Affine symmetric group explained
The affine symmetric groups are a family of mathematical structures that describe the symmetries of the number line and the regular triangular tiling of the plane, as well as related higher-dimensional objects. In addition to this geometric description, the affine symmetric groups may be defined in other ways: as collections of permutations (rearrangements) of the integers that are periodic in a certain sense, or in purely algebraic terms as a group with certain generators and relations. They are studied in combinatorics and representation theory.
A finite symmetric group consists of all permutations of a finite set. Each affine symmetric group is an infinite extension of a finite symmetric group. Many important combinatorial properties of the finite symmetric groups can be extended to the corresponding affine symmetric groups. Permutation statistics such as descents and inversions can be defined in the affine case. As in the finite case, the natural combinatorial definitions for these statistics also have a geometric interpretation.
The affine symmetric groups have close relationships with other mathematical objects, including juggling patterns and certain complex reflection groups. Many of their combinatorial and geometric properties extend to the broader family of affine Coxeter groups.
Definitions
The affine symmetric group may be equivalently defined as an abstract group by generators and relations, or in terms of concrete geometric and combinatorial models.
Algebraic definition
One way of defining groups is by generators and relations. In this type of definition, generators are a subset of group elements that, when combined, produce all other elements. The relations of the definition are a system of equations that determine when two combinations of generators are equal. In this way, the affine symmetric group
is generated by a set
of elements that satisfy the following relations: when
,
(the generators are
involutions),
if is not one of
, indicating that for these pairs of generators, the group operation is
commutative, and
.In the relations above, indices are taken
modulo , so that the third relation includes as a particular case
. (The second and third relation are sometimes called the
braid relations.) When
, the affine symmetric group
is the
infinite dihedral group generated by two elements
subject only to the relations
.
These relations can be rewritten in the special form that defines the Coxeter groups, so the affine symmetric groups are Coxeter groups, with the
as their Coxeter generating sets. Each Coxeter group may be represented by a
Coxeter–Dynkin diagram, in which vertices correspond to generators and edges encode the relations between them. For
, the Coxeter–Dynkin diagram of
is the
-cycle (where the edges correspond to the relations between pairs of consecutive generators and the absence of an edge between other pairs of generators indicates that they commute), while for
it consists of two nodes joined by an edge labeled
.
Geometric definition
with coordinates
, the set of points for which
forms a
(hyper)plane, an -dimensional subspace. For every pair of distinct elements and of
and every integer, the set of points in that satisfy
forms an -dimensional subspace within, and there is a unique
reflection of that fixes this subspace. Then the affine symmetric group
can be realized geometrically as a collection of maps from to itself, the compositions of these reflections.
Inside, the subset of points with integer coordinates forms the root lattice, . It is the set of all the integer vectors
such that
. Each reflection preserves this lattice, and so the lattice is preserved by the whole group.
The fixed subspaces of these reflections divide into congruent simplices, called alcoves. The situation when
is shown in the figure; in this case, the root lattice is a triangular lattice, the reflecting lines divide into equilateral triangle alcoves, and the roots are the centers of nonoverlapping hexagons made up of six triangular alcoves.To translate between the geometric and algebraic definitions, one fixes an alcove and consider the hyperplanes that form its boundary. The reflections through these boundary hyperplanes may be identified with the Coxeter generators. In particular, there is a unique alcove (the
fundamental alcove) consisting of points
such that
x1\geqx2\geq … \geqxn\geqx1-1
, which is bounded by the hyperplanes
..., and
illustrated in the case
. For
, one may identify the reflection through
with the Coxeter generator
, and also identify the reflection through
with the generator
.
Combinatorial definition
The elements of the affine symmetric group may be realized as a group of periodic permutations of the integers. In particular, say that a function
is an
affine permutation if
- it is a bijection (each integer appears as the value of
for exactly one
),
for all integers (the function is
equivariant under shifting by
), and
u(1)+u(2)+ … +u(n)=1+2+ … +n=
, the
th
triangular number.For every affine permutation, and more generally every shift-equivariant bijection, the numbers
must all be distinct modulo . An affine permutation is uniquely determined by its
window notation
, because all other values of
can be found by shifting these values. Thus, affine permutations may also be identified with
tuples
of integers that contain one element from each congruence class modulo and sum to
.
