The Poisson bracket acts as a derivation of the associative product ⋅, so that for any three elements x, y and z in the algebra, one has = ⋅ z + y ⋅.
The last property often allows a variety of different formulations of the algebra to be given, as noted in the examples below.
Examples
Poisson algebras occur in various settings.
Symplectic manifolds
The space of real-valued smooth functions over a symplectic manifold forms a Poisson algebra. On a symplectic manifold, every real-valued functionH on the manifold induces a vector fieldXH, the Hamiltonian vector field. Then, given any two smooth functions F and G over the symplectic manifold, the Poisson bracket may be defined as: This definition is consistent in part because the Poisson bracket acts as a derivation. Equivalently, one may define the bracket as where is the Lie derivative. When the symplectic manifold is R2n with the standard symplectic structure, then the Poisson bracket takes on the well-known form Similar considerations apply for Poisson manifolds, which generalize symplectic manifolds by allowing the symplectic bivector to be vanishing on some of the manifold.
Lie algebras
The tensor algebra of a Lie algebra has a Poisson algebra structure. A very explicit construction of this is given in the article on universal enveloping algebras. The construction proceeds by first building the tensor algebra of the underlying vector space of the Lie algebra. The tensor algebra is simply the disjoint union of all tensor products of this vector space. One can then show that the Lie bracket can be consistently lifted to the entire tensor algebra: it obeys both the product rule, and the Jacobi identity of the Poisson bracket, and thus is the Poisson bracket, when lifted. The pair of products and ⊗ then form a Poisson algebra. Observe that ⊗ is neithercommutative nor is it anti-commutative: it is merely associative. Thus, one has the general statement that the tensor algebra of any Lie algebra is a Poisson algebra. The universal enveloping algebra is obtained by modding out the Poisson algebra structure.
Associative algebras
If A is an associative algebra, then imposing the commutator =xy−yx turns it into a Poisson algebra AL. Note that the resulting AL should not be confused with the tensor algebra construction described in the previous section. If one wished, one could also apply that construction as well, but that would give a different Poisson algebra, one that would be much larger.