \ufr\ufr, \zfr\zfr, \sfr\sfr, PP_{\ell}, \calMijσ\calM_{ij}^{\sigma}).
  • Literature Integration: Integrate specific citations addressing:
  • Low-dimensional solvable Lie bialgebra classifications and specifically e(2)\mathfrak{e}(2).
  • Uses of the Hochschild-Serre spectral sequence as an obstruction mechanism in deformation theory.
  • κ\kappa-Poincaré deformations and resonant degenerations involving residue-type cocycles.

3. Output Constraints (CRITICAL)

  • Absolute LaTeX Strictness: Your output must consist exclusively of valid LaTeX code, beginning exactly with \documentclass and ending exactly with \end{document}.
  • No Markdown Wrappers: Do not wrap the output in latex ... code blocks. Do not include introductory or concluding conversational text.
  • Compilation Guarantee: Ensure all cross-references (\Cref, \label), theorem environments, and bibliographical citations (\bibitem) are perfectly matched and will compile without fatal errors.
  • Tone: Maintain a formal, academic, and rigorous tone throughout. Prioritize mathematical precision over conversational exposition.

Suy nghĩ

bash -lc sed -n '721,845p' /mnt/data/final_short.tex

Thought for 11m 18s

Trả lời

\documentclass[12pt,reqno]{amsart}

\usepackage[T1]{fontenc} \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} \usepackage{amsmath,amssymb,amsthm,amsfonts,mathtools,mathrsfs} \usepackage[margin=1.15in]{geometry} \usepackage{enumitem} \usepackage{tikz-cd} \usepackage[colorlinks=true,linkcolor=blue!55!black,citecolor=blue!55!black,urlcolor=blue!55!black]{hyperref} \usepackage[nameinlink,capitalize,noabbrev]{cleveref}

\numberwithin{equation}{section}

\theoremstyle{plain} \newtheorem{theorem}{Theorem}[section] \newtheorem{proposition}[theorem]{Proposition} \newtheorem{lemma}[theorem]{Lemma} \newtheorem{corollary}[theorem]{Corollary}

\theoremstyle{definition} \newtheorem{definition}[theorem]{Definition} \newtheorem{assumption}[theorem]{Assumption} \newtheorem{example}[theorem]{Example} \newtheorem{notation}[theorem]{Notation}

\theoremstyle{remark} \newtheorem{remark}[theorem]{Remark}

\DeclareMathOperator{\ad}{ad} \DeclareMathOperator{\Ad}{Ad} \DeclareMathOperator{\id}{id} \DeclareMathOperator{\im}{im} \DeclareMathOperator{\coker}{coker} \DeclareMathOperator{\pr}{pr} \DeclareMathOperator{\rk}{rk} \DeclareMathOperator{\Hom}{Hom} \DeclareMathOperator{\End}{End} \DeclareMathOperator{\CE}{CE} \DeclareMathOperator{\Ob}{Ob} \DeclareMathOperator{\CJ}{CJ} \DeclareMathOperator{\gr}{gr}

\newcommand{\g}{\mathfrak{g}} \newcommand{\sfr}{\mathfrak{s}} \newcommand{\zfr}{\mathfrak{z}} \newcommand{\ufr}{\mathfrak{u}} \newcommand{\afr}{\mathfrak{a}} \newcommand{\so}{\mathfrak{so}} \newcommand{\R}{\mathbb{R}} \newcommand{\C}{\mathbb{C}} \newcommand{\calM}{\mathcal{M}} \newcommand{\calR}{\mathcal{R}} \newcommand{\calH}{\mathcal{H}} \newcommand{\calC}{\mathcal{C}} \newcommand{\calB}{\mathcal{B}} \newcommand{\calL}{\mathcal{L}} \newcommand{\schouten}[2]{{#1,#2}}

\pdfstringdefDisableCommands{% \def\g{g}% \def\sfr{s}% \def\zfr{z}% \def\ufr{u}% \def\afr{a}% \def\calM{M}% \def\calR{R}% \def\calC{C}% \def\Ob{Ob}% }

\title[Hochschild--Serre JJ-channel obstructions]{Hochschild--Serre \texorpdfstring{JJ}{J}-Channel Obstructions for Flat Metric Lie Bialgebras} \author{Amine Bahayou} \address{Department of Mathematics, Kasdi Merbah University, Ouargla 30000, Algeria} \email{[email protected]} \subjclass[2020]{Primary 17B62, 53D17; Secondary 17B56, 18G40, 53D30, 81R50, 81R60} \keywords{Lie bialgebra; flat metric Lie algebra; Milnor decomposition; Hochschild--Serre spectral sequence; Poisson--Lie group; deformation quantization; resonant degeneration; κ\kappa-Poincar'e} \date{\today}

\begin{document}

\begin{abstract} Let

\g=\sfr\zfr\ufr,\ufr=[\g,\g]==1mP,\adsP=λ(s)J,\g=\sfr\oplus\zfr\oplus\ufr, \qquad \ufr=[\g,\g]=\bigoplus_{\ell=1}^{m}P_{\ell}, \qquad \ad_s|_{P_{\ell}}=\lambda_{\ell}(s)J_{\ell},

be a real flat metric Lie algebra in Milnor form. We study normalized Lie bialgebra one-cocycles whose restriction to a rotation plane contains, in addition to the identity-type term AuA_{\ell}\wedge u, a central rotated term WJuW_{\ell}\wedge J_{\ell}u. The central rotated sector produces a Hochschild--Serre class

[σR]H0(\afr,H1(\ufr,3\g)),σR(u)=JuR(W)(uP),[\sigma_R]\in H^0\bigl(\afr,H^1(\ufr,\wedge^3\g)\bigr), \qquad \sigma_R(u)=J_{\ell}u\wedge R(W_{\ell})\quad (u\in P_{\ell}),

whose comparison image is an explicit cokernel obstruction \Ob(R)\cokerβ\Ob(R)\in\coker\beta. The main result proves that the JJ-extended coupled Maurer--Cartan system is solvable if and only if this class vanishes. The proof uses actual coefficient cohomology for the abelian ideal \ufr\ufr, not the erroneous identification H1(\ufr,M)=\Hom(\ufr,M)H^1(\ufr,M)=\Hom(\ufr,M).