To translate between the combinatorial and algebraic definitions, for
one may identify the Coxeter generator
with the affine permutation that has window notation
[1,2,\ldots,i-1,i+1,i,i+2,\ldots,n]
, and also identify the generator
with the affine permutation
[0,2,3,\ldots,n-2,n-1,n+1]
. More generally, every reflection (that is, a conjugate of one of the Coxeter generators) can be described uniquely as follows: for distinct integers, in
and arbitrary integer, it maps to, maps to, and fixes all inputs not congruent to or modulo .
Representation as matrices
Affine permutations can be represented as infinite periodic permutation matrices. If
is an affine permutation, the corresponding matrix has entry 1 at position
in the infinite grid
for each integer, and all other entries are equal to 0. Since is a bijection, the resulting matrix contains exactly one 1 in every row and column. The periodicity condition on the map ensures that the entry at position
is equal to the entry at position
for every pair of integers
. For example, a portion of the matrix for the affine permutation
is shown in the figure. In row 1, there is a 1 in column 2; in row 2, there is a 1 in column 0; and in row 3, there is a 1 in column 4. The rest of the entries in those rows and columns are all 0, and all the other entries in the matrix are fixed by the periodicity condition.
Relationship to the finite symmetric group
The affine symmetric group
contains the finite symmetric group
of permutations on
elements as both a
subgroup and a
quotient group. These connections allow a direct translation between the combinatorial and geometric definitions of the affine symmetric group.
As a subgroup
There is a canonical way to choose a subgroup of
that is isomorphic to the finite symmetric group
.In terms of the algebraic definition, this is the subgroup of
generated by
(excluding the simple reflection
). Geometrically, this corresponds to the subgroup of transformations that fix the origin, while combinatorially it corresponds to the window notations for which
\{u(1),\ldots,u(n)\}=\{1,2,\ldots,n\}
(that is, in which the window notation is the one-line notation of a finite permutation).
If
u=[u(1),u(2),\ldots,u(n)]
is the window notation of an element of this standard copy of
, its action on the hyperplane in
is given by permutation of coordinates:
(x1,x2,\ldots,xn) ⋅ u=(xu(1),xu(2),\ldots,xu(n))
. (In this article, the geometric action of permutations and affine permutations is on the right; thus, if and are two affine permutations, the action of on a point is given by first applying, then applying .)
There are also many nonstandard copies of
contained in
. A geometric construction is to pick any point in (that is, an integer vector whose coordinates sum to 0); the subgroup
of
of
isometries that fix is isomorphic to
.
As a quotient
There is a simple map (technically, a surjective group homomorphism) from
onto the finite symmetric group
. In terms of the combinatorial definition, an affine permutation can be mapped to a permutation by reducing the window entries modulo to elements of
, leaving the one-line notation of a permutation. In this article, the image
of an affine permutation is called the
underlying permutation of .
The map sends the Coxeter generator
s0=[0,2,3,4,\ldots,n-2,n-1,n+1]
to the permutation whose one-line notation and cycle notation are
[n,2,3,4,\ldots,n-2,n-1,1]
and
, respectively.
The kernel of is by definition the set of affine permutations whose underlying permutation is the identity. The window notations of such affine permutations are of the form
[1-a1 ⋅ n,2-a2 ⋅ n,\ldots,n-an ⋅ n]
, where
is an integer vector such that
, that is, where
. Geometrically, this kernel consists of the
translations, the isometries that shift the entire space without rotating or reflecting it. In an
abuse of notation, the symbol is used in this article for all three of these sets (integer vectors in, affine permutations with underlying permutation the identity, and translations); in all three settings, the natural group operation turns into an
abelian group, generated
freely by the vectors
\{(1,-1,0,\ldots,0),(0,1,-1,\ldots,0),\ldots,(0,\ldots,0,1,-1)\}
.
Connection between the geometric and combinatorial definitions
The affine symmetric group
has as a
normal subgroup, and is isomorphic to the
semidirect productof this subgroup with the finite symmetric group
, where the action of
on is by permutation of coordinates. Consequently, every element of
has a unique realization as a product
where
is a permutation in the standard copy of
in
and
is a translation in .
