Littelmann path model
In mathematics, the Littelmann path model is a combinatorial device due to Peter Littelmann for computing multiplicities without overcounting in the representation theory of symmetrisable Kac–Moody algebras. Its most important application is to complex semisimple Lie algebras or equivalently compact semisimple Lie groups, the case described in this article. Multiplicities in irreducible representations, 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 and Lusztig on quantum groups and the standard monomial theory of C. S. 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 as well as a pair of root operators acting on paths for each simple root. 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 include:- For a given dominant weight λ, find the weight multiplicities in the irreducible representation L with highest weight λ.
- For two highest weights λ, μ, find the decomposition of their tensor product L ''L into irreducible representations.
- Suppose that is the Levi component of a parabolic subalgebra of a semisimple Lie algebra. For a given dominant highest weight λ, determine the branching rule for decomposing the restriction of L'' to.
- Issai Schur's result in his 1901 dissertation that the weight multiplicities could be counted in terms of column-strict Young tableaux.
- The celebrated Littlewood–Richardson rule that describes both tensor product decompositions and branching from m+''n to m'' n in terms of lattice permutations of skew tableaux.
Littelmann's contribution was to give a unified combinatorial model that applied to all symmetrizable Kac–Moody algebras 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 of a Cartan subalgebra; 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 of.
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 groups of Masaki Kashiwara and George Lusztig. Kashiwara and Lusztig constructed canonical bases for representations of deformations of the universal enveloping algebra of 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.
Definitions
Let P be the weight lattice in the dual of a Cartan subalgebra of the semisimple Lie algebra.A Littelmann path is a piecewise-linear mapping
such that π = 0 and π is a weight.
Let be the basis of consisting of "coroot" vectors, dual to basis of * formed by simple roots. For fixed α and a path π, the function has a minimum value M.
Define non-decreasing self-mappings l and r of Q by
Thus l = 0 until the last time that h = M and r = 1 after the first time that h = M.
Define new paths πl and πr by
The root operators eα and fα are defined on a basis vector by
- if r = 0 and 0 otherwise;
- if l = 1 and 0 otherwise.
Properties
Let be the algebra generated by the root operators. Let π be a path lying wholly within the positive Weyl chamber defined by the simple roots. Using results on the path model of C. S. Seshadri and Lakshmibai, Littelmann showed that- the -module generated by depends only on π = λ and has a Q-basis consisting of paths ;
- the multiplicity of the weight μ in the integrable highest weight representation L is the number of paths σ with σ = μ.
If π is a path lying wholly inside the positive Weyl chamber, the Littelmann graph is defined to be the coloured, directed graph having as vertices the non-zero paths obtained by successively applying the operators fα 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 fα.
- The Littelmann graphs of two paths are isomorphic as coloured, directed graphs if and only if the paths have the same end point.
Applications
Character formula
If π = λ, the multiplicity of the weight μ in L is the number of vertices σ in the Littelmann graph with σ = μ.Generalized Littlewood–Richardson rule
Let π and σ be paths in the positive Weyl chamber with π = λ and σ = μ. Thenwhere τ ranges over paths in such that π τ lies entirely in the positive Weyl chamber and
the concatenation π τ is defined as π for t ≤ 1/2 and π + τ for t ≥ 1/2.
Branching rule
If is the Levi component of a parabolic subalgebra of with weight lattice P1 P thenwhere the sum ranges over all paths σ in which lie wholly in the positive Weyl chamber for.