Problems on Deligne-Mumford spaces
These problems deal with Deligne-Mumford spaces, by which we mean the moduli spaces of domains relevant for our construction of the Fukaya category. The first two problems form the warm-up portion: you should make sure you can do these before Tuesday morning. The remaining two problems form the further fun section: useful for deeper understanding, but not essential for following the thread of the lectures.
down and dirty with low-dimensional associahedra
Using the notation of Deligne-Mumford space, for any , the associahedron
is a
-dimensional manifold with boundary and corners which parametrizes nodal trees of disks with
marked points, one of them distinguished (we think of the
undistinguished resp. 1 distinguished marked points as "input" resp. "output" marked points).
The associahedra are similar to the Deligne-Mumford spaces we will use during the summer school.
The difference is that we will augment the associahedra by labeling the interior edges of the underlying tree by elements of
, and allow (unordered) interior marked points.
(a) As shown in [Auroux, Ex. 2.6 [[1]]], is homeomorphic to a closed interval, with one endpoint corresponding to a collision of the first two inputs
and the other corresponding to a collision of
.
Moving up a dimension,
is a pentagon; it's the central pentagon in the depiction of
in Deligne-Mumford space.
Which polyhedron is
equal to?
(A good way to get started on this problem is to list the codimension-1 strata.)
(b) Using the manifold-with-corners structure of the associahedra constructed in Deligne-Mumford space, observe that can be covered by two charts, centered at the two points in
.
Explicitly work out the transition map between these charts.
2-, 3-dimensional examples of "the original" Deligne-Mumford space
Define to be the moduli space

where two configurations are identified if one can be taken to the other by a Moebius transformation.
We can compactify to form by including stable trees of spheres, where every sphere has at least 3 special (marked/nodal) points and any neighboring pair of spheres is attached at a pair of points.
(A detailed construction of
can be found in [big McDuff-Salamon, App. D].)
Make the identifications (don't worry too much about rigor)
,
, and
.
poset underlying associahedra
The associahedron can be given the structure of a stratified space, where the underlying poset is called
and consists of stable rooted ribbon trees with
leaves.
Similarly to the setup in Moduli spaces of pseudoholomorphic polygons, a stable rooted ribbon tree is a tree
satisfying these properties:
-
has
leaves and 1 root (in our terminology, the root has valence 1 but is not counted as a leaf);
-
is stable, i.e. every main vertex (=neither a leaf nor the root) has valence at least 3;
-
is a ribbon tree, i.e. the edges incident to any vertex are equipped with a cyclic ordering.
To define the partial order, we declare if we can contract some of the interior edges in
to get
; we declare that
is in the closure of
if
.
Write the closure of the stratum corresponding to
as a product of lower-dimensional
's.
Which tree corresponds to the top stratum of
?
To the codimension-1 strata of
?
...and, to the operadically initiated (or willing to dig around a little at [[2]]): show that the collection can be given the structure of an operad (which is to say that for every
and
there is a composition operation
which splices
onto
by identifying the outgoing edge of
with the
-th incoming edge of
, and that these operations satisfy some coherence conditions).
Next, show that algebras / categories over the operad
of cellular chains on
are the same thing as
algebra / categories.