Schur algebra

In mathematics, Schur algebras, named after Issai Schur, are certain finite-dimensional algebras closely associated with Schur–Weyl duality between general linear and symmetric groups. They are used to relate the representation theories of those two groups. Their use was promoted by the influential monograph of J. A. Green first published in 1980.[1] The name "Schur algebra" is due to Green. In the modular case (over infinite fields of positive characteristic) Schur algebras were used by Gordon James and Karin Erdmann to show that the (still open) problems of computing decomposition numbers for general linear groups and symmetric groups are actually equivalent.[2] Schur algebras were used by Friedlander and Suslin to prove finite generation of cohomology of finite group schemes.[3]

Construction

The Schur algebra S_k(n, r) can be defined for any commutative ring k and integers n, r \geq 0. Consider the algebra k[x_{ij}] of polynomials (with coefficients in k) in n^2 commuting variables x_{ij}, 1 ≤ i, jn. Denote by A_k(n, r) the homogeneous polynomials of degree r. Elements of A_k(n, r) are k-linear combinations of monomials formed by multiplying together r of the generators x_{ij} (allowing repetition). Thus

k[x_{ij}] = \bigoplus_{r\ge 0} A_k(n, r).

Now, k[x_{ij}] has a natural coalgebra structure with comultiplication \Delta and counit \varepsilon the algebra homomorphisms given on generators by

 \Delta(x_{ij}) = \textstyle\sum_l x_{il} \otimes x_{lj}, \quad \varepsilon(x_{ij}) = \delta_{ij}\quad\    (Kronecker's delta).

Since comultiplication is an algebra homomorphism, k[x_{ij}] is a bialgebra. One easily checks that A_k(n, r) is a subcoalgebra of the bialgebra k[x_{ij}], for every r  0.

Definition. The Schur algebra (in degree r) is the algebra S_k (n, r) = \mathrm{Hom}_k( A_k (n, r), k). That is, S_k(n,r) is the linear dual of A_k(n,r).

It is a general fact that the linear dual of a coalgebra A is an algebra in a natural way, where the multiplication in the algebra is induced by dualizing the comultiplication in the coalgebra. To see this, let

\Delta(a) = \textstyle \sum a_i \otimes b_i

and, given linear functionals f, g on A, define their product to be the linear functional given by

\textstyle a \mapsto \sum f(a_i) g(b_i).

The identity element for this multiplication of functionals is the counit in A.

Main properties

V^{\otimes r} = V \otimes \cdots \otimes V \quad (r\text{ factors}). \,

Then the symmetric group \mathfrak{S}_r on r letters acts naturally on the tensor space by place permutation, and one has an isomorphism

S_k(n,r) \cong \mathrm{End}_{\mathfrak{S}_r} (V^{\otimes r}).

In other words, S_k(n,r) may be viewed as the algebra of endomorphisms of tensor space commuting with the action of the symmetric group.

S_k(n,r) \cong S_{\mathbb{Z}}(n,r) \otimes _{\mathbb{Z}} k
for any commutative ring k.

Generalizations

The study of these various classes of generalizations forms an active area of contemporary research.

References

  1. J. A. Green, Polynomial Representations of GLn, Springer Lecture Notes 830, Springer-Verlag 1980. MR 2349209, ISBN 978-3-540-46944-5, ISBN 3-540-46944-3
  2. Karin Erdmann, Decomposition numbers for symmetric groups and composition factors of Weyl modules. Journal of Algebra 180 (1996), 316320. doi:10.1006/jabr.1996.0067 MR 1375581
  3. Eric Friedlander and Andrei Suslin, Cohomology of finite group schemes over a field. Inventiones Mathematicae 127 (1997), 209--270. MR 1427618 doi:10.1007/s002220050119
  4. Edward Cline, Brian Parshall, and Leonard Scott, Finite-dimensional algebras and highest weight categories. Journal für die Reine und Angewandte Mathematik [Crelle's Journal] 391 (1988), 8599. MR 0961165
  5. Stephen Donkin, On Schur algebras and related algebras, I. Journal of Algebra 104 (1986), 310328. doi:10.1016/0021-8693(86)90218-8 MR 0866778
  6. Richard Dipper and Gordon James, The q-Schur algebra. Proceedings of the London Math. Society (3) 59 (1989), 2350. doi:10.1112/plms/s3-59.1.23 MR 0997250
  7. Stephen Doty, Presenting generalized q-Schur algebras. Representation Theory 7 (2003), 196--213 (electronic). doi:10.1090/S1088-4165-03-00176-6
  8. R. M. Green, The affine q-Schur algebra. Journal of Algebra 215 (1999), 379--411. doi:10.1006/jabr.1998.7753
  9. Richard Dipper, Gordon James, and Andrew Mathas, Cyclotomic q-Schur algebras. Math. Zeitschrift 229 (1998), 385--416. doi:10.1007/PL00004665 MR 1658581

Further reading

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