combinatorial representation theory
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10.37236/8241 ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Megan Ly

Schur–Weyl duality is a fundamental framework in combinatorial representation theory. It intimately relates the irreducible representations of a group to the irreducible representations of its centralizer algebra. We investigate the analog of Schur–Weyl duality for the group of unipotent upper triangular matrices over a finite field.  In this case, the character theory of these upper triangular matrices is "wild" or unattainable. Thus we employ a generalization, known as supercharacter theory, that creates a striking variation on the character theory of the symmetric group with combinatorics built from set partitions. In this paper, we present a combinatorial formula for calculating a restriction and induction of supercharacters based on statistics of set partitions and seashell inspired diagrams. We use these formulas to create a graph that encodes the decomposition of a tensor space, and develop an analog of Young tableaux, known as shell tableaux, to index paths in this graph. 


2010 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 419-445 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen Griffeth

AbstractThis paper aims to lay the foundations for a combinatorial study, via orthogonal functions and intertwining operators, of category $\mathcal{O}$ for the rational Cherednik algebra of type G(r, p, n). As a first application, a self-contained and elementary proof of the analogue for the groups G(r, p, n), with r > 1, of Gordon's Theorem (previously Haiman's Conjecture) on the diagonal co-invariant ring is given. No restriction is imposed on p; the result for p ≠ r has been proved by Vale using a technique analogous to Gordon's. Because of the combinatorial application to Haiman's Conjecture, the paper is logically self-contained except for standard facts about complex reflection groups. The main results should be accessible to mathematicians working in algebraic combinatorics who are unfamiliar with the impressive range of ideas used in Gordon's proof of his theorem.


2010 ◽  
pp. 799-882
Author(s):  
Christine Bessenrodt ◽  
Francesco Brenti ◽  
Alexander Kleshchev ◽  
Arun Ram

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