Having now seen and "understood" (quotes necessary) the Seiberg-Witten equations on a closed oriented Riemannian 4-manifold $X$, I have no real understanding of where they came from.
We take an orthogonal frame bundle $P$ of $TX$, a $\textrm{spin}^\mathbb{C}$ structure $\tilde{P}$ with determinant line bundle $\mathcal{L}$, the complex $\pm$ spin bundles $S^\pm(\tilde{P})$ associated to $\tilde{P}$, a unitary connection $A$ on $\mathcal{L}$, and then BAM:
$F_A^+=\psi\otimes\psi^*-\frac{1}{2}|\psi|^2$
$D_A\psi=0$
for a spinor $\psi\in C^\infty(S^+(\tilde{P}))$. From here we can consider the space of solutions (monopoles) and do some Floer theory stuff and whatnot.
I only read that these equations come from Witten's famous paper Monopoles and 4-manifolds (along with two others joint with Seiberg)... however, unless I am mistaken, he simply writes them down and starts arguing for their similarity/duality to Donaldson's theory (with instanton solutions). I then try and go to the standard references of Donaldson, which don't seem to suggest how the SW equations come about (nor do I even really see how the instantons come about). Although I have studied physics for a long time, I seem to just juggle around these papers, without ever finding a natural "blooming" of the SW equations.
Even if it's in the language of string theory, I would like to know the general story / understanding of the "blooming" of the SW equations, and how exactly they are "dual" to the instanton-scenario of Donaldson, perhaps even for the "blooming" of these instantons. (For instance, I don't see a set of equations for instantons). This post may not be stated in its clearest form, but I will try my best to make appropriate edits.
Andrei Tyurin passed away several years ago (27.10.2002) was an influential Russian algebraic geometer, e.g. Tyurin parameters for vector bundles on curves widely used (e.g. S.P. Novikov, Kriechever http://arxiv.org/abs/math-ph/0308019 )
– Alexander Chervov Feb 15 '12 at 08:22