This point of view allows for a direct translation between the combinatorial and geometric definitions of
: if one writes
[u(1),\ldots,u(n)]=[r1-a1 ⋅ n,\ldots,rn-an ⋅ n]
where
and
then the affine permutation corresponds to the rigid motion of defined by
Furthermore, as with every affine Coxeter group, the affine symmetric group acts transitively and freely on the set of alcoves: for each two alcoves, a unique group element takes one alcove to the other. Hence, making an arbitrary choice of alcove
places the group in one-to-one correspondence with the alcoves: the identity element corresponds to
, and every other group element corresponds to the alcove
that is the image of
under the action of .
Example:
Algebraically,
is the infinite dihedral group, generated by two generators
subject to the relations
. Every other element of the group can be written as an alternating product of copies of
and
.
Combinatorially, the affine permutation
has window notation
, corresponding to the bijection
2k\mapsto2k-1,2k-1\mapsto2k
for every integer . The affine permutation
has window notation
, corresponding to the bijection
2k\mapsto2k+1,2k+1\mapsto2k
for every integer . Other elements have the following window notations:
\begin{align}
\overbrace{s0s1 … s0
&=[1+2k,2-2k],\\[5pt]
\overbrace{s1s0 … s1
&=[1-2k,2+2k],\\[5pt]
\overbrace{s0s1 …
&=[2+2k,1-2k],\\[5pt]
\overbrace{s1s0 …
&=[2-2(k+1),1+2(k+1)].
\end{align}
Geometrically, the space on which
acts is a line, with infinitely many equally spaced reflections. It is natural to identify the line with the real line
,
with reflection around the point, and
with reflection around the point . In this case, the reflection
reflects across the point for any integer, the composition
translates the line by, and the composition
translates the line by .
Permutation statistics and permutation patterns
Many permutation statistics and other features of the combinatorics of finite permutations can be extended to the affine case.
Descents, length, and inversions
The length
of an element of a Coxeter group is the smallest number such that can be written as a product
of Coxeter generators of .Geometrically, the length of an element in
is the number of reflecting hyperplanes that separate
and
, where
is the fundamental alcove (the simplex bounded by the reflecting hyperplanes of the Coxeter generators
).Combinatorially, the length of an affine permutation is encoded in terms of an appropriate notion of
inversions: for an affine permutation, the length is
Alternatively, it is the number of equivalence classes of pairs
such that
and
under the equivalence relation
if
for some integer .The
generating function for length in
is
Similarly, there is an affine analogue of descents in permutations: an affine permutation has a descent in position if
. (By periodicity, has a descent in position if and only if it has a descent in position
for all integers .)Algebraically, the descents corresponds to the
right descents in the sense of Coxeter groups; that is, is a descent of if and only if
. The left descents (that is, those indices such that
) are the descents of the inverse affine permutation
; equivalently, they are the values such that occurs before in the sequence
\ldots,u(-2),u(-1),u(0),u(1),u(2),\ldots
.Geometrically, is a descent of if and only if the fixed hyperplane of
separates the alcoves
and
Because there are only finitely many possibilities for the number of descents of an affine permutation, but infinitely many affine permutations, it is not possible to naively form a generating function for affine permutations by number of descents (an affine analogue of Eulerian polynomials). One possible resolution is to consider affine descents (equivalently, cyclic descents) in the finite symmetric group
. Another is to consider simultaneously the length and number of descents of an affine permutation. The multivariate generating function for these statistics over
simultaneously for all is
where is the number of descents of the affine permutation and
\exp(x;q)=\sumn
| xn(1-q)n |
(1-q)(1-q2) … (1-qn) |
is the
-exponential function.
Cycle type and reflection length
Any bijection
partitions the integers into a (possibly infinite) list of (possibly infinite) cycles: for each integer, the cycle containing is the sequence
(\ldots,u-2(i),u-1(i),i,u(i),u2(i),\ldots)
where exponentiation represents functional composition. For an affine permutation, the following conditions are equivalent: all cycles of are finite, has finite
order, and the geometric action of on the space has at least one fixed point.