The revision gives a cochain-level definition of strict \afr\afr-invariance and separates it from invariance only in cohomology, proves rank and surjectivity criteria for the contraction map β\beta, supplies a projector-based canonicity proof, expands the polynomial integration argument using right trivialization and the exact BCH truncation on N=exp(\zfr\ufr)N=\exp(\zfr\oplus\ufr), and states a functional-analytic version of the simple-pole theorem at resonance. The examples include a no-go result for genuine four-dimensional obstructions and a fully worked example with four-dimensional nilradical exhibiting both \Ob(R)0\Ob(R)\neq0 and \Ob(R)=0\Ob(R)=0. \end{abstract}

\maketitle \tableofcontents

\section*{Notation and standing conventions}\label{sec:notation} \addcontentsline{toc}{section}{Notation and standing conventions}

All spaces are real unless stated otherwise. The table fixes the notation used throughout. \begin{center} \renewcommand{\arraystretch}{1.18} \begin{tabular}{p{0.22\textwidth}p{0.67\textwidth}} \hline Symbol & Meaning \ \hline \g\g & flat metric Lie algebra. \ \sfr\sfr & abelian Milnor subalgebra acting by rotations on \ufr\ufr. \ \zfr\zfr & centre Z(\g)Z(\g). \ \ufr\ufr & derived ideal [\g,\g][\g,\g], abelian in Milnor's class. \ \afr\afr & quotient subalgebra \sfr\zfr\sfr\oplus\zfr, so \g=\afr\ufr\g=\afr\ltimes\ufr. \ PP_{\ell} & oriented two-plane in \ufr\ufr. \ JJ_{\ell} & positive quarter-turn on PP_{\ell}, J2=\idJ_{\ell}^{2}=-\id. \ λ\lambda_{\ell} & weight \adsP=λ(s)J\ad_s|_{P_{\ell}}=\lambda_{\ell}(s)J_{\ell}. \ ω\omega_{\ell} & oriented area bivector of PP_{\ell}. \ AA_{\ell} & identity-type coefficient. \ WW_{\ell} & central rotated coefficient in \zfr\zfr. \ I2I^2 & invariant bivectors (2\g)\g(\wedge^2\g)^\g. \ TT_{\ell} & visible quotient I2/RωI^2/\R\omega_{\ell}. \ β\beta_{\ell} & contraction (3\g)\afrT(\wedge^3\g)^\afr\to T_{\ell}. \ \calMijσ\calM_{ij}^{\sigma} & mixed resonant plane of weight λi+σλj\lambda_i+\sigma\lambda_j. \ σR\sigma_R & cochain uJuR(W)u\mapsto J_{\ell}u\wedge R(W_{\ell}). \ \Ob(R)\Ob(R) & class of (πR(W))(\pi_{\ell}R(W_{\ell}))_{\ell} in \cokerβ\coker\beta. \ \hline \end{tabular} \end{center}

\section{Introduction}

Milnor's structure theorem for flat left-invariant metrics \cite{Milnor1976} gives an orthogonal decomposition \begin{equation}\label{eq:milnor-intro} \g=\sfr\oplus\zfr\oplus\ufr, \qquad \zfr=Z(\g), \qquad \ufr=[\g,\g], \end{equation} where \sfr\sfr and \zfr\zfr are abelian, \ufr\ufr is an abelian ideal, and each \ads\ufr\ad_s|_{\ufr} is skew-adjoint. Simultaneous real block diagonalization gives \begin{equation}\label{eq:weights-intro} \ufr=\bigoplus_{\ell=1}^{m}P_{\ell}, \qquad \ad_s|{P{\ell}}=\lambda_{\ell}(s)J_{\ell}. \end{equation} This architecture reduces many Lie bialgebra questions to finite-dimensional weight linear algebra.

Lie bialgebras are infinitesimal multiplicative Poisson structures \cite{Drinfeld1983,KosmannSchwarzbach2004}. Their quantization is governed by deformation-theoretic machinery in the sense of Drinfeld and Etingof--Kazhdan \cite{Drinfeld1987,EtingofKazhdan1996}. Low-dimensional solvable and Euclidean examples, especially e(2)\mathfrak e(2), have been classified in explicit form in \cite{Gomez2000,Stachura1998,Zakrzewski1997}. The present paper isolates a cohomological mechanism that is not visible in the purely identity-type normalization: the central rotated JJ-channel. The Hochschild--Serre spectral sequence is used here as an obstruction mechanism in the spirit of \cite{HochschildSerre1953,Gerstenhaber1964,NijenhuisRichardson1967,Weibel1994}. The singular resonant part is motivated by degeneration phenomena familiar in κ\kappa-Poincar'e and related quantum-group limits \cite{MajidRuegg1994,LukierskiRueggZakrzewski1995,BorowiecPachol2010}.

The main theorem is the following.

\begin{theorem}[Central rotated Hochschild--Serre obstruction]\label{thm:intro-main} Let RR be a JJ-extended normalized one-cocycle on a nonresonant flat metric Lie algebra \g\g. The cochain σR\sigma_R defines a strict \afr\afr-invariant class

[σR]H0(\afr,H1(\ufr,3\g)).[\sigma_R]\in H^0\bigl(\afr,H^1(\ufr,\wedge^3\g)\bigr).

Under the comparison isomorphism

Γ:H0(\afr,H1(\ufr,3\g))J\cokerβ\Gamma:H^0\bigl(\afr,H^1(\ufr,\wedge^3\g)\bigr)_J\xrightarrow{\sim}\coker\beta

one has Γ([σR])=\Ob(R)\Gamma([\sigma_R])=\Ob(R). The JJ-extended coupled Maurer--Cartan system is solvable if and only if \Ob(R)=0\Ob(R)=0. \end{theorem}

The proof appears as \Cref{thm:obstruction}. The strictness hypothesis in the survival statement is sufficient, not logically necessary: a class invariant only in cohomology survives exactly when its Hochschild--Serre transgression vanishes; this is made precise in \Cref{prop:cohomological-invariance}.

\section{Milnor architecture and invariant tensors}\label{sec:foundations}

\begin{definition}[Flat metric Lie algebra] A flat metric Lie algebra is a pair (\g,,)(\g,\langle\cdot,\cdot\rangle) such that the simply connected Lie group with Lie algebra \g\g and the induced left-invariant metric has zero sectional curvature. \end{definition}

\begin{theorem}[Milnor decomposition \cite{Milnor1976}]\label{thm:milnor} Let (\g,,)(\g,\langle\cdot,\cdot\rangle) be a flat metric Lie algebra. Then there is an orthogonal decomposition

\g=\sfr\zfr\ufr,\zfr=Z(\g),\ufr=[\g,\g],\g=\sfr\oplus\zfr\oplus\ufr, \qquad \zfr=Z(\g), \qquad \ufr=[\g,\g],

in which \sfr\sfr and \zfr\zfr are abelian, \ufr\ufr is an abelian ideal, and \ads\ufr\so(\ufr)\ad_s|_{\ufr}\in\so(\ufr) for every s\sfrs\in\sfr. The commuting skew-adjoint operators \ads\ufr\ad_s|_{\ufr} admit a simultaneous decomposition

\ufr==1mP,\adsP=λ(s)J,\ufr=\bigoplus_{\ell=1}^{m}P_{\ell}, \qquad \ad_s|_{P_{\ell}}=\lambda_{\ell}(s)J_{\ell},

where PP_{\ell} is an oriented Euclidean two-plane, J2=\idJ_{\ell}^{2}=-\id, and λ\sfr{0}\lambda_{\ell}\in\sfr^{\ast}\setminus\{0\}. \end{theorem}

We put \afr=\sfr\zfr\afr=\sfr\oplus\zfr and extend λ\lambda_{\ell} by zero on \zfr\zfr. Choose oriented orthonormal bases (e,f)(e_{\ell},f_{\ell}) of PP_{\ell} with Je=fJ_{\ell}e_{\ell}=f_{\ell} and write ω=ef\omega_{\ell}=e_{\ell}\wedge f_{\ell}.

