Hall algebra

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Script error: No such module "For". In mathematics, the Hall algebra is an associative algebra with a basis corresponding to isomorphism classes of finite abelian p-groups. It was first discussed by Script error: No such module "Footnotes". but forgotten until it was rediscovered by Philip Hall (1959), both of whom published no more than brief summaries of their work. The Hall polynomials are the structure constants of the Hall algebra. The Hall algebra plays an important role in the theory of Masaki Kashiwara and George Lusztig regarding canonical bases in quantum groups. Script error: No such module "Footnotes". generalized Hall algebras to more general categories, such as the category of representations of a quiver.

Construction

A finite abelian p-group M is a direct sum of cyclic p-power components Cpλi, where λ=(λ1,λ2,) is a partition of n called the type of M. Let gμ,νλ(p) be the number of subgroups N of M such that N has type ν and the quotient M/N has type μ. Hall proved that the functions g are polynomial functions of p with integer coefficients. Thus we may replace p with an indeterminate q, which results in the Hall polynomials

gμ,νλ(q)[q].

Hall next constructs an associative ring H over [q], now called the Hall algebra. This ring has a basis consisting of the symbols uλ and the structure constants of the multiplication in this basis are given by the Hall polynomials:

uμuν=λgμ,νλ(q)uλ.

It turns out that H is a commutative ring, freely generated by the elements u𝟏n corresponding to the elementary p-groups. The linear map from H to the algebra of symmetric functions defined on the generators by the formula

u𝟏nqn(n1)/2en

(where en is the nth elementary symmetric function) uniquely extends to a ring homomorphism and the images of the basis elements uλ may be interpreted via the Hall–Littlewood symmetric functions. Specializing q to 1, these symmetric functions become Schur functions, which are thus closely connected with the theory of Hall polynomials.

References

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  • George Lusztig, Quivers, perverse sheaves, and quantized enveloping algebras, Journal of the American Mathematical Society 4 (1991), no. 2, 365–421.
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