The reflection length
of an element of
is the smallest number such that there exist reflections
such that
. (In the symmetric group, reflections are transpositions, and the reflection length of a permutation is
, where
is the number of cycles of .) In, the following formula was proved for the reflection length of an affine permutation : for each cycle of, define the
weight to be the integer
k such that consecutive entries congruent modulo differ by exactly . Form a tuple of cycle weights of (counting translates of the same cycle by multiples of only once), and define the
nullity
to be the size of the smallest
set partition of this tuple so that each part sums to 0. Then the reflection length of is
where
is the underlying permutation of .
For every affine permutation, there is a choice of subgroup of
such that
,
, and for the standard form
implied by this semidirect product, the reflection lengths are additive, that is,
\ellR(u)=\ellR(w)+\ellR(t)
.
Fully commutative elements and pattern avoidance
A reduced word for an element of a Coxeter group is a tuple
of Coxeter generators of minimum possible length such that
. The element is called
fully commutative if any reduced word can be transformed into any other by sequentially swapping pairs of factors that commute. For example, in the finite symmetric group
, the element
is fully commutative, since its two reduced words
and
can be connected by swapping commuting factors, but
is not fully commutative because there is no way to reach the reduced word
starting from the reduced word
by commutations.
proved that in the finite symmetric group
, a permutation is fully commutative if and only if it avoids the
permutation pattern 321, that is, if and only if its one-line notation contains no three-term decreasing subsequence. In, this result was extended to affine permutations: an affine permutation is fully commutative if and only if there do not exist integers
such that
.
The number of affine permutations avoiding a single pattern is finite if and only if avoids the pattern 321, so in particular there are infinitely many fully commutative affine permutations. These were enumerated by length in .
Parabolic subgroups and other structures
The parabolic subgroups of
and their
coset representatives offer a rich combinatorial structure. Other aspects of affine symmetric groups, such as their
Bruhat order and
representation theory, may also be understood via combinatorial models.
Parabolic subgroups, coset representatives
A standard parabolic subgroup of a Coxeter group is a subgroup generated by a subset of its Coxeter generating set. The maximal parabolic subgroups are those that come from omitting a single Coxeter generator. In
, all maximal parabolic subgroups are isomorphic to the finite symmetric group
. The subgroup generated by the subset
\{s0,\ldots,sn\}\smallsetminus\{si\}
consists of those affine permutations that stabilize the interval
, that is, that map every element of this interval to another element of the interval.
For a fixed element of
, let
J=\{s0,\ldots,sn\}\smallsetminus\{si\}
be the maximal proper subset of Coxeter generators omitting
, and let
denote the parabolic subgroup generated by . Every
coset
has a unique element of minimum length. The collection of such representatives, denoted
, consists of the following affine permutations:
In the particular case that
, so that
is the standard copy of
inside
, the elements of
may naturally be represented by
abacus diagrams: the integers are arranged in an infinite strip of width, increasing sequentially along rows and then from top to bottom; integers are circled if they lie directly above one of the window entries of the minimal coset representative. For example, the minimal coset representative
is represented by the abacus diagram at right. To compute the length of the representative from the abacus diagram, one adds up the number of uncircled numbers that are smaller than the last circled entry in each column. (In the example shown, this gives
.)
Other combinatorial models of minimum-length coset representatives for
can be given in terms of core partitions (
integer partitions in which no hook length is divisible by) or bounded partitions (integer partitions in which no part is larger than). Under these correspondences, it can be shown that the
weak Bruhat order on
is isomorphic to a certain subposet of
Young's lattice.
Bruhat order
The Bruhat order on
has the following combinatorial realization. If is an affine permutation and and are integers, define
to be the number of integers such that
and
. (For example, with
u=[2,0,4]\in\widetilde{S}3
, one has
: the three relevant values are
, which are respectively mapped by to 1, 2, and 4.) Then for two affine permutations,, one has that
in Bruhat order if and only if
for all integers, .
