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Cellular algebra
Term in abstract algebra From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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In abstract algebra, a cellular algebra is a finite-dimensional associative algebra A with a distinguished cellular basis which is particularly well-adapted to studying the representation theory of A.
History
The cellular algebras discussed in this article were introduced in a 1996 paper of Graham and Lehrer.[1] However, the terminology had previously been used by Weisfeiler and Lehman in the Soviet Union in the 1960s, to describe what are also known as coherent algebras. [2][3][4]
Definitions
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Let be a fixed commutative ring with unit. In most applications this is a field, but this is not needed for the definitions. Let also be an -algebra.
The concrete definition
A cell datum for is a tuple consisting of
- A finite partially ordered set .
- A -linear anti-automorphism with .
- For every a non-empty finite set of indices.
- An injective map
- The images under this map are notated with an upper index and two lower indices so that the typical element of the image is written as .
- and satisfying the following conditions:
- The image of is a -basis of .
- for all elements of the basis.
- For every , and every the equation
- with coefficients depending only on , and but not on . Here denotes the -span of all basis elements with upper index strictly smaller than .
This definition was originally given by Graham and Lehrer who invented cellular algebras.[1]
The more abstract definition
Let be an anti-automorphism of -algebras with (just called "involution" from now on).
A cell ideal of w.r.t. is a two-sided ideal such that the following conditions hold:
- .
- There is a left ideal that is free as a -module and an isomorphism
- of --bimodules such that and are compatible in the sense that
A cell chain for w.r.t. is defined as a direct decomposition
into free -submodules such that
- is a two-sided ideal of
- is a cell ideal of w.r.t. to the induced involution.
Now is called a cellular algebra if it has a cell chain. One can show that the two definitions are equivalent.[5] Every basis gives rise to cell chains (one for each topological ordering of ) and choosing a basis of every left ideal one can construct a corresponding cell basis for .
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Examples
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Polynomial examples
is cellular. A cell datum is given by and
- with the reverse of the natural ordering.
A cell-chain in the sense of the second, abstract definition is given by
Matrix examples
is cellular. A cell datum is given by and
- For the basis one chooses the standard matrix units, i.e. is the matrix with all entries equal to zero except the (s,t)-th entry which is equal to 1.
A cell-chain (and in fact the only cell chain) is given by
In some sense all cellular algebras "interpolate" between these two extremes by arranging matrix-algebra-like pieces according to the poset .
Further examples
Modulo minor technicalities all Iwahori–Hecke algebras of finite type are cellular w.r.t. to the involution that maps the standard basis as .[6] This includes for example the integral group algebra of the symmetric groups as well as all other finite Weyl groups.
A basic Brauer tree algebra over a field is cellular if and only if the Brauer tree is a straight line (with arbitrary number of exceptional vertices).[5]
Further examples include q-Schur algebras, the Brauer algebra, the Temperley–Lieb algebra, the Birman–Murakami–Wenzl algebra, the blocks of the Bernstein–Gelfand–Gelfand category of a semisimple Lie algebra.[5]
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Representations
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Cell modules and the invariant bilinear form
Assume is cellular and is a cell datum for . Then one defines the cell module as the free -module with basis and multiplication
where the coefficients are the same as above. Then becomes an -left module.
These modules generalize the Specht modules for the symmetric group and the Hecke-algebras of type A.
There is a canonical bilinear form which satisfies
for all indices .
One can check that is symmetric in the sense that
for all and also -invariant in the sense that
for all ,.
Simple modules
Assume for the rest of this section that the ring is a field. With the information contained in the invariant bilinear forms one can easily list all simple -modules:
Let and define for all . Then all are absolute simple -modules and every simple -module is one of these.
These theorems appear already in the original paper by Graham and Lehrer.[1]
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Properties of cellular algebras
Persistence properties
- Tensor products of finitely many cellular -algebras are cellular.
- A -algebra is cellular if and only if its opposite algebra is.
- If is cellular with cell-datum and is an ideal (a downward closed subset) of the poset then (where the sum runs over and ) is a two-sided, -invariant ideal of and the quotient is cellular with cell datum (where i denotes the induced involution and M, C denote the restricted mappings).
- If is a cellular -algebra and is a unitary homomorphism of commutative rings, then the extension of scalars is a cellular -algebra.
- Direct products of finitely many cellular -algebras are cellular.
If is an integral domain then there is a converse to this last point:
- If is a finite-dimensional -algebra with an involution and a decomposition in two-sided, -invariant ideals, then the following are equivalent:
- is cellular.
- and are cellular.
- Since in particular all blocks of are -invariant if is cellular, an immediate corollary is that a finite-dimensional -algebra is cellular w.r.t. if and only if all blocks are -invariant and cellular w.r.t. .
- Tits' deformation theorem for cellular algebras: Let be a cellular -algebra. Also let be a unitary homomorphism into a field and the quotient field of . Then the following holds: If is semisimple, then is also semisimple.
If one further assumes to be a local domain, then additionally the following holds:
- If is cellular w.r.t. and is an idempotent such that , then the algebra is cellular.
Other properties
Assuming that is a field (though a lot of this can be generalized to arbitrary rings, integral domains, local rings or at least discrete valuation rings) and is cellular w.r.t. to the involution . Then the following hold
- is split, i.e. all simple modules are absolutely irreducible.
- The following are equivalent:[1]
- is semisimple.
- is split semisimple.
- is simple.
- is nondegenerate.
- The Cartan matrix of is symmetric and positive definite.
- The following are equivalent:[7]
- is quasi-hereditary (i.e. its module category is a highest-weight category).
- .
- All cell chains of have the same length.
- All cell chains of have the same length where is an arbitrary involution w.r.t. which is cellular.
- .
- If is Morita equivalent to and the characteristic of is not two, then is also cellular w.r.t. a suitable involution. In particular is cellular (to some involution) if and only if its basic algebra is.[8]
- Every idempotent is equivalent to , i.e. . If then in fact every equivalence class contains an -invariant idempotent.[5]
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References
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