Littelmann Path Model
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mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, the Littelmann path model is a combinatorial device due to Peter Littelmann for computing multiplicities ''without overcounting'' in the
representation theory Representation theory is a branch of mathematics that studies abstract algebraic structures by ''representing'' their elements as linear transformations of vector spaces, and studies modules over these abstract algebraic structures. In essen ...
of symmetrisable
Kac–Moody algebra In mathematics, a Kac–Moody algebra (named for Victor Kac and Robert Moody, who independently and simultaneously discovered them in 1968) is a Lie algebra, usually infinite-dimensional, that can be defined by generators and relations through a ge ...
s. Its most important application is to complex
semisimple Lie algebra In mathematics, a Lie algebra is semisimple if it is a direct sum of simple Lie algebras. (A simple Lie algebra is a non-abelian Lie algebra without any non-zero proper ideals). Throughout the article, unless otherwise stated, a Lie algebra i ...
s or equivalently compact
semisimple Lie group In mathematics, a Lie algebra is semisimple if it is a direct sum of modules, direct sum of simple Lie algebras. (A simple Lie algebra is a non-abelian Lie algebra without any non-zero proper Lie algebra#Subalgebras.2C ideals and homomorphisms, i ...
s, the case described in this article. Multiplicities in
irreducible representations In mathematics, specifically in the representation theory of groups and algebras, an irreducible representation (\rho, V) or irrep of an algebraic structure A is a nonzero representation that has no proper nontrivial subrepresentation (\rho, _W,W ...
, tensor products and branching rules can be calculated using a coloured directed graph, with labels given by the simple roots of the Lie algebra. Developed as a bridge between the theory of crystal bases arising from the work of
Kashiwara file:Kashiwara City Office, Osaka pref01.JPG, 270px, Kashiwara City Hall is a city located in Osaka Prefecture, Japan. , the city had an estimated population of 67,698 in 32007 households and a population density of . The total area of the city ...
and
Lusztig Lusztig is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: *George Lusztig George Lusztig (born ''Gheorghe Lusztig''; May 20, 1946) is an American-Romanian mathematician and Abdun Nur Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology ...
on
quantum group In mathematics and theoretical physics, the term quantum group denotes one of a few different kinds of noncommutative algebras with additional structure. These include Drinfeld–Jimbo type quantum groups (which are quasitriangular Hopf algebras) ...
s and the
standard monomial theory In algebraic geometry, standard monomial theory describes the sections of a line bundle over a generalized flag variety or Schubert variety of a reductive algebraic group by giving an explicit basis of elements called standard monomials. Many of t ...
of
C. S. Seshadri Conjeevaram Srirangachari Seshadri (29 February 1932 – 17 July 2020) was an Indian mathematician. He was the founder and director-emeritus of the Chennai Mathematical Institute, and is known for his work in algebraic geometry. The Seshadri ...
and Lakshmibai, Littelmann's path model associates to each irreducible representation a rational vector space with basis given by paths from the origin to a
weight In science and engineering, the weight of an object is the force acting on the object due to gravity. Some standard textbooks define weight as a Euclidean vector, vector quantity, the gravitational force acting on the object. Others define weigh ...
as well as a pair of root operators acting on paths for each
simple root Simple or SIMPLE may refer to: *Simplicity, the state or quality of being simple Arts and entertainment * ''Simple'' (album), by Andy Yorke, 2008, and its title track * "Simple" (Florida Georgia Line song), 2018 * "Simple", a song by Johnn ...
. This gives a direct way of recovering the algebraic and combinatorial structures previously discovered by Kashiwara and Lusztig using quantum groups.


