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The Schur polynomials , are polynomials in variables indexed by partitions of , which constitute a linear basis of the ring of symmetric polynomials in variables
Given the partition , the corresponding Schur polynomial is defined as follows. First define the -determinant (for any partition in parts)
Let . Then the Schur polynomial attached to is the quotient
As is usual in the theory of symmetric functions one can also deal with formal power series in infinitely many variables. To make this precise one uses an inverse limit (see Macdonald 95) and obtains a Schur function for each partition, depending on countably many variables .
A semistandard Young tableau is a Young tableau such that its values are:
weakly increasing to the right (along rows),
strictly increasing downwards (along columns).
For example:
Given a semistandard Young tableau , we write for the monomial which contains one factor of the variable for each occurrence of in the Young tableau:
We write
for the set of semistandard Young tableaux whose underlying partition (i.e. forgetting its labels) is , and, respectively, for its subset on those whose labels are bounded as .
For and a partition of , the corresponding Schur polynomial is equal to the sum over the monomials (1) associated with all semistandard Young tableaux (2) of shape :
(Sagan 01, Def. 4.4.1, review in Sagan Enc., p. 1)
This means that the Schur polynomial in variables is the sum over semistandard Young tableaux (2) of shape and with labels bounded as :
In particular, the evaluation of a Schur polynomial at unit values is the number of semistandard Young tableaux with labels :
An immediate consequence is:
The coefficient of any monomial appearing in a Schur polynomial is non-negative.
We discuss an expression of the Schur polynomials as symmetric polynomials with coefficients in the character-values of the symmetric group; this is Frobenius’ formula in Prop. below.
First to set up some notation:
For the present purpose, a partition of a natural number is a weakly decreasing sequence
of natural numbers whose sum equals :
By the representation theory of the symmetric group, such partitions label its irreducible representations in the form of Specht modules . We write
for the irreducible character corresponding to this Specht module.
We write
for the function that sends a permutation of elements to the partition
of given by the lengths of its permutation cycles (this Prop.).
Given any such partition , we consider the following symmetric polynomial in variables:
(Frobenius formula)
For and a partition of , the Schur polynomial is equal to the sum over permutations of the character values (5) at times the symmetric polynomial (7) which is indexed by the cycle lengths (6) of :
(Sagan 01, Thm. 4.6.4, review in Sagan Enc., Thm. 3)
The Schur polynomials are precisely the irreducible characters of finite dimensional polynomial representations of GL(n).
Also, the character of , the irreducible representation of attached to (for the size of the partition) maps to the Schur polynomial under the character map from virtual characters to symmetric polynomials.
This correspondence between linear representations of the symmetric groups and the general linear groups is called Schur-Weyl duality.
Schur functors may be viewed as a categorification of Schur functions. In fact, the Schur functors make sense in more general symmetric monoidal categories than VectorSpaces. It is a theorem in the case of vector space that the trace of
a Schur functor on an endomorphism is the Schur function of the eigenvalues of . Considering the trace of a Schur functor makes sense in a general situation allowing for Schur functors and for the trace (rigid monoidal category); of course choosing appropriate variables to express the trace may depend on a context.
Generalizations:
The concept first appears in work by Carl Jacobi on determinants.
It is named after:
See also
Textbook accounts:
Ian G. Macdonald, Section I.3 of: Symmetric functions and Hall polynomials, Oxford Math. Monographs, 2nd enlarged ed. 1995 (ISBN:9780198739128)
Richard Stanley, Sections 7.10, 7.15 in: Enumerative combinatorics 2, Cambridge University Press (1999, 2010) (doi:10.1017/CBO9780511609589, webpage)
Bruce Sagan, Section 4.4 of: The symmetric group, Springer 2001 (doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-6804-6, pdf)
Stuart Martin, Schur algebras and representation theory, Cambridge Univ. Press 1994
Survey:
Bruce E. Sagan, Schur functions, in: Michiel Hazewinkel (ed.), Encyclopaedia of Mathematics, Springer 2002 (pdf, pdf)
Wikipedia, Schur polynomial
See also:
Olivier Blondeau-Fournier, Pierre Mathieu, Schur superpolynomials: combinatorial definition and Pieri rule, arxiv/1408.2807
Miles Jones, Luc Lapointe, Pieri rules for Schur functions in superspace, arxiv/1608.08577
Last revised on May 23, 2021 at 21:46:28. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.