\begin{definition}[Nonresonance]\label{def:nonresonant} The weight system is nonresonant if: \begin{enumerate}[label=\textup{(N\arabic*)}] \item\label{item:N1} λi±λj\lambda_i\neq\pm\lambda_j for iji\neq j; \item\label{item:N2} for pairwise distinct i,j,ki,j,k and a,b{1,0,1}a,b\in\{-1,0,1\}, λk=aλi+bλj\lambda_k=a\lambda_i+b\lambda_j never holds. \end{enumerate} \end{definition}

\begin{proposition}[Invariant tensors]\label{prop:invariant-tensors} Under \Cref{def:nonresonant}, \begin{align} (\wedge^2\g)^\g&=\wedge^2\zfr\oplus\bigoplus_{\ell=1}^{m}\R\omega_{\ell},\label{eq:inv2}\ (\wedge^3\g)^\g&=\wedge^3\zfr\oplus\bigoplus_{\ell=1}^{m}\zfr\wedge\R\omega_{\ell}\oplus\bigoplus_{\ell=1}^{m}\sfr_{\ell}\wedge\R\omega_{\ell},\label{eq:inv3} \end{align} where \sfr=kkerλk\sfr_{\ell}=\bigcap_{k\neq\ell}\ker\lambda_k. Moreover \begin{equation}\label{eq:ainv3} (\wedge^3\g)^\afr=\wedge^3\afr\oplus\bigoplus_{\ell=1}^{m}\afr\wedge\R\omega_{\ell}. \end{equation} \end{proposition}

\begin{proof} Decompose exterior powers into \sfr\sfr-weight spaces. The zero-weight part of 2\g\wedge^2\g is 2\afrRω\wedge^2\afr\oplus\bigoplus\R\omega_{\ell} by \ref{item:N1}. Invariance under \ufr\ufr removes every noncentral \sfr\sfr-factor in 2\afr\wedge^2\afr, leaving \eqref{eq:inv2}. In degree three, \ref{item:N2} excludes zero-weight triples from three distinct planes; the \afr\afr-invariant part is therefore \eqref{eq:ainv3}. Requiring also \ufr\ufr-invariance removes \sfr\sfr-factors except those annihilating all other weights, giving \eqref{eq:inv3}. \end{proof}

\section{The coupled Maurer--Cartan system}\label{sec:coupled}

A Lie bialgebra cobracket is a Chevalley--Eilenberg one-cocycle ξZ1(\g,2\g)\xi\in Z^1(\g,\wedge^2\g) satisfying the co-Jacobi equation \schoutenξξ=0\schouten{\xi}{\xi}=0. In Milnor normal form one writes ξ=\adr+R\xi=\ad_r+R and \begin{equation}\label{eq:MC-expansion} \schouten{\xi}{\xi}=\schouten{R}{R}+d_{\g}\Psi, \qquad \Psi=[r,r]+2\schouten{r}{R}. \end{equation}

\begin{definition}[JJ-extended normalized cocycle]\label{def:Jextended} A normalized cocycle RZ1(\g,2\g)R\in Z^1(\g,\wedge^2\g) is JJ-extended if \begin{equation}\label{eq:Jextended} R(u)=A_{\ell}\wedge u+W_{\ell}\wedge J_{\ell}u, \qquad u\in P_{\ell}, \end{equation} where A\afrA_{\ell}\in\afr, W\zfrW_{\ell}\in\zfr, and R(\afr)(2\g)\gR(\afr)\subset(\wedge^2\g)^\g. The second term is the central rotated, or JJ-channel, term. \end{definition}

Let

I2=(2\g)\g=2\zfrk=1mRωk,T=I2/Rω,\calBJ==1mT,I^2=(\wedge^2\g)^\g=\wedge^2\zfr\oplus\bigoplus_{k=1}^{m}\R\omega_k, \qquad T_{\ell}=I^2/\R\omega_{\ell}, \qquad \calB_J=\bigoplus_{\ell=1}^{m}T_{\ell},

and write π:I2T\pi_{\ell}:I^2\to T_{\ell} for the quotient.

\begin{definition}[Canonical contraction]\label{def:beta} For Ψ(3\g)\afr\Psi\in(\wedge^3\g)^\afr, define β(Ψ)T\beta_{\ell}(\Psi)\in T_{\ell} by \begin{equation}\label{eq:beta-def} [u,\Psi]\equiv -J_{\ell}u\wedge\beta_{\ell}(\Psi) \quad\bmod J_{\ell}u\wedge\R\omega_{\ell}, \qquad u\in P_{\ell}. \end{equation} Set β=β:(3\g)\afr\calBJ\beta=\bigoplus_{\ell}\beta_{\ell}:(\wedge^3\g)^\afr\to\calB_J. \end{definition}

\begin{proposition}[Coordinate formula]\label{prop:beta-coordinate} Write

Ψ=α+k=1makωk,α3\afr,ak\afr,\Psi=\alpha+\sum_{k=1}^{m}a_k\wedge\omega_k, \qquad \alpha\in\wedge^3\afr, \quad a_k\in\afr,

as in \eqref{eq:ainv3}. Then \begin{equation}\label{eq:beta-coordinate} \beta_{\ell}(\Psi)=\pi_{\ell}\left(\pr_{I^2}\iota_{\lambda_{\ell}}\alpha+ \sum_{k\neq\ell}\lambda_{\ell}(a_k)\omega_k\right). \end{equation} \end{proposition}

\begin{proof} Only brackets with \sfr\sfr-factors contribute. Since [u,s]=λ(s)Ju[u,s]=-\lambda_{\ell}(s)J_{\ell}u and [u,\zfr]=0[u,\zfr]=0, contraction of one \sfr\sfr-factor in α\alpha gives the first term. Similarly, [u,akωk]=λ(ak)Juωk[u,a_k\wedge\omega_k]=-\lambda_{\ell}(a_k)J_{\ell}u\wedge\omega_k for kk\neq\ell. The k=k=\ell contribution is invisible because Juω=0J_{\ell}u\wedge\omega_{\ell}=0. \end{proof}

\begin{proposition}[Rank bounds and surjectivity]\label{prop:rank} Let p=dim\sfrp=\dim\sfr, q=dim\zfrq=\dim\zfr, and a=p+qa=p+q. Under nonresonance, \begin{equation}\label{eq:rank-dimensions} \dim(\wedge^3\g)^\afr=\binom{a}{3}+am, \qquad \dim\calB_J=m\left(\binom{q}{2}+m-1\right). \end{equation} Consequently

\rkβmin{(a3)+am,m((q2)+m1)},dim\cokerβ=dim\calBJ\rkβ.\rk\beta\leq\min\left\{\binom{a}{3}+am, m\left(\binom{q}{2}+m-1\right)\right\}, \qquad \dim\coker\beta=\dim\calB_J-\rk\beta.