Background and motivation

Some of the basic questions in the representation theory of complex semisimple Lie algebras or compact semisimple Lie groups going back to
Hermann Weyl Hermann Klaus Hugo Weyl, (; 9 November 1885 – 8 December 1955) was a German mathematician, theoretical physicist and philosopher. Although much of his working life was spent in Zürich, Switzerland, and then Princeton, New Jersey, he is assoc ...
include: * For a given dominant weight λ, find the weight multiplicities in the
irreducible representation In mathematics, specifically in the representation theory of groups and algebras, an irreducible representation (\rho, V) or irrep of an algebraic structure A is a nonzero representation that has no proper nontrivial subrepresentation (\rho, _W,W ...
''L''(λ) with highest weight λ. * For two highest weights λ, μ, find the decomposition of their tensor product ''L''(λ) \otimes ''L''(μ) into irreducible representations. * Suppose that \mathfrak_1 is the Levi component of a parabolic subalgebra of a semisimple Lie algebra \mathfrak. For a given dominant highest weight λ, determine the branching rule for decomposing the restriction of ''L''(λ) to \mathfrak_1. (Note that the first problem, of weight multiplicities, is the special case of the third in which the parabolic subalgebra is a Borel subalgebra. Moreover, the Levi branching problem can be embedded in the tensor product problem as a certain limiting case.) Answers to these questions were first provided by Hermann Weyl and
Richard Brauer Richard Dagobert Brauer (February 10, 1901 – April 17, 1977) was a leading German and American mathematician. He worked mainly in abstract algebra, but made important contributions to number theory. He was the founder of modular represent ...
as consequences of explicit character formulas, followed by later combinatorial formulas of
Hans Freudenthal Hans Freudenthal (17 September 1905 – 13 October 1990) was a Jewish-German-born Dutch mathematician. He made substantial contributions to algebraic topology and also took an interest in literature, philosophy, history and mathematics education ...
,
Robert Steinberg Robert Steinberg (May 25, 1922, Soroca, Bessarabia, Romania (present-day Moldova) – May 25, 2014) was a mathematician at the University of California, Los Angeles. He introduced the Steinberg representation, the Lang–Steinberg theorem, t ...
and
Bertram Kostant Bertram Kostant (May 24, 1928 – February 2, 2017) was an American mathematician who worked in representation theory, differential geometry, and mathematical physics. Early life and education Kostant grew up in New York City, where he gradua ...
; see . An unsatisfactory feature of these formulas is that they involved alternating sums for quantities that were known a priori to be non-negative. Littelmann's method expresses these multiplicities as sums of non-negative integers ''without overcounting''. His work generalizes classical results based on
Young tableau In mathematics, a Young tableau (; plural: tableaux) is a combinatorial object useful in representation theory and Schubert calculus. It provides a convenient way to describe the group representations of the symmetric and general linear groups and ...
x for the general linear Lie algebra \mathfrak''n'' or the
special linear Lie algebra In mathematics, the special linear Lie algebra of order n (denoted \mathfrak_n(F) or \mathfrak(n, F)) is the Lie algebra of n \times n matrices with trace zero and with the Lie bracket ,Y=XY-YX. This algebra is well studied and understood, and ...
\mathfrak''n'': *
Issai Schur Issai Schur (10 January 1875 – 10 January 1941) was a Russian mathematician who worked in Germany for most of his life. He studied at the University of Berlin. He obtained his doctorate in 1901, became lecturer in 1903 and, after a stay at the ...
's result in his 1901 dissertation that the weight multiplicities could be counted in terms of column-strict Young tableaux (i.e. weakly increasing to the right along rows, and strictly increasing down columns). * The celebrated
Littlewood–Richardson rule In mathematics, the Littlewood–Richardson rule is a combinatorial description of the coefficients that arise when decomposing a product of two Schur functions as a linear combination of other Schur functions. These coefficients are natural number ...
that describes both tensor product decompositions and branching from \mathfrak''m''+''n'' to \mathfrak''m'' \oplus \mathfrak''n'' in terms of lattice permutations of skew tableaux. Attempts at finding similar algorithms without overcounting for the other classical Lie algebras had only been partially successful. Littelmann's contribution was to give a unified combinatorial model that applied to all symmetrizable
Kac–Moody algebra In mathematics, a Kac–Moody algebra (named for Victor Kac and Robert Moody, who independently and simultaneously discovered them in 1968) is a Lie algebra, usually infinite-dimensional, that can be defined by generators and relations through a ge ...
s and provided explicit subtraction-free combinatorial formulas for weight multiplicities, tensor product rules and branching rules. He accomplished this by introducing the vector space ''V'' over Q generated by the
weight lattice In the mathematical field of representation theory, a weight of an algebra ''A'' over a field F is an algebra homomorphism from ''A'' to F, or equivalently, a one-dimensional representation of ''A'' over F. It is the algebra analogue of a multiplic ...
of a
Cartan subalgebra In mathematics, a Cartan subalgebra, often abbreviated as CSA, is a nilpotent subalgebra \mathfrak of a Lie algebra \mathfrak that is self-normalising (if ,Y\in \mathfrak for all X \in \mathfrak, then Y \in \mathfrak). They were introduced by à ...
; on the vector space of piecewise-linear paths in ''V'' connecting the origin to a weight, he defined a pair of ''root operators'' for each
simple root Simple or SIMPLE may refer to: *Simplicity, the state or quality of being simple Arts and entertainment * ''Simple'' (album), by Andy Yorke, 2008, and its title track * "Simple" (Florida Georgia Line song), 2018 * "Simple", a song by Johnn ...
of \mathfrak. The combinatorial data could be encoded in a coloured directed graph, with labels given by the simple roots. Littelmann's main motivation was to reconcile two different aspects of representation theory: * The standard monomial theory of Lakshmibai and Seshadri arising from the geometry of Schubert varieties. * Crystal bases arising in the approach to
quantum group In mathematics and theoretical physics, the term quantum group denotes one of a few different kinds of noncommutative algebras with additional structure. These include Drinfeld–Jimbo type quantum groups (which are quasitriangular Hopf algebras) ...
s of
Masaki Kashiwara is a Japanese mathematician. He was a student of Mikio Sato at the University of Tokyo. Kashiwara made leading contributions towards algebraic analysis, microlocal analysis, D-module, ''D''-module theory, Hodge theory, sheaf theory and represent ...
and
George Lusztig George Lusztig (born ''Gheorghe Lusztig''; May 20, 1946) is an American-Romanian mathematician and Abdun Nur Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He was a Norbert Wiener Professor in the Department of Mathematics from 1 ...
. Kashiwara and Lusztig constructed canonical bases for representations of deformations of the
universal enveloping algebra In mathematics, the universal enveloping algebra of a Lie algebra is the unital associative algebra whose representations correspond precisely to the representations of that Lie algebra. Universal enveloping algebras are used in the representati ...
of \mathfrak depending on a formal deformation parameter ''q''. In the degenerate case when ''q'' = 0, these yield crystal bases together with pairs of operators corresponding to simple roots; see . Although differently defined, the crystal basis, its root operators and crystal graph were later shown to be equivalent to Littelmann's path model and graph; see . In the case of complex semisimple Lie algebras, there is a simplified self-contained account in relying only on the properties of
root system In mathematics, a root system is a configuration of vectors in a Euclidean space satisfying certain geometrical properties. The concept is fundamental in the theory of Lie groups and Lie algebras, especially the classification and representati ...
s; this approach is followed here.


