Second-Jet Equivariant η Separations on Lens Spaces
Pith reviewed 2026-06-27 23:31 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The residual-circle equivariant η germ separates lens spaces L(25,4) and L(25,9) with normalized second derivative -6080 while their ordinary η invariants agree.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
For three-dimensional lens spaces with the round metric and standard coordinate-torus action, the residual-circle equivariant η germ is formed by keeping the spin-Fourier character of the Dirac eigenspaces. In the square family L(ℓ²,ℓ-1) and L(ℓ²,2ℓ-1) for odd ℓ≥5 the ordinary η invariants of each pair agree, the first derivative vanishes by symmetry, and the second derivative is nonzero. The normalized value of this second derivative for L(25,4) versus L(25,9) is -6080. The computation uses the spin-Fourier residues directly.
What carries the argument
The residual-circle equivariant η germ, formed by retaining the spin-Fourier character of each Dirac eigenspace and differentiating with respect to the residual circle parameter.
If this is right
- The ordinary η invariant is insufficient to distinguish the paired lens spaces in the square family.
- The second derivative of the residual-circle equivariant η germ provides a nonzero separation for every such pair with odd ℓ≥5.
- The distinction between the spaces is carried entirely by the spin-Fourier residues of the eigenspaces.
- Equivariant extensions of the η invariant can capture geometric information beyond the scalar case.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same second-jet construction could be applied to other families of lens spaces or different torus actions to test for further separations.
- If the method extends, higher-order derivatives of equivariant spectral invariants may refine the classification of three-manifolds that share the same ordinary η value.
- Analogous germs might be defined for other spectral invariants such as the rho invariant on the same spaces.
Load-bearing premise
The spin-Fourier residues of the Dirac eigenspaces can be used directly to compute the second derivative of the residual-circle equivariant η germ without additional correction terms from the coordinate-torus action.
What would settle it
An independent computation of the second derivative for L(25,4) versus L(25,9) that incorporates possible torus-action corrections and produces a value other than -6080.
read the original abstract
Lens spaces are useful test examples in spectral geometry because their spin Dirac eigenspaces admit explicit congruence descriptions. We use these descriptions to study equivariant $\eta$ invariants for three-dimensional lens spaces with the round metric and the standard coordinate-torus action, retaining the spin-Fourier character of each eigenspace rather than only the ordinary scalar $\eta$ value. For the square family $L(\ell^2,\ell-1)$ and $L(\ell^2,2\ell-1)$, with $\ell\geq 5$ odd, we obtain a residual-circle equivariant $\eta$ separation: the ordinary $\eta$ values agree, and the first derivative of the residual $\eta$ germ vanishes by symmetry, but the second derivative is nonzero. For $L(25,4)$ versus $L(25,9)$, the normalized second derivative is $-6080$. Thus, the residual-circle equivariant $\eta$ germ detects a distinction invisible to the ordinary $\eta$ invariant. The calculation uses spin-Fourier residues directly; perturbative Hessian signs serve only as motivation and are not part of the invariant.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper claims that for the family of lens spaces L(ℓ², ℓ-1) and L(ℓ², 2ℓ-1) with ℓ odd and ≥5, equipped with the round metric and standard coordinate-torus action, the ordinary η invariants agree and the first derivative of the residual-circle equivariant η germ vanishes by symmetry, while the normalized second derivative is nonzero; explicitly, this second derivative equals -6080 for the pair L(25,4) versus L(25,9). The computation is performed directly from the spin-Fourier residues of the Dirac eigenspaces under the residual-circle action, with perturbative Hessian signs used only for motivation.
Significance. If the residue calculation is shown to capture the full second jet without omitted torus corrections, the result supplies a concrete, parameter-free example of a refined equivariant η invariant that distinguishes lens spaces invisible to the ordinary η invariant. The explicit numerical distinction on these congruence-described spinor spaces is a strength, as is the absence of free parameters or fitting in the derivation.
major comments (1)
- [abstract, final paragraph] Abstract, final paragraph: the assertion that the second derivative of the residual η germ is obtained directly from spin-Fourier residues of the Dirac eigenspaces, without additional correction terms from the retained coordinate-torus action, is load-bearing for the claimed numerical distinction of -6080; an explicit argument is required showing that any torus-action contributions to the second jet either vanish or cancel identically between L(25,4) and L(25,9).
minor comments (1)
- The phrase 'residual-circle equivariant η germ' is used repeatedly without an explicit local definition or coordinate chart in the opening paragraphs; a brief expansion would improve accessibility.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and for highlighting the need to make explicit that torus-action contributions cancel in the second-jet comparison. We address the single major comment below and will revise the manuscript accordingly.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [abstract, final paragraph] Abstract, final paragraph: the assertion that the second derivative of the residual η germ is obtained directly from spin-Fourier residues of the Dirac eigenspaces, without additional correction terms from the retained coordinate-torus action, is load-bearing for the claimed numerical distinction of -6080; an explicit argument is required showing that any torus-action contributions to the second jet either vanish or cancel identically between L(25,4) and L(25,9).
Authors: We agree that an explicit statement is required. Both lens spaces carry the identical round metric and the same standard coordinate-torus action. The residual-circle equivariant η germ is obtained by fixing the torus parameters and differentiating only along the residual S¹. Any second-jet contribution arising from the retained torus action is therefore identical for the two spaces and cancels exactly in the difference. The nonzero normalized value −6080 is produced solely by the differing spin-Fourier residues of the Dirac eigenspaces under this residual action. In the revised manuscript we will insert a short clarifying paragraph immediately after the final sentence of the abstract, stating the cancellation explicitly and referencing the common torus action. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; direct residue computation is self-contained
full rationale
The paper derives the second-jet distinction for L(25,4) versus L(25,9) by direct evaluation of spin-Fourier residues of the Dirac eigenspaces under the residual-circle action. The abstract states explicitly that 'The calculation uses spin-Fourier residues directly' and that perturbative Hessian signs are 'only as motivation and are not part of the invariant.' No parameter fitting, self-definitional reduction, or load-bearing self-citation chain is present; the reported normalized second derivative of -6080 is obtained from the residue data rather than forced by the inputs or prior author results. The derivation therefore remains independent of its target claim.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption Lens spaces with the round metric admit explicit congruence descriptions of their spin Dirac eigenspaces.
- domain assumption The residual-circle equivariant η germ is well-defined and its second derivative can be extracted directly from spin-Fourier residues.
Reference graph
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discussion (0)
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