Each component β\beta_{\ell} is onto TT_{\ell}. The total map β\beta is onto if the evaluation map \begin{equation}\label{eq:evaluation} L:\sfr\to\R^m, \qquad L(s)=(\lambda_1(s),\ldots,\lambda_m(s)), \end{equation} is onto. The surjectivity of β\beta is independent of the identity-type coefficients AA_{\ell}; if one restricts the ansatz to trivectors of the form AkωkA_k\wedge\omega_k, the corresponding restricted matrix is (λ(Ak))k(\lambda_{\ell}(A_k))_{\ell\neq k}. \end{proposition}

\begin{proof} The dimension formulas follow from \eqref{eq:ainv3} and from the definition of TT_{\ell}. Since λ0\lambda_{\ell}\neq0, choose ss_{\ell} with λ(s)=1\lambda_{\ell}(s_{\ell})=1. For η2\zfr\eta\in\wedge^2\zfr, the trivector sηs_{\ell}\wedge\eta maps to η\eta in TT_{\ell}; for kk\neq\ell, the trivector sωks_{\ell}\wedge\omega_k maps to ωk\omega_k. Thus β\beta_{\ell} is surjective. Simultaneous surjectivity requires solving the evaluations for all components at once. This is guaranteed by the surjectivity of LL, which gives arbitrary prescribed values for all weights. \end{proof}

\begin{definition}[Central rotated obstruction]\label{def:obstruction} For a JJ-extended normalized cocycle RR, define \begin{equation}\label{eq:obstruction} \Ob(R)=\left[(\pi_{\ell}R(W_{\ell}))_{\ell=1}^{m}\right]\in\coker\beta. \end{equation} \end{definition}

\begin{theorem}[Coupled Maurer--Cartan system]\label{thm:coupled} Let RR be JJ-extended and nonresonant. For ξ=\adr+R\xi=\ad_r+R and Ψ=[r,r]+2\schoutenrR\Psi=[r,r]+2\schouten{r}{R}, the co-Jacobi equation is equivalent to: \begin{enumerate}[label=\textup{(C\arabic*)}] \item\label{item:C1} the reduced identity-type equation \schoutenRR=0\schouten{R}{R}=0 on the non-JJ blocks; \item\label{item:C2} Ψ(3\g)\afr\Psi\in(\wedge^3\g)^\afr; \item\label{item:C3} (πR(W))=β(Ψ)(\pi_{\ell}R(W_{\ell}))_{\ell}=\beta(\Psi) in \calBJ\calB_J. \end{enumerate} In particular, the JJ-channel is solvable for some rr precisely when \Ob(R)=0\Ob(R)=0. \end{theorem}

\begin{proof} Equation \eqref{eq:MC-expansion} splits into \sfr\sfr-isotypic components. Nonresonance prevents cancellation among distinct channels. The identity-type part gives \ref{item:C1}; the zero-weight part of the coboundary equation gives \ref{item:C2}; and the coefficient of JuJ_{\ell}u modulo the invisible line Rω\R\omega_{\ell} is exactly \ref{item:C3} by \eqref{eq:beta-def}. Conversely these conditions annihilate every isotypic component of \eqref{eq:MC-expansion}. \end{proof}

\begin{proposition}[Mild resonances violating only \ref{item:N2}]\label{prop:mild} Assume \ref{item:N1} holds but \ref{item:N2} fails. Then \ref{item:C1}--\ref{item:C3} remain sufficient only after imposing vanishing of all resonant mixed components. In general the complete JJ-channel equation is \begin{equation}\label{eq:mild-C3} (\pi_{\ell}R(W_{\ell})){\ell}=\beta(\Psi_0)+\beta^{\mathrm{res}}(\Psi{\mathrm{res}}), \end{equation} where Ψ0\Psi_0 is the nonresonant part of \eqref{eq:ainv3} and Ψres\Psi_{\mathrm{res}} is a sum of zero-weight terms \begin{equation}\label{eq:mild-terms} P_i^{\epsilon_i}\wedge P_j^{\epsilon_j}\wedge P_k^{\epsilon_k}, \qquad \epsilon_i\lambda_i+\epsilon_j\lambda_j+ \epsilon_k\lambda_k=0, \qquad \epsilon_r\in{\pm1}. \end{equation} Here βres\beta^{\mathrm{res}} is defined by the same contraction rule as \eqref{eq:beta-def}. Thus the original conditions are necessary and sufficient under a mild \ref{item:N2}-resonance exactly on the sublocus where βres(Ψres)=0\beta^{\mathrm{res}}(\Psi_{\mathrm{res}})=0 and the resonant component of \schoutenRR+d\gΨ\schouten{R}{R}+d_{\g}\Psi vanishes. \end{proposition}

\begin{proof} When \ref{item:N1} holds, different rotation planes are still separated, so there is no multiplicity in the basic JJ_{\ell}-channel. The failure of \ref{item:N2} creates additional zero-weight trivectors from three distinct planes. Bracketing such a term with uPu\in P_{\ell} may leave a visible coefficient in TT_{\ell}, and these coefficients are precisely the terms collected in βres\beta^{\mathrm{res}}. No other weights can enter the JJ-channel because all nonzero weights remain in distinct isotypic components. \end{proof}

\section{The Hochschild--Serre obstruction}\label{sec:HS}

Let M=3\gM=\wedge^3\g. For the split extension

0\ufr\g\afr00\to\ufr\to\g\to\afr\to0

the Hochschild--Serre spectral sequence is \begin{equation}\label{eq:HS} E_2^{p,q}=H^p\bigl(\afr,H^q(\ufr,M)\bigr)\Longrightarrow H^{p+q}(\g,M). \end{equation} Although \ufr\ufr is abelian, its coefficient action on MM is not trivial.

\begin{lemma}[Abelian ideal cohomology]\label{lem:abelian} For an abelian Lie algebra \ufr\ufr acting on MM,

H1(\ufr,M)={ϕ:\ufrM: uϕ(v)=vϕ(u) u,v}{uuΘ:ΘM}.H^1(\ufr,M)= \frac{\{\phi:\ufr\to M:\ u\cdot\phi(v)=v\cdot\phi(u)\ \forall u,v\}} {\{u\mapsto u\cdot\Theta:\Theta\in M\}}.

\end{lemma}

\begin{definition}[Strict and cohomological invariance]\label{def:strict} A d\ufrd_{\ufr}-closed cochain ϕC1(\ufr,M)\phi\in C^1(\ufr,M) is strictly \afr\afr-invariant if \begin{equation}\label{eq:strict} a\cdot\phi(u)-\phi([a,u])=0 \qquad (a\in\afr, \ u\in\ufr). \end{equation} It is \afr\afr-invariant in cohomology if for each a\afra\in\afr there exists ΘaM\Theta_a\in M such that \begin{equation}\label{eq:cohinv} a\cdot\phi(u)-\phi([a,u])=u\cdot\Theta_a. \end{equation} Strict invariance is a cochain-level statement; cohomological invariance is the statement that [ϕ]H1(\ufr,M)[\phi]\in H^1(\ufr,M) belongs to the \afr\afr-invariant subspace. \end{definition}

\begin{definition}[The obstruction cochain]\label{def:sigma} For a JJ-extended cocycle RR, put \begin{equation}\label{eq:sigma} \sigma_R(u)=J_{\ell}u\wedge R(W_{\ell}), \qquad u\in P_{\ell}. \end{equation} \end{definition}

\begin{lemma}[Closedness and strict invariance]\label{lem:closed} The cochain σR\sigma_R is d\ufrd_{\ufr}-closed and strictly \afr\afr-invariant. Hence it defines a class

[σR]H0(\afr,H1(\ufr,3\g)).[\sigma_R]\in H^0\bigl(\afr,H^1(\ufr,\wedge^3\g)\bigr).