Definitions

Let ''P'' be the
weight lattice In the mathematical field of representation theory, a weight of an algebra ''A'' over a field F is an algebra homomorphism from ''A'' to F, or equivalently, a one-dimensional representation of ''A'' over F. It is the algebra analogue of a multiplic ...
in the dual of a
Cartan subalgebra In mathematics, a Cartan subalgebra, often abbreviated as CSA, is a nilpotent subalgebra \mathfrak of a Lie algebra \mathfrak that is self-normalising (if ,Y\in \mathfrak for all X \in \mathfrak, then Y \in \mathfrak). They were introduced by à ...
of the
semisimple Lie algebra In mathematics, a Lie algebra is semisimple if it is a direct sum of simple Lie algebras. (A simple Lie algebra is a non-abelian Lie algebra without any non-zero proper ideals). Throughout the article, unless otherwise stated, a Lie algebra i ...
\mathfrak. A Littelmann path is a piecewise-linear mapping :\pi: ,1cap \mathbf \rightarrow P\otimes_\mathbf such that Ï€(0) = 0 and Ï€(1) is a
weight In science and engineering, the weight of an object is the force acting on the object due to gravity. Some standard textbooks define weight as a Euclidean vector, vector quantity, the gravitational force acting on the object. Others define weigh ...
. Let (''H'' α) be the basis of \mathfrak consisting of "coroot" vectors, dual to basis of \mathfrak* formed by simple roots (α). For fixed α and a path π, the function h(t)= (\pi(t), H_\alpha) has a minimum value ''M''. Define non-decreasing self-mappings ''l'' and ''r'' of ,1\cap Q by : l(t) = \min_ (1,h(s)-M),\,\,\,\,\,\, r(t) = 1 - \min_ (1,h(s)-M). Thus ''l''(''t'') = 0 until the last time that ''h''(''s'') = ''M'' and ''r''(''t'') = 1 after the first time that ''h''(''s'') = ''M''. Define new paths πl and πr by :\pi_r(t)= \pi(t) + r(t) \alpha,\,\,\,\,\,\, \pi_l(t) = \pi(t) - l(t)\alpha The root operators ''e''α and ''f''α are defined on a basis vector by * \displaystyle if ''r'' (0) = 0 and 0 otherwise; * \displaystyle if ''l'' (1) = 1 and 0 otherwise. The key feature here is that the paths form a basis for the root operators like that of a
monomial representation In the mathematical fields of representation theory and group theory, a linear representation (rho) of a group is a monomial representation if there is a finite-index subgroup and a one-dimensional linear representation of , such that is equi ...
: when a root operator is applied to the basis element for a path, the result is either 0 or the basis element for another path.


