the adjoint operator of the exterior differential . This operator can be expressed purely in terms of the Hodge star operator as follows:
Now consider acting on the space of all forms .
One way to consider this as a graded operator is the following: Let be an involution on the space of all forms defined by:
It is verified that anti-commutes with and, consequently, switches the -eigenspaces of
Consequently,
Definition: The operator with the above grading respectively the above operator is called the signature operator of .[2]
Definition in the odd-dimensional case
In the odd-dimensional case one defines the signature operator to be acting
on the even-dimensional forms of .
Hirzebruch Signature Theorem
If , so that the dimension of is a multiple of four, then Hodge theory implies that:
Atiyah, M.F.; Bott, R. (1967), "A Lefschetz fixed-point formula for elliptic complexes I", Annals of Mathematics, 86 (2): 374–407, doi:10.2307/1970694, JSTOR1970694
Hirzebruch, Friedrich (1995), Topological Methods in Algebraic Geometry, 4th edition, Berlin and Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag. Pp. 234, ISBN978-3-540-58663-0