\end{lemma}

\begin{proof} Put B=R(W)B_{\ell}=R(W_{\ell}). Since W\zfr\afrW_{\ell}\in\zfr\subset\afr and R(\afr)(2\g)\gR(\afr)\subset(\wedge^2\g)^\g, each BB_{\ell} is \g\g-invariant. For uPiu\in P_i, vPjv\in P_j,

(d\ufrσR)(u,v)=u(JjvBj)v(JiuBi)=0,(d_{\ufr}\sigma_R)(u,v)=u\cdot(J_jv\wedge B_j)-v\cdot(J_iu\wedge B_i)=0,

because \ufr\ufr is abelian and uBj=vBi=0u\cdot B_j=v\cdot B_i=0. For s\sfrs\in\sfr and uPu\in P_{\ell},

[s,JuB]σR([s,u])=λ(s)uBλ(s)J2uB=0.[s,J_{\ell}u\wedge B_{\ell}]-\sigma_R([s,u]) =-\lambda_{\ell}(s)u\wedge B_{\ell}-\lambda_{\ell}(s)J_{\ell}^2u\wedge B_{\ell}=0.

Central elements act trivially, so \eqref{eq:strict} holds. \end{proof}

\begin{definition}[JJ-channel subspace]\label{def:Jsubspace} A JJ-channel cochain has the form ϕ(u)=JuB\phi(u)=J_{\ell}u\wedge B_{\ell} for uPu\in P_{\ell} and BI2B_{\ell}\in I^2. The corresponding subspace of H0(\afr,H1(\ufr,M))H^0(\afr,H^1(\ufr,M)) is denoted E2,J0,1E_{2,J}^{0,1}. \end{definition}

\begin{lemma}[Comparison isomorphism]\label{lem:comparison} The map

Γ:E2,J0,1\cokerβ,[ϕ][(πB)],ϕ(u)=JuB,\Gamma:E_{2,J}^{0,1}\to\coker\beta, \qquad [\phi]\mapsto[(\pi_{\ell}B_{\ell})_{\ell}], \quad \phi(u)=J_{\ell}u\wedge B_{\ell},

is a well-defined isomorphism. Moreover Γ([σR])=\Ob(R)\Gamma([\sigma_R])=\Ob(R). \end{lemma}

\begin{proof} The component BRωB_{\ell}\in\R\omega_{\ell} is invisible because Juω=0J_{\ell}u\wedge\omega_{\ell}=0. Coboundaries in the JJ-channel are exactly cochains u[u,Θ]u\mapsto[u,\Theta] with Θ(3\g)\afr\Theta\in(\wedge^3\g)^\afr, and \eqref{eq:beta-def} identifies their projected coefficients with β(Θ)\beta(\Theta). Thus quotienting by d\ufrd_{\ufr}-boundaries is exactly quotienting \calBJ\calB_J by \imβ\im\beta. The identity for σR\sigma_R is \eqref{eq:obstruction}. \end{proof}

\begin{lemma}[Strict extension]\label{lem:extension} If ϕC1(\ufr,M)\phi\in C^1(\ufr,M) is d\ufrd_{\ufr}-closed and strictly \afr\afr-invariant, then the extension ϕ~\ufr=ϕ\widetilde\phi|_{\ufr}=\phi, ϕ~\afr=0\widetilde\phi|_{\afr}=0 is a one-cocycle in C1(\g,M)C^1(\g,M). \end{lemma}

\begin{proof} The only nontrivial mixed differential is (d\gϕ~)(a,u)=aϕ(u)ϕ([a,u])(d_{\g}\widetilde\phi)(a,u)=a\cdot\phi(u)-\phi([a,u]), which vanishes by strict invariance. The \ufr\ufr\ufr\wedge\ufr component is d\ufrϕd_{\ufr}\phi and the \afr\afr\afr\wedge\afr component is zero. \end{proof}

\begin{proposition}[Survival and cohomological invariance]\label{prop:cohomological-invariance} Every strict \afr\afr-invariant JJ-channel class survives from E20,1E_2^{0,1} to E0,1E_{\infty}^{0,1}. If a class is only invariant in cohomology, then it survives if and only if its Hochschild--Serre transgression d2[ϕ]H2(\afr,M\ufr)d_2[\phi]\in H^2(\afr,M^{\ufr}) vanishes. \end{proposition}

\begin{proof} Strict classes extend to total one-cocycles by \Cref{lem:extension}; the transgression is the obstruction to such an extension, hence d2=0d_2=0 on them. For a cohomologically invariant representative satisfying \eqref{eq:cohinv}, one kills the (1,1)(1,1) component of dϕ~d\widetilde\phi by choosing primitives Θa\Theta_a. The remaining (2,0)(2,0) defect is the standard Hochschild--Serre transgression. Since no higher differential can leave bidegree (0,1)(0,1) in a first-quadrant spectral sequence, vanishing of d2d_2 is equivalent to survival. \end{proof}

\begin{theorem}[Obstruction theorem]\label{thm:obstruction} Let RR be a JJ-extended normalized cocycle on a nonresonant flat metric Lie algebra. Then [σR]E2,J0,1[\sigma_R]\in E_{2,J}^{0,1} survives to E,J0,1E_{\infty,J}^{0,1}, and

Γ([σR])=\Ob(R).\Gamma([\sigma_R])=\Ob(R).