Properties

Let \mathcal be the algebra generated by the root operators. Let π(''t'') be a path lying wholly within the positive
Weyl chamber In mathematics, in particular the theory of Lie algebras, the Weyl group (named after Hermann Weyl) of a root system Φ is a subgroup of the isometry group of that root system. Specifically, it is the subgroup which is generated by reflections th ...
defined by the simple roots. Using results on the path model of
C. S. Seshadri Conjeevaram Srirangachari Seshadri (29 February 1932 – 17 July 2020) was an Indian mathematician. He was the founder and director-emeritus of the Chennai Mathematical Institute, and is known for his work in algebraic geometry. The Seshadri ...
and Lakshmibai, Littelmann showed that *the \mathcal-module generated by depends only on Ï€(1) = λ and has a Q-basis consisting of paths ƒ *the multiplicity of the weight μ in the integrable highest weight representation ''L''(λ) is the number of paths σ with σ(1) = μ. There is also an action of the
Weyl group In mathematics, in particular the theory of Lie algebras, the Weyl group (named after Hermann Weyl) of a root system Φ is a subgroup of the isometry group of that root system. Specifically, it is the subgroup which is generated by reflections th ...
on paths If α is a simple root and ''k'' = ''h''(1), with ''h'' as above, then the corresponding reflection ''s''α acts as follows: * ''s''α = if ''k'' = 0; * ''s''α ''f''α''k'' if ''k'' > 0; * ''s''α ''e''α – ''k'' if ''k'' < 0. If π is a path lying wholly inside the positive Weyl chamber, the Littelmann graph \mathcal_\pi is defined to be the coloured, directed graph having as vertices the non-zero paths obtained by successively applying the operators ''f''α to π. There is a directed arrow from one path to another labelled by the simple root α, if the target path is obtained from the source path by applying ''f''α. * The Littelmann graphs of two paths are isomorphic as coloured, directed graphs if and only if the paths have the same end point. The Littelmann graph therefore only depends on λ. Kashiwara and Joseph proved that it coincides with the "crystal graph" defined by Kashiwara in the theory of crystal bases.


Applications


Character formula

If π(1) = λ, the multiplicity of the weight μ in ''L''(λ) is the number of vertices σ in the Littelmann graph \mathcal_\pi with σ(1) = μ.


Generalized Littlewood–Richardson rule

Let π and σ be paths in the positive Weyl chamber with π(1) = λ and σ(1) = μ. Then : L(\lambda) \otimes L(\mu) = \bigoplus_\eta L(\lambda + \tau(1)), where τ ranges over paths in \mathcal_\sigma such that π \star τ lies entirely in the positive Weyl chamber and the ''concatenation'' π \star τ (t) is defined as π(2''t'') for ''t'' ≤ 1/2 and π(1) + τ( 2''t'' – 1) for ''t'' ≥ 1/2.


Branching rule

If \mathfrak_1 is the Levi component of a parabolic subalgebra of \mathfrak with weight lattice ''P''1 \supset ''P'' then : L(\lambda), _ = \bigoplus_ L_(\sigma(1)), where the sum ranges over all paths σ in \mathcal_\pi which lie wholly in the positive Weyl chamber for \mathfrak_1.


See also

*
Crystal basis A crystal base for a representation of a quantum group on a \Q(v)-vector space is not a base of that vector space but rather a \Q-base of L/vL where L is a \Q(v)-lattice in that vector spaces. Crystal bases appeared in the work of and also in the ...


Notes


References

* * * * * * * * nstructional course* * * * * {{refend Representation theory Lie algebras Algebraic combinatorics