Presenting the Affine Hecke algebra: Iwahori and Bernstein Presentations and the Path model
Arun Ram
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
University of Melbourne
Parkville, VIC 3010 Australia
aram@unimelb.edu.au
Last update: 05 April 2012
Initial data
The inital data is
- a finite reflection group,
This means
- is a free module (has basis )
- is a finite subgroup of generated by reflections.
A
reflection is a matrix conjugate (in
) to
HW: Show that if is a reflection in a finite subgroup
of then
is a root of unity?
Our favourite example:
Type
contains 3 reflection, and
the reflections in
respectively.
The affine Weyl group (semidirect product presentation)
with
for and Then acts on
by
In our example:
Coxeter generators
are fundamental regions for acting on such that
-
-
are the walls of
-
are the walls of
- the corresponding reflections.
-
is presented by generators and such that is a subgroup,
The Dynkin, or Coxeter diagram of is the graph with
- vertices
- and edges
(the graph of the "1-skeleton of
").
The affine Hecke algebra (Bernstein presentation)
is generated by
and
with
where
determines
The affine Hecke algebra (Coxeterish presentation)
is presented by generators and with
for
Bases of
Let A reduced word for
is a minimal length sequence
The periodic orientation is:
- If then is on the positive side of
- Parallel hyperplanes have parallel orientation.
For a reduced work
define
where
Then
are bases of
Note:
The path model (the algebra of paths)
Four kinds of steps
An alcove walk is a sequence of steps such that
- the tail of the first step is in
- at every step, the head of each arrow is in the same alcove as the tail of the next.
Use the relations
to straighten any sequence of steps to a linear combination of alcove walks.
- Fix and
- Fix a minimal length walk
from to
- and a minimal length walk
from to
Then
where the sum is over all alcove walks
and
is the ending alcove of
Notes and References
These notes are from lecture notes of Arun Ram (CBMS Lecture 1).
References
References?
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