The coupled Maurer--Cartan system of \Cref{thm:coupled} is solvable if and only if [σR]=0[\sigma_R]=0 in E,J0,1E_{\infty,J}^{0,1}, equivalently if and only if \Ob(R)=0\Ob(R)=0. \end{theorem}

\begin{proof} Closedness and strict invariance are \Cref{lem:closed}; survival is \Cref{prop:cohomological-invariance}; the comparison with \cokerβ\coker\beta is \Cref{lem:comparison}; and solvability is the vanishing criterion in \Cref{thm:coupled}. \end{proof}

\subsection{Canonicity}

Let

2\afr=2\sfr(\sfr\zfr)2\zfr\wedge^2\afr=\wedge^2\sfr\oplus(\sfr\wedge\zfr)\oplus\wedge^2\zfr

with projectors Π\sfr\sfr\Pi_{\sfr\sfr}, Π\sfr\zfr\Pi_{\sfr\zfr}, and Π\zfr\zfr\Pi_{\zfr\zfr}.

\begin{lemma}[Projector separation]\label{lem:projectors} Let q2\afrq\in\wedge^2\afr and write q=q\sfr\sfr+q\sfr\zfr+q\zfr\zfrq=q_{\sfr\sfr}+q_{\sfr\zfr}+q_{\zfr\zfr}. For uPu\in P_{\ell}, \begin{align} [u,q_{\zfr\zfr}]&=0,\label{eq:zz}\ [u,q_{\sfr\zfr}]&=\sum_{\alpha}\lambda_{\ell}(s_{\alpha})z_{\alpha}\wedge J_{\ell}u, \qquad q_{\sfr\zfr}=\sum_{\alpha}s_{\alpha}\wedge z_{\alpha},\label{eq:sz}\ [u,q_{\sfr\sfr}]&=K_{\ell}(q_{\sfr\sfr})\wedge J_{\ell}u, \qquad K_{\ell}(q_{\sfr\sfr})\in\sfr.\label{eq:ss} \end{align} The 2\zfr\wedge^2\zfr component is zero, the 2\sfr\wedge^2\sfr component lies in the noncentral rotated sector removed by the normal-form projection, and the \sfr\zfr\sfr\wedge\zfr component is the only component capable of changing the central rotated representative. Its effect on [σR][\sigma_R] is a d\ufrd_{\ufr}-coboundary. \end{lemma}

\begin{proof} Equations \eqref{eq:zz}--\eqref{eq:ss} follow from [u,z]=0[u,z]=0 and [u,s]=λ(s)Ju[u,s]=-\lambda_{\ell}(s)J_{\ell}u. If rr is replaced by r+qr+q and RR by Rd\gqR-d_{\g}q, the \sfr\zfr\sfr\wedge\zfr component changes the representative by

Δσ(u)=Juαλ(sα)R(zα).\Delta\sigma(u)=J_{\ell}u\wedge\sum_{\alpha}\lambda_{\ell}(s_{\alpha})R(z_{\alpha}).

With Θ=αsαR(zα)\Theta=-\sum_{\alpha}s_{\alpha}\wedge R(z_{\alpha}), one has d\ufrΘ=Δσd_{\ufr}\Theta=\Delta\sigma. Thus the representative may change, but the Hochschild--Serre class does not. If one fixes the normal-form convention in which WW_{\ell} is represented modulo this \sfr\zfr\sfr\wedge\zfr coboundary freedom, then WW_{\ell} itself is unchanged in the quotient. \end{proof}

\begin{theorem}[Canonicity]\label{thm:canonicity} The class [σR]E2,J0,1\cokerβ[\sigma_R]\in E_{2,J}^{0,1}\cong\coker\beta depends only on the cohomology class of the cobracket ξ=\adr+R\xi=\ad_r+R and on the Milnor decomposition. It is independent of the choice of rr, of oriented orthonormal bases of the planes PP_{\ell}, and of the normal-form complement \calH\calH. \end{theorem}

\begin{proof} Changes of rr by elements of 2\afr\wedge^2\afr are separated by \Cref{lem:projectors}; all three components act trivially on the class. Orientation-preserving basis changes commute with JJ_{\ell} and fix ω\omega_{\ell}. Orientation reversal changes (λ,J,W)(\lambda_{\ell},J_{\ell},W_{\ell}) to (λ,J,W)(-\lambda_{\ell},-J_{\ell},-W_{\ell}), leaving JuR(W)J_{\ell}u\wedge R(W_{\ell}) invariant. Finally, two choices of \calH\calH differ by a finite-dimensional coboundary from 2\afr\wedge^2\afr, already covered by the projector argument. \end{proof}

\section{Polynomial integration}\label{sec:integration}

Let N=exp(\zfr\ufr)N=\exp(\zfr\oplus\ufr). This group is abelian, but the coefficient action of \zfr\ufr\zfr\oplus\ufr on 2\g\wedge^2\g is nontrivial through the bracket with \sfr\sfr.

\begin{theorem}[Polynomial multiplicative integration]\label{thm:integration} Let RZ1(\g,2\g)R\in Z^1(\g,\wedge^2\g). Let ΠRR\Pi_R^R be the right-trivialized multiplicative Poisson tensor integrating R\zfr\ufrR|_{\zfr\oplus\ufr}:

ΠRR(n)=(Rn1)ΠR(n).\Pi_R^R(n)=(R_{n^{-1}})_{\ast}\Pi_R(n).

For X\zfr\ufrX\in\zfr\oplus\ufr, \begin{equation}\label{eq:integration} \Pi_R^R(\exp X)=\int_0^1 e^{t\ad_X}R(X),dt =R(X)+\frac12[X,R(X)]. \end{equation} Thus the coefficients in exponential coordinates on NN are polynomials of degree at most two. \end{theorem}

\begin{proof} For a Lie algebra one-cocycle, the right-trivialized group cocycle satisfies

ddtΠRR(exp(tX))=et\adXR(X),ΠRR(e)=0.\frac{d}{dt}\Pi_R^R(\exp(tX))=e^{t\ad_X}R(X), \qquad \Pi_R^R(e)=0.

Integration gives the first equality in \eqref{eq:integration}. Since \zfr\ufr\zfr\oplus\ufr is abelian, BCH on NN truncates exactly:

expXexpY=exp(X+Y).\exp X\exp Y=\exp(X+Y).

Furthermore

[X,\zfr]=0,[X,\ufr]=0,[X,\sfr]\ufr,[X,\zfr]=0, \qquad [X,\ufr]=0, \qquad [X,\sfr]\subset\ufr,

so \adX2=0\ad_X^2=0 on \g\g and hence on 2\g\wedge^2\g. Therefore et\adX=\id+t\adXe^{t\ad_X}=\id+t\ad_X exactly. Since R(X)R(X) is linear in XX, the two terms in \eqref{eq:integration} are respectively linear and quadratic. \end{proof}

\begin{remark}[Necessity of the abelian nilradical] If the nilradical is nonabelian, the degree bound need not hold. For a nilpotent ideal of step cc, BCH and et\adXe^{t\ad_X} can produce higher finite-degree terms; for a nonnilpotent normal subgroup one may obtain nonpolynomial exponential or trigonometric coefficients. The degree 2\leq2 assertion is therefore specific to Milnor's condition [\ufr,\ufr]=0[\ufr,\ufr]=0. \end{remark}

\section{Resonant singular perturbations}\label{sec:resonance}

Fix a smooth one-parameter family of flat metric Lie algebras with weights

λε=λ+εν,\lambda_{\ell}^{\varepsilon}=\lambda_{\ell}+\varepsilon\nu_{\ell},

nonresonant for ε>0\varepsilon>0, and with a single transversal resonance \begin{equation}\label{eq:transverse} \lambda_i+\sigma\lambda_j=0, \qquad \nu_i+\sigma\nu_j\neq0. \end{equation} The mixed resonant plane \calMijσPiPj\calM_{ij}^{\sigma}\subset P_i\wedge P_j is the two-dimensional weight space whose weight is ε(νi+σνj)\varepsilon(\nu_i+ \sigma\nu_j).

