Weyl Distance Function
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In combinatorial geometry, the Weyl distance function is a function that behaves in some ways like the
distance function In mathematics, a metric space is a set together with a notion of ''distance'' between its elements, usually called points. The distance is measured by a function called a metric or distance function. Metric spaces are the most general settin ...
of a
metric space In mathematics, a metric space is a set together with a notion of ''distance'' between its elements, usually called points. The distance is measured by a function called a metric or distance function. Metric spaces are the most general settin ...
, but instead of taking values in the positive real numbers, it takes values in a group of reflections, called 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 ...
(named for
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 ...
). This distance function is defined on the collection of chambers in a mathematical structure known as a
building A building, or edifice, is an enclosed structure with a roof and walls standing more or less permanently in one place, such as a house or factory (although there's also portable buildings). Buildings come in a variety of sizes, shapes, and fun ...
, and its value on a pair of chambers a minimal sequence of reflections (in the Weyl group) to go from one chamber to the other. An adjacent sequence of chambers in a building is known as a gallery, so the Weyl distance function is a way of encoding the information of a minimal gallery between two chambers. In particular, the number of reflections to go from one chamber to another coincides with the length of the minimal gallery between the two chambers, and so gives a natural metric (the gallery metric) on the building. According to , the Weyl distance function is something like a
geometric vector In mathematics, physics, and engineering, a Euclidean vector or simply a vector (sometimes called a geometric vector or spatial vector) is a geometric object that has magnitude (or length) and direction. Vectors can be added to other vectors ...
: it encodes both the magnitude (distance) between two chambers of a building, as well as the direction between them.


Definitions

We record here definitions from . Let be the
Coxeter complex In mathematics, the Coxeter complex, named after H. S. M. Coxeter, is a geometrical structure (a simplicial complex) associated to a Coxeter group. Coxeter complexes are the basic objects that allow the construction of buildings; they form the a ...
associated to a group ''W'' generated by a set of reflections ''S''. The vertices of are the elements of ''W'', and the chambers of the complex are the cosets of ''S'' in ''W''. The vertices of each chamber can be ''colored'' in a one-to-one manner by the elements of ''S'' so that no adjacent vertices of the complex receive the same color. This coloring, although essentially canonical, is not quite unique. The coloring of a given chamber is not uniquely determined by its realization as a coset of ''S''. But once the coloring of a single chamber has been fixed, the rest of the Coxeter complex is uniquely colorable. Fix such a coloring of the complex. A gallery is a sequence of adjacent chambers :C_0,C_1,\dots,C_n. Because these chambers are adjacent, any consecutive pair C_,C_i of chambers share all but one vertex. Denote the color of this vertex by s_i. The Weyl distance function between C_0 and C_n is defined by :\delta(C_0,C_n) = s_1s_2\cdots s_n. It can be shown that this does not depend on the choice of gallery connecting C_0 and C_n. Now, a building is a simplicial complex that is organized into apartments, each of which is a Coxeter complex (satisfying some coherence axioms). Buildings are colorable, since the Coxeter complexes that make them up are colorable. A coloring of a building is associated with a uniform choice of Weyl group for the Coxeter complexes that make it up, allowing it to be regarded as a collection of words on the set of colors with relations. Now, if C_0,\dots,C_n is a gallery in a building, then define the Weyl distance between C_0 and C_n by :\delta(C_0,C_n) = s_1s_2\cdots s_n where the s_i are as above. As in the case of Coxeter complexes, this does not depend on the choice of gallery connecting the chambers C_0 and C_n. The gallery distance d(C_0,C_n) is defined as the minimal word length needed to express \delta(C_0,C_n) in the Weyl group. Symbolically, d(C_0,C_n)=\ell(\delta(C_0,C_n)).


Properties

The Weyl distance function satisfies several properties that parallel those of distance functions in metric spaces: * \delta(C,D) = 1 if and only if C=D (the group element 1 corresponds to the empty word on ''S''). This corresponds to the property d(C,D)=0 if and only if C=D of the gallery metric : * \delta(C,D)=\delta(D,C)^ (inversion corresponds to reversal of words in the alphabet ''S''). This corresponds to symmetry d(C,D)=d(D,C) of the gallery metric. * If \delta(C',C)=s\in S and \delta(C,D)=w, then \delta(C',D) is either ''w'' or ''sw''. Moreover, if \ell(sw)=\ell(w)+1, then \delta(C',D)=sw. This corresponds to the triangle inequality.


Abstract characterization of buildings

In addition to the properties listed above, the Weyl distance function satisfies the following property: * If \delta(C,D)=w, then for any s\in S there is a chamber C', such that \delta(C',C)=s and \delta(C',D)=sw. In fact, this property together with the two listed in the "Properties" section furnishes an abstract "metrical" characterization of buildings, as follows. Suppose that (''W'',''S'') is a Coxeter system consisting of a Weyl group ''W'' generated by reflections belonging to the subset ''S''. A building of type (''W'',''S'') is a pair consisting of a set ''C'' of ''chambers'' and a function: :\delta:C\times C\to W such that the three properties listed above are satisfied. Then ''C'' carries the canonical structure of a building, in which is the Weyl distance function.


References

* {{citation, last1=Abramenko, first1=P., last2=Brown, first2=K., title=Buildings: Theory and applications, publisher=Springer, year=2008


External links

* Mike Davis
Cohomology of Coxeter groups and buildings
MSRI 2007. Geometric group theory Metric geometry