Representation theory and an affine Robinson–Schensted correspondence
In the finite symmetric group, the Robinson–Schensted correspondence gives a bijection between the group and pairs
of
standard Young tableaux of the same shape. This bijection plays a central role in the combinatorics and the
representation theory of the symmetric group. For example, in the language of
Kazhdan–Lusztig theory, two permutations lie in the same left cell if and only if their images under Robinson–Schensted have the same tableau, and in the same right cell if and only if their images have the same tableau . In, Jian-Yi Shi showed that left cells for
are indexed instead by
tabloids, and in he gave an algorithm to compute the tabloid analogous to the tableau for an affine permutation. In, the authors extended Shi's work to give a bijective map between
and triples
consisting of two tabloids of the same shape and an integer vector whose entries satisfy certain inequalities. Their procedure uses the matrix representation of affine permutations and generalizes the
shadow construction, introduced in .
Inverse realizations
In some situations, one may wish to consider the action of the affine symmetric group on
or on alcoves that is inverse to the one given above. These alternate realizations are described below.
In the combinatorial action of
on
, the generator
acts by switching the
values and . In the inverse action, it instead switches the entries in
positions and . Similarly, the action of a general reflection will be to switch the entries at
positions and for each, fixing all inputs at positions not congruent to or modulo .
In the geometric action of
, the generator
acts on an alcove by reflecting it across one of the bounding planes of the fundamental alcove . In the inverse action, it instead reflects across one of
its own bounding planes. From this perspective, a reduced word corresponds to an
alcove walk on the tessellated space .
[1] Relationship to other mathematical objects
The affine symmetric groups are closely related to a variety of other mathematical objects.
Juggling patterns
In, a correspondence is given between affine permutations and juggling patterns encoded in a version of siteswap notation. Here, a juggling pattern of period is a sequence
of nonnegative integers (with certain restrictions) that captures the behavior of balls thrown by a juggler, where the number
indicates the length of time the th throw spends in the air (equivalently, the height of the throw). The number of balls in the pattern is the average
. The Ehrenborg - Readdy correspondence associates to each juggling pattern
of period the function
defined by
where indices of the sequence
a are taken modulo . Then
is an affine permutation in
, and moreover every affine permutation arises from a juggling pattern in this way. Under this bijection, the length of the affine permutation is encoded by a natural statistic in the juggling pattern:
where
\operatorname{cross}({\bfa})
is the number of crossings (up to periodicity) in the arc diagram of
a. This allows an elementary proof of the generating function for affine permutations by length.
For example, the juggling pattern 441 has
and
. Therefore, it corresponds to the affine permutation
w441=[1+4-3,2+4-3,3+1-3]=[2,3,1]
. The juggling pattern has four crossings, and the affine permutation has length
.
Similar techniques can be used to derive the generating function for minimal coset representatives of
by length.
Complex reflection groups
In a finite-dimensional real inner product space, a reflection is a linear transformation that fixes a linear hyperplane pointwise and negates the vector orthogonal to the plane. This notion may be extended to vector spaces over other fields. In particular, in a complex inner product space, a reflection is a unitary transformation of finite order that fixes a hyperplane. This implies that the vectors orthogonal to the hyperplane are eigenvectors of, and the associated eigenvalue is a complex root of unity. A complex reflection group is a finite group of linear transformations on a complex vector space generated by reflections.
The complex reflection groups were fully classified by : each complex reflection group is isomorphic to a product of irreducible complex reflection groups, and every irreducible either belongs to an infinite family
(where,, and are positive integers such that divides) or is one of 34 other (so-called "exceptional") examples. The group
is the
generalized symmetric group: algebraically, it is the
wreath product
of the
cyclic group
with the symmetric group
. Concretely, the elements of the group may be represented by
monomial matrices (matrices having one nonzero entry in every row and column) whose nonzero entries are all th roots of unity. The groups
are subgroups of
, and in particular the group
consists of those matrices in which the product of the nonzero entries is equal to 1.
In, Shi showed that the affine symmetric group is a generic cover of the family
\left\{G(m,m,n)\colonm\geq1\right\}
, in the following sense: for every positive integer, there is a surjection
from
to
, and these maps are compatible with the natural surjections
G(m,m,n)\twoheadrightarrowG(p,p,n)
when
that come from raising each entry to the th power. Moreover, these projections respect the reflection group structure, in that the image of every reflection in
under
is a reflection in
; and similarly when
the image of the standard
Coxeter element
in
is a Coxeter element in
.