All analytic statements below are finite-dimensional. We identify the underlying vector spaces of \gε\g_{\varepsilon} with that of \g0\g_0; smooth dependence means smooth dependence of structure constants and Milnor projectors. Laurent expansions are taken in a punctured real interval, equivalently after complexification in a punctured disc. All norms are fixed Euclidean norms, hence equivalent.

For q\calMijσq\in\calM_{ij}^{\sigma} define \begin{equation}\label{eq:residue} \calC_{\nu}(q)(s)=(\nu_i+\sigma\nu_j)(s)K_{ij}^{\sigma}q, \quad s\in\sfr, \qquad \calC_{\nu}(q)|_{\zfr\oplus\ufr}=0, \end{equation} where KijσK_{ij}^{\sigma} is the mixed complex structure on \calMijσ\calM_{ij}^{\sigma}.

\begin{proposition}[Residue cocycle]\label{prop:residue} The map \calCν(q)\calC_{\nu}(q) is a Chevalley--Eilenberg one-cocycle in Z1(\g0,2\g0)Z^1(\g_0,\wedge^2\g_0), and

\adε(ε1q)\calCν(q)(ε0).\ad_{\varepsilon}(\varepsilon^{-1}q)\to\calC_{\nu}(q) \qquad (\varepsilon\to0).

\end{proposition}

\begin{proof} On \calMijσ\calM_{ij}^{\sigma} the zeroth-order weight cancels and [s,q]ε=ε(νi+σνj)(s)Kijσq[s,q]_{\varepsilon}=\varepsilon(\nu_i+ \sigma\nu_j)(s)K_{ij}^{\sigma}q. Dividing by ε\varepsilon gives \eqref{eq:residue}. Since the limit has weight zero on the resonant fibre and vanishes on the abelian ideal \zfr\ufr\zfr\oplus\ufr, the Chevalley--Eilenberg cocycle identity is immediate. \end{proof}

\begin{theorem}[Simple-pole theorem]\label{thm:simplepole} Let rεr_{\varepsilon} be the Milnor-normal solution of the reduced nonresonant homological equation

Dεrε=Ψε,Ψε(3\g)\gε,D_{\varepsilon}r_{\varepsilon}=\Psi_{\varepsilon}, \qquad \Psi_{\varepsilon}\in(\wedge^3\g)^{\g_{\varepsilon}},

with Ψε\Psi_{\varepsilon} uniformly bounded and with only the transversal resonance \eqref{eq:transverse}. Then

rε=ε1q+r0+o(1),q\calMijσ,r_{\varepsilon}=\varepsilon^{-1}q+r_0+o(1), \qquad q\in\calM_{ij}^{\sigma},

and no pole of order 2\ge2 can occur. The residue qq determines the cocycle \calCν(q)\calC_{\nu}(q) of \eqref{eq:residue}. \end{theorem}

\begin{proof} On nonresonant weight blocks the inverse of the weight operator is uniformly bounded. On \calMijσ\calM_{ij}^{\sigma} the relevant eigenvalue is ε(νi+σνj)\varepsilon(\nu_i+ \sigma\nu_j) times an invertible complex structure, so the inverse has at worst one factor ε1\varepsilon^{-1}. If a Laurent expansion had leading order εNqN\varepsilon^{-N}q_N with N2N\ge2, the left-hand side DεrεD_{\varepsilon}r_{\varepsilon} would contain a term of size ε1NqN\varepsilon^{1-N}\|q_N\| on the resonant block, contradicting boundedness of Ψε\Psi_{\varepsilon}. Thus N1N\le1, and the leading coefficient lies in the resonant plane. The residue cocycle is \Cref{prop:residue}. \end{proof}

\section{Formal realization at resonance}\label{sec:formal}

Let \calL\calL be the differential graded Lie algebra controlling deformations of the resonant Lie bialgebra (\g0,ξ0)(\g_0,\xi_0), with differential

Lξ0(η)=\schoutenμ0+ξ0η.L_{\xi_0}(\eta)=\schouten{\mu_0+ \xi_0}{\eta}.

Filter \calL\calL by order along the resonant mixed-plane ideal and write Fk\calLF^k\calL for this filtration.

\begin{definition}[Resonant acyclicity]\label{def:acyclic} The resonant fibre is resonantly acyclic if, for every k1k\ge1, \begin{equation}\label{eq:acyclic} H^2(\gr_k^F\calL,L_{\xi_0})=0, \qquad \gr_k^F\calL=F^k\calL/F^{k+1}\calL. \end{equation} Equivalently, every degree-two obstruction with leading resonant order kk has a primitive of the same resonant order. \end{definition}

\begin{theorem}[Formal realization criterion]\label{thm:formal} Assume resonant acyclicity. A residue q\calMijσq\in\calM_{ij}^{\sigma} of \Cref{thm:simplepole} is formally realizable by a Laurent-formal solution

r(ε)=ε1q+k0εkrk,R(ε)=k0εkRk,r(\varepsilon)=\varepsilon^{-1}q+ \sum_{k\ge0}\varepsilon^k r_k, \qquad R(\varepsilon)=\sum_{k\ge0}\varepsilon^kR_k,

if and only if \begin{equation}\label{eq:residue-vanishing} [\calC_{\nu}(q)]=0\quad\text{in }H^1(\g_0,\wedge^2\g_0). \end{equation} Under resonant acyclicity this is the complete formal obstruction. \end{theorem}

\begin{proof} Necessity follows by collecting the order-zero part of the Maurer--Cartan equation after subtracting the pole: it is the cocycle \calCν(q)\calC_{\nu}(q), which must be a coboundary if a regular formal correction exists. Conversely, choose a primitive killing \calCν(q)\calC_{\nu}(q). At order NN, the remaining defect is Lξ0L_{\xi_0}-closed by the graded Jacobi identity. Its associated graded class lies in H2(\grNF\calL,Lξ0)H^2(\gr_N^F\calL,L_{\xi_0}), which vanishes by \Cref{def:acyclic}; hence it can be killed by an order-NN correction. Induction gives the formal solution. \end{proof}

\section{Examples and computations}\label{sec:examples}

\subsection{The Euclidean algebra e(2)\mathfrak e(2)}

Let \g=RsReRf\g=\R s\oplus\R e\oplus\R f with [s,e]=f[s,e]=f, [s,f]=e[s,f]=-e. Then \sfr=Rs\sfr=\R s, \zfr=0\zfr=0, \ufr=P1=ReRf\ufr=P_1=\R e\oplus\R f, and J1e=fJ_1e=f. Since \zfr=0\zfr=0, there is no central rotated coefficient and \calBJ=0\calB_J=0. Hence \Ob(R)=0\Ob(R)=0 for every normalized identity-type structure. The polynomial integration formula gives, for u=xe+yfu=xe+yf and R(e)=seR(e)=s\wedge e, R(f)=sfR(f)=s\wedge f,

ΠRR(expu)=su+12(x2+y2)ef,\Pi_R^R(\exp u)=s\wedge u+ \frac12(x^2+y^2)e\wedge f,

matching the low-dimensional Poisson--Lie forms in \cite{Stachura1998,Zakrzewski1997}.

