In number theory, specifically the study of modular forms, a Maass–Shimura operator is an operator which maps modular forms to almost holomorphic modular forms.
The Maass–Shimura operator on (almost holomorphic) modular forms of weight
is defined by
where
is the imaginary part of
.
One may similarly define Maass–Shimura operators of higher orders, where
and
is taken to be identity.
Maass–Shimura operators raise the weight of a function's modularity by 2. If
is modular of weight
with respect to a congruence subgroup
, then
is modular with weight
:[1]
However,
is not a modular form due to the introduction of a non-holomorphic part.
Maass–Shimura operators follow a product rule: for almost holomorphic modular forms
and
with respective weights
and
(from which it is seen that
is modular with weight
), one has
Using induction, it is seen that the iterated Maass–Shimura operator satisfies the following identity:
where
is a Pochhammer symbol.[2]
Lanphier showed a relation between the Maass–Shimura and Rankin–Cohen bracket operators:[3]
where
is a modular form of weight
and
is a modular form of weight
.