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The generalized triangle inequalities in symmetric spaces and buildings with applications to algebra
Algebra & Discrete Mathematics| Speaker: | John Millson, University of Maryland |
| Location: | 693 Kerr |
| Start time: | Fri, Jan 23 2004, 12:10PM |
Description
In my lectures I will present joint work with Misha Kapovich
and Bernhard Leeb. I will begin by describing the GENERALIZED
TRIANGLE INEQUALITIES.
A geodesic segment in a symmetric space of noncompact type and rank m
is determined up to isometry by m real numbers
(not just the usual length). The generalized triangle inequalities are a
system of homogeneous linear inequalities that give conditions on 3 m-tuples
of real numbers that are necessary and sufficient in order that one can
assemble three geodesic segments with these parameters into a triangle.
It is a remarkable fact that the triangle inequalities play
a fundamental role in some important problems from algebra. Indeed, given
a triple of dominant weights a,b,c (now we have 3 m-tuples of decreasing
INTEGERS), in order that the corresponding triple tensor product of finite
dimensional irreducible representations contain the trivial representation it
is necessary that the triple a,b,c satisfies the triangle inequalities.
It is a well-known recent theorem of Knutson and Tao
(the Saturation Conjecture for GL(m)) that the
triangle inequalities are also SUFFICIENT for the group GL(m). However for
other groups they are no longer sufficient. I will present a conjecture
about what happens for other groups. The main evidence for the conjecture is
that there is also a "Saturation Conjecture" for the (spherical)
Hecke algebra which I will prove (I will explain what this algebra is) . There
is a very close connection between the two conjectures
and in fact they are equivalent for GL(m). From this equivalence
I will deduce a new proof of the theorem of Knutson and Tao.
I will also present recent explicit computations of the generalized triangle
inequalities I made with S. Kumar. For example for the symplectic group in
six variables, Sp(6), there are 135 inequalities defining a polyhedral cone
in nine dimensions with 102 facets and 51 generators (edges).