Affine Lie algebras
Each affine Coxeter group is associated to an affine Lie algebra, a certain infinite-dimensional non-associative algebra with unusually nice representation-theoretic properties. In this association, the Coxeter group arises as a group of symmetries of the root space of the Lie algebra (the dual of the Cartan subalgebra). In the classification of affine Lie algebras, the one associated to
is of (untwisted) type
, with Cartan matrix
\left[\begin{array}{rr}2&-2\ -2&2\end{array}\right]
for
and
(a
circulant matrix) for
.
Like other Kac–Moody algebras, affine Lie algebras satisfy the Weyl–Kac character formula, which expresses the characters of the algebra in terms of their highest weights. In the case of affine Lie algebras, the resulting identities are equivalent to the Macdonald identities. In particular, for the affine Lie algebra of type
, associated to the affine symmetric group
, the corresponding Macdonald identity is equivalent to the
Jacobi triple product.
Braid group and group-theoretic properties
Coxeter groups have a number of special properties not shared by all groups. These include that their word problem is decidable (that is, there exists an algorithm that can determine whether or not any given product of the generators is equal to the identity element) and that they are linear groups (that is, they can be represented by a group of invertible matrices over a field).
, which is defined by a similar presentation that omits relations of the form
for each generator . In particular, the Artin - Tits group associated to
is generated by elements
\sigma0,\sigma1,\ldots,\sigman
subject to the relations
\sigmai\sigmai\sigmai=\sigmai\sigmai\sigmai
for
(and no others), where as before the indices are taken modulo (so
). Artin - Tits groups of Coxeter groups are conjectured to have many nice properties: for example, they are conjectured to be torsion-free, to have trivial
center, to have solvable word problem, and to satisfy the
conjecture. These conjectures are not known to hold for all Artin - Tits groups, but in it was shown that
has these properties. (Subsequently, they have been proved for the Artin - Tits groups associated to affine Coxeter groups.) In the case of the affine symmetric group, these proofs make use of an associated
Garside structure on the Artin - Tits group.
Artin - Tits groups are sometimes also known as generalized braid groups, because the Artin - Tits group
of the (finite) symmetric group is the
braid group on strands. Not all Artin - Tits groups have a natural representation in terms of geometric braids. However, the Artin - Tits group of the
hyperoctahedral group
(geometrically, the symmetry group of the
n-dimensional
hypercube; combinatorially, the group of signed permutations of size
n) does have such a representation: it is given by the subgroup of the braid group on
strands consisting of those braids for which a particular strand ends in the same position it started in, or equivalently as the braid group of strands in an
annular region. Moreover, the Artin - Tits group of the hyperoctahedral group
can be written as a semidirect product of
with an infinite cyclic group. It follows that
may be interpreted as a certain subgroup consisting of geometric braids, and also that it is a
linear group.
Extended affine symmetric group
. Its elements are
extended affine permutations: bijections
such that
for all integers . Unlike the affine symmetric group, the extended affine symmetric group is not a Coxeter group. But it has a natural generating set that extends the Coxeter generating set for
: the
shift operator
whose window notation is
generates the extended group with the simple reflections, subject to the additional relations
.
Combinatorics of other affine Coxeter groups
The geometric action of the affine symmetric group
places it naturally in the family of affine Coxeter groups, each of which has a similar geometric action on an affine space. The combinatorial description of the
may also be extended to many of these groups: in, an axiomatic description is given of certain permutation groups acting on
(the "George groups", in honor of
George Lusztig), and it is shown that they are exactly the "classical" Coxeter groups of finite and affine types A, B, C, and D. (In the classification of affine Coxeter groups, the affine symmetric group is type A.) Thus, the combinatorial interpretations of descents, inversions, etc., carry over in these cases. Abacus models of minimum-length coset representatives for parabolic quotients have also been extended to this context.
History
The study of Coxeter groups in general could be said to first arise in the classification of regular polyhedra (the Platonic solids) in ancient Greece. The modern systematic study (connecting the algebraic and geometric definitions of finite and affine Coxeter groups) began in work of Coxeter in the 1930s. The combinatorial description of the affine symmetric group first appears in work of, and was expanded upon by ; both authors used the combinatorial description to study the Kazhdan–Lusztig cells of
. The proof that the combinatorial definition agrees with the algebraic definition was given by .
References
Notes
Notes and References
- As in, for example,, .