Kostant partition function explained
is the number of ways one can represent a vector (
weight) as a non-negative integer linear combination of the positive roots
. Kostant used it to rewrite the
Weyl character formula as a formula (the
Kostant multiplicity formula) for the
multiplicity of a weight of an
irreducible representation of a
semisimple Lie algebra. An alternative formula, that is more computationally efficient in some cases, is Freudenthal's formula.
The Kostant partition function can also be defined for Kac–Moody algebras and has similar properties.
Examples
A2
Consider the A2 root system, with positive roots
,
, and
. If an element
can be expressed as a non-negative integer linear combination of
,
, and
, then since
, it can also be expressed as a non-negative integer linear combination of the positive simple roots
and
:
with
and
being non-negative integers. This expression gives
one way to write
as a non-negative integer combination of positive roots; other expressions can be obtained by replacing
with
some number of times. We can do the replacement
times, where
. Thus, if the Kostant partition function is denoted by
, we obtain the formula
p(n1\alpha1+n2\alpha2)=1+min(n1,n2)
.This result is shown graphically in the image at right. If an element
is not of the form
, then
.
B2
The partition function for the other rank 2 root systems are more complicated but are known explicitly.[1] [2]
For B2, the positive simple roots are
\alpha1=(1,0),\alpha2=(0,1)
, and the positive roots are the simple roots together with
and
. The partition function can be viewed as a function of two non-negative integers
and
, which represent the element
. Then the partition function
can be defined piecewise with the help of two auxiliary functions.
If
, then
. If
, then
P(n1,n2)=q2(n2)-b(2n2-n1-1)=b(n1)-q2(n1-n2-1)
. If
, then
. The auxiliary functions are defined for
and are given by
and
for
even,
for
odd.
G2
For G2, the positive roots are
(1,0),(0,1),(1,1),(2,1),(3,1)
and
, with
denoting the short simple root and
denoting the long simple root.
The partition function is defined piecewise with the domain divided into five regions, with the help of two auxiliary functions.
Relation to the Weyl character formula
Inverting the Weyl denominator
For each root
and each
, we can
formally apply the formula for the sum of a geometric series to obtain
=1+e-\alpha(H)+e-2\alpha(H)+ …
where we do not worry about convergence—that is, the equality is understood at the level of formal
power series. Using Weyl's denominator formula
{\sumw\in(-1)\ell(w)ew ⋅ \rho(H)=e\rho(H)\prod\alpha>0(1-e-\alpha(H))},
we obtain a formal expression for the reciprocal of the Weyl denominator:
[3] \begin{align}
| 1 |
\sumw\in(-1)\ell(w)ew ⋅ \rho(H) |
&{}=e-\rho(H)\prod\alpha>0(1+e-\alpha(H)+e-2\alpha(H)+e-3\alpha(H)+ … )\\
&{}=e-\rho(H)\sum\mup(\mu)e-\mu(H)\end{align}
Here, the first equality is by taking a product over the positive roots of the geometric series formula and the second equality is by counting all the ways a given exponential
can occur in the product. The function
is zero if the argument is a rotation and one if the argument is a reflection.
Rewriting the character formula
This argument shows that we can convert the Weyl character formula for the irreducible representation with highest weight
:
\operatorname{ch}(V)={\sumw\in(-1)\ell(w)ew ⋅ (λ+\rho)(H)\over\sumw\in(-1)\ell(w)ew ⋅ \rho(H)
}
from a quotient to a product:
\operatorname{ch}(V)=\left(\sumw\in(-1)\ell(w)ew ⋅ (λ+\rho)(H)\right)\left(e-\rho(H)\sum\mup(\mu)e-\mu(H)\right).
The multiplicity formula
Using the preceding rewriting of the character formula, it is relatively easy to write the character as a sum of exponentials. The coefficients of these exponentials are the multiplicities of the corresponding weights. We thus obtain a formula for the multiplicity of a given weight
in the irreducible representation with highest weight
:
[4] mult(\mu)=\sumw\in(-1)\ell(w)p(w ⋅ (λ+\rho)-(\mu+\rho))
.This result is the
Kostant multiplicity formula.
The dominant term in this formula is the term
; the contribution of this term is
, which is just the multiplicity of
in the
Verma module with highest weight
. If
is sufficiently far inside the fundamental Weyl chamber and
is sufficiently close to
, it may happen that all other terms in the formula are zero. Specifically, unless
is higher than
, the value of the Kostant partition function on
will be zero. Thus, although the sum is nominally over the whole Weyl group, in most cases, the number of nonzero terms is smaller than the order of the Weyl group.
Sources
- Humphreys, J.E. Introduction to Lie algebras and representation theory, Springer, 1972.
Notes and References
- Tarski . Jan . University of California . Berkeley. . Partition Function for Certain Simple Lie Algebras . Journal of Mathematical Physics . April 1963 . 4 . 4 . 569–574 . 10.1063/1.1703992 . 4 June 2023 . United States Air Force, Office of Scientific Research. 2027/mdp.39015095253541 . free .
- Capparelli . Stefano . Calcolo della funzione di partizione di Kostant . Bollettino dell'Unione Matematica Italiana . 2003 . 6-B . 1 . 89–110 . 0392-4041.
- Proposition 10.27
- Theorem 10.29