Generalized flag variety: Difference between revisions
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==Flag varieties for algebraic groups == |
==Flag varieties for algebraic groups == |
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If ''G'' is a [[semisimple group|semisimple algebraic group]] then its complete flag variety is the homogeneous space ''G''/''B'' and partial flag varieties have the form ''G''/''P'', where ''B'' is a [[Borel subgroup]] and ''P'' is a [[parabolic subgroup]] of ''G''. The case of the flag manifold corresponds to taking ''G'' to be [[general linear group|general (or special) linear group]]. For a [[classical Lie group|classical group]] ''G'' acting on a [[ |
If ''G'' is a [[semisimple group|semisimple algebraic group]] then its complete flag variety is the homogeneous space ''G''/''B'' and partial flag varieties have the form ''G''/''P'', where ''B'' is a [[Borel subgroup]] and ''P'' is a [[parabolic subgroup]] of ''G''. The case of the flag manifold corresponds to taking ''G'' to be [[general linear group|general (or special) linear group]]. For a [[classical Lie group|classical group]] ''G'' acting on a [[fundamental representation]] by isometries, its partial flag varieties can be described in terms of flags in the space satisfying additional conditions (e.g. [[isotropic]] or self-dual). |
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[[Armand Borel]] found an elegant characterization of flag varieties for a general semisimple ''G'': they are ''complete homogeneous spaces'' of ''G'', or [[projective variety|projective ''G''-varieties]], which in this situation amounts to the same thing. |
[[Armand Borel]] found an elegant characterization of flag varieties for a general semisimple ''G'': they are ''complete homogeneous spaces'' of ''G'', or [[projective variety|projective ''G''-varieties]], which in this situation amounts to the same thing. |
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Revision as of 22:01, 24 September 2008
In mathematics, a generalized flag variety (or simply flag variety) is a homogeneous space whose points are flags in a finite-dimensional vector space V over a field F. When F is the real or complex numbers, a generalized flag variety is a smooth or complex manifold, called a real or complex flag manifold. Flag varieties are naturally projective varieties.
Flag varieties can be defined in various degrees of generality. A prototype is the variety of complete flags in a vector space V over a field F, which is a flag variety for the general linear group over F. Other flag varieties arise by considering partial flags, or by restriction from the general linear group to its subgroups. For partial flags, one needs to specify the sequence of dimensions of the flags under consideration.
Prototype: the complete flag variety
According to basic results of linear algebra, any two complete flags of an n-dimensional vector space V over a field F are no different from each other from a geometric point of view. That is to say, the general linear group acts transitively on the set of all flags.
Fix an ordered basis for V. The standard flag associated with this basis is the one where the i th subspace is spanned by the first i vectors of the basis. Relative to this basis, the stabilizer of the standard flag is the group of nonsingular upper triangular matrices, which we denote by Bn. The flag variety can therefore be written as a homogeneous space GL(n) / Bn. This shows that the dimension of the flag variety is n(n−1)/2.
If the field F is the real or complex numbers we can introduce an inner product on V. The complete flag is then split into a direct sum of one dimensional subspaces by taking orthogonal complements. It follows that the complete flag variety over the complex numbers is the homogeneous space
and there is a similar description over the real numbers.
Partial flag varieties
To handle partial flag varieties we need to specify a sequence of dimensions
- 0 = d0 < d1 < d2 < ⋯ < dk < dk+1 = n,
where n is the dimension of V. A complete flag is the special case of di = i and k = n − 1. We can consider a homogeneous space
- F(d1, d2, ..., dk) = G/H
of all flags of that type. Here H must therefore be taken as the stabilizer of one such flag given by subspaces Vi of dimension di, that are nested. For instance, if G is the general linear group, the H can be taken to be the group of nonsingular block upper triangular matrices, where the dimensions of the blocks are di − di−1.
Flag varieties for algebraic groups
If G is a semisimple algebraic group then its complete flag variety is the homogeneous space G/B and partial flag varieties have the form G/P, where B is a Borel subgroup and P is a parabolic subgroup of G. The case of the flag manifold corresponds to taking G to be general (or special) linear group. For a classical group G acting on a fundamental representation by isometries, its partial flag varieties can be described in terms of flags in the space satisfying additional conditions (e.g. isotropic or self-dual). Armand Borel found an elegant characterization of flag varieties for a general semisimple G: they are complete homogeneous spaces of G, or projective G-varieties, which in this situation amounts to the same thing.
As algebraic varieties
This much works over any field K. The flag manifold is an algebraic variety over K; which turns out to be a projective variety. These varieties therefore include the Grassmannians, which are the special case where k = 1: i.e. we take just one intermediate space V1.
To look more closely at the stabilizer H, one can take a standard basis e1, ..., en, and Vi to be spanned by the first di of them. Then as a matrix group H has a definite block structure; in fact the various H correspond to the various ways of considering what 'below the diagonal' means in block matrix terms, by demanding entries that are 0 there. This can be applied, for example, to count flags over finite fields, as is done on the general linear group page.
Subgroups of the general linear group
It also gives a survey of all the parabolic subgroups of the general linear group, up to conjugacy. That is, in this case the abstract algebraic group theory of parabolic subgroups (those containing a Borel subgroup) can be read off from the flag manifolds, considered collectively. The subgroup of upper triangular matrices is in this case a Borel subgroup: it corresponds to the stabilizer of a complete flag.
Topology
It is also possible to read off topological information about the groups H. From the point of view of homotopy theory, the unipotent part of the Jordan normal forms is a contractible factor in a direct product decomposition, and so makes no contribution. In this way one can to read off topological principles for vector bundles. Reduction of the structure group of such a bundle to one of the groups H implies the existence of sub-bundles. The obstructions will lie in the diagonal block parts, not in the above-diagonal part. For example the reduction to upper-triangular form implies reduction to diagonal form, and so sum of line bundles. This gives rise therefore to generalizations of the splitting principle.
References
- Robert J. Baston and Michael G. Eastwood, The Penrose Transform: its Interaction with Representation Theory, Oxford University Press, 1989.
- Jürgen Berndt, Sergio Console and Carlos Olmos, Submanifolds and Holonomy, CRC Press, 2003.
- James E. Humphreys, Linear Algebraic Groups, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 21, Springer-Verlag, 1972.