\subsection{No nontrivial total four-dimensional obstruction}\label{ssec:fourdim-nogo}

A four-dimensional Milnor algebra with \ufr0\ufr\neq0 has necessarily

dim\sfr=1,dim\zfr=1,m=1.\dim\sfr=1, \qquad \dim\zfr=1, \qquad m=1.

Then I2=Rω1I^2=\R\omega_1 and T1=I2/Rω1=0T_1=I^2/\R\omega_1=0. Therefore \calBJ=0\calB_J=0 and \cokerβ=0\coker\beta=0. A total four-dimensional example with \Ob(R)0\Ob(R)\neq0 is impossible in the present framework. The minimal explicit obstruction with four-dimensional nilradical is the following example.

\subsection{A worked example with four-dimensional nilradical}\label{ssec:worked}

Let

\g=RsRz1Rz2P1P2,P=ReRf,\g=\R s\oplus\R z_1\oplus\R z_2\oplus P_1\oplus P_2, \qquad P_{\ell}=\R e_{\ell}\oplus\R f_{\ell},

with z1,z2z_1,z_2 central and

[s,e1]=f1,[s,f1]=e1,[s,e2]=2f2,[s,f2]=2e2.[s,e_1]=f_1, \quad [s,f_1]=-e_1, \qquad [s,e_2]=2f_2, \quad [s,f_2]=-2e_2.

Thus λ1(s)=1\lambda_1(s)=1, λ2(s)=2\lambda_2(s)=2, and the weights are nonresonant. Set ζ=z1z2\zeta=z_1\wedge z_2 and ω=ef\omega_{\ell}=e_{\ell}\wedge f_{\ell}. Then

I2=RζRω1Rω2,T1=RζRω2,T2=RζRω1.I^2=\R\zeta\oplus\R\omega_1\oplus\R\omega_2, \quad T_1=\R\zeta\oplus\R\omega_2, \quad T_2=\R\zeta\oplus\R\omega_1.

For

Ψ=csζ+a1ω1+a2ω2,ak=xks+zk,\Psi=c\,s\wedge\zeta+a_1\wedge\omega_1+a_2\wedge\omega_2, \qquad a_k=x_ks+z_k',

\Cref{prop:beta-coordinate} gives \begin{equation}\label{eq:worked-beta} \beta_1(\Psi)=c\zeta+x_2\omega_2, \qquad \beta_2(\Psi)=2c\zeta+2x_1\omega_1. \end{equation} Hence \begin{equation}\label{eq:worked-image} \im\beta={(b_1,b_2):\text{the ζ\zeta-coefficient of }b_2=2\text{ times that of }b_1}. \end{equation}

\begin{center} \renewcommand{\arraystretch}{1.16} \begin{tabular}{c c c c c c c} \hline plane & basis & λ(s)\lambda_{\ell}(s) & JJ_{\ell} & AA_{\ell} & WW_{\ell} & target \ \hline P1P_1 & (e1,f1)(e_1,f_1) & 11 & J1e1=f1J_1e_1=f_1 & 00 & z1z_1 & T1=RζRω2T_1=\R\zeta\oplus\R\omega_2 \ P2P_2 & (e2,f2)(e_2,f_2) & 22 & J2e2=f2J_2e_2=f_2 & 00 & z2z_2 & T2=RζRω1T_2=\R\zeta\oplus\R\omega_1 \ \hline \end{tabular} \end{center}

Define \begin{align*} R(e_1)&=z_1\wedge f_1,& R(f_1)&=-z_1\wedge e_1,\ R(e_2)&=z_2\wedge f_2,& R(f_2)&=-z_2\wedge e_2, \end{align*} with R(s)=0R(s)=0 and with central values in I2I^2 as below. These formulas define a one-cocycle because the central values are invariant and the ss-action on PP_{\ell} is by λJ\lambda_{\ell}J_{\ell}.

\subsubsection*{Obstructed case} Let

R(z1)=0,R(z2)=ζ.R(z_1)=0, \qquad R(z_2)=\zeta.

Then

(π1R(W1),π2R(W2))=(0,ζ).(\pi_1R(W_1),\pi_2R(W_2))=(0,\zeta).

By \eqref{eq:worked-image}, this tuple is not in \imβ\im\beta, because 1201\neq2\cdot0. Thus

\Ob(R)=[(0,ζ)]0.\Ob(R)=[(0,\zeta)]\neq0.

The representative is

σR(e1)=σR(f1)=0,σR(e2)=f2ζ,σR(f2)=e2ζ.\sigma_R(e_1)=\sigma_R(f_1)=0, \qquad \sigma_R(e_2)=f_2\wedge\zeta, \qquad \sigma_R(f_2)=-e_2\wedge\zeta.

By \Cref{thm:obstruction}, the coupled Maurer--Cartan system has no solution.

\subsubsection*{Resolved case} Let

R(z1)=ζ,R(z2)=2ζ.R(z_1)=\zeta, \qquad R(z_2)=2\zeta.

Then

(π1R(W1),π2R(W2))=(ζ,2ζ)=β(sζ).(\pi_1R(W_1),\pi_2R(W_2))=(\zeta,2\zeta)=\beta(s\wedge\zeta).

Consequently \Ob(R)=0\Ob(R)=0. The cochain

σR(e1)=f1ζ,σR(f1)=e1ζ,σR(e2)=2f2ζ,σR(f2)=2e2ζ\sigma_R(e_1)=f_1\wedge\zeta, \quad \sigma_R(f_1)=-e_1\wedge\zeta, \quad \sigma_R(e_2)=2f_2\wedge\zeta, \quad \sigma_R(f_2)=-2e_2\wedge\zeta

is d\ufr(sζ)d_{\ufr}(-s\wedge\zeta), so [σR]=0[\sigma_R]=0 and the JJ-channel equation is solved by Ψ=sζ\Psi=s\wedge\zeta.

\subsection{Algorithmic computation}

The obstruction is computed as follows: list the weights and central data; form I2I^2 and each TT_{\ell}; build the matrix of β\beta from \eqref{eq:beta-coordinate}; assemble the vector (πR(W))(\pi_{\ell}R(W_{\ell}))_{\ell}; reduce it modulo the column space of β\beta. The reduced vector is \Ob(R)\Ob(R).

\section{Conclusion}

The central rotated JJ-channel adds a genuine finite-dimensional obstruction to the identity-type theory of flat metric Lie bialgebras. The obstruction is simultaneously a concrete cokernel class and a canonical Hochschild--Serre edge class. Strict cochain-level invariance guarantees spectral survival, while cohomological invariance alone requires the transgression test. The rank formulas show when the obstruction is forced to vanish and when it can appear. The examples demonstrate that nonzero obstruction is impossible in total dimension four but appears naturally once the visible central and cross-plane targets outnumber the image of the weight contraction map.

\section*{Declarations} \noindent\textbf{Data availability.} This is a theoretical work and no data sets were generated or analyzed.

\noindent\textbf{Competing interests.} The author declares no competing interests.

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