The title of this talk comes from the novel "The Glass Bead Game" by Hermann Hesse. The setting of the
story is a serene location in the mountains called Castalia.
There are three mountains (the preprojective variety, the quiver variety and the loop Grassmannian). These three mountains feed the spring at their base (the quantum group). At the spring live three nymphs, very similar, but different (the semicanonical basis, the canonical basis and the MV basis). Each of these is nourished by the special nutrients of the corresponding source (the preprojective variety, the quiver variety and the loop Grassmannian). But the shadow of the muses is the same (the MV polytope). And, as we shall see, there is a Glass Bead Game in this story as well.
Thank you
This is a lecture given at the
IBS Symposium and Meeting in Seoul Korea on 7 August 2013.
Thank you to IBS, for the
invitation and to the team who has organised so many details in making
the arrangements perfect.
from a google image search claiming this is on the page http://video.ias.edu/0405, though I didn't find it there myself
Thank you to the IAS for permission to use the image of the seal in this presentation.
Other images are mostly from Wikimedia Commons distributable by the GNU license
from the following sources. Thanks to many contributors for these excellent resources.
. . . and thank you to my collaborators Alex Ghitza (Melbourne)
and Senthamarai Kannan (Chennai) for all their contribution to the ideas being pursued in this talk.
The three mountains: The preprojective variety, the quiver variety and the loop Grassmannian
Preprojective variety
Quiver variety or KLR modules
Loop Grassmannian
Irreducible components
Irreducible modules
MV-cycles
The character map
The Quantum group
The semicanonical basis
The MV basis
The canonical basis
The shadow map
MV polytopes: The crystal
The crystal shadow is exactly the same for all three mountains:
The preprojective variety, the quiver variety and the loop Grassmannian.
The loop Grassmannian G/K
is a complex reductive algebraic group, say
is the loop Grassmannian, or affine Grassmannian.
The loop Grassmannian is studied with the decompositions
where
The Mirkovic-Vilonen intersections are
The MV cycles are the irreducible components
Dynkin diagrams
Let
be the Langlands dual complex reductive algebraic group.
In our example,
The Weyl group and the character lattice are
In our example,
Parallel lines of lattice points
produce
with fundamental alcove (contained in
and adjacent to the origin)
The fundamental alcove has walls
and
,
and the extended Dynkin diagram, or affine Dynkin diagram, is the dual graph of the fundamental alcove.
This means: Make a graph with vertices and
In our example,
the case:
KLR Quiver Hecke algebras
The KLR quiver Hecke algebra is given by generators
with relations
where
. . . and
has -grading
Let
Define
(generating function in noncommutative
(Khovanov-Lauda, Rouquier)
The Glass Bead game
A skew shape is a configuration of beads such that any two beads on the same runner are separated by two beads.
A standard tableau of shape is a runner sequence
which results in .
For example,
Define
(Kleshchev-Ram)
The
are simple -modules.
Preprojective algebras
Idea: Replace beads by vector spaces.
The data of
a vector space for each vertex
a linear transformation for each edge
is a representation of the quiver.
Then
where is equivalence of representations (change of basis
in the vector spaces).
In the case of also require
Then are the irreducible
components of .
Philosophy
Preprojective variety
Quiver variety
Loop Grassmannian
Irreducible components
Irreducible modules
MV-cycles
Functions/Sheaves/Orbit convolution on
Functions/Sheaves/Orbit convolution on
Functions/Sheaves/Orbit convolution on
Cotangent bundle
with character ring
with character ring
with character ring
The idea of the relationship between these is
Thank you.
Arun Ram
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
University of Melbourne
Parkville, VIC 3010 Australia
aram@unimelb.edu.au