Difference between revisions of "Schubert polynomials"
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+ | Polynomials introduced by A. Lascoux and M.-P. Schützenberger [[#References|[a18]]] as distinguished polynomial representatives of Schubert cycles (cf. also [[Schubert cycle|Schubert cycle]]) in the [[cohomology ring]] of the manifold $\mathcal{F}_n$ of complete flags in $\CC^{n}$. This extended work by I.N. Bernshtein, I.M. Gel'fand and S.I. Gel'fand [[#References|[a1]]] and M. Demazure [[#References|[a8]]], who gave algorithms for computing representatives of Schubert cycles in the co-invariant algebra, which is isomorphic to the cohomology ring of $\mathcal{F}_n$ [[#References|[a6]]]: | ||
− | + | \begin{equation*} H ^ { * } ( \mathcal{F}_n , \ZZ ) \simeq \ZZ [ x _ { 1 } , \dots , x _ { n } ] / \ZZ^ { + } [ x _ { 1 } , \dots , x _ { n } ] ^ { \mathcal{S} _ { n } }. \end{equation*} | |
− | + | Here, $\ZZ ^ { + } [ x _ { 1 } , \ldots , x _ { n } ] ^ { \mathcal{S} _ { n } }$ is the ideal generated by the non-constant polynomials that are symmetric in $x _ { 1 } , \ldots , x _ { n }$. See [[#References|[a19]]] for an elegant algebraic treatment of Schubert polynomials, and [[#References|[a13]]] and [[#References|[a20]]] for a more geometric treatment. | |
+ | |||
+ | For each $i = 1 , \dots , n - 1$, let $s_i$ be the transposition $( i , i + 1 )$ in the [[Symmetric group|symmetric group]] $\mathcal{S} _ { n }$, which acts on $\ZZ [ x _ { 1 } , \ldots , x _ { n } ]$. The divided difference operator $\partial_{i}$ is defined by | ||
+ | |||
+ | \begin{equation*} \partial _ { i } f = \frac { f - s _ { i } f } { x _ { i } - x _ { i + 1} }. \end{equation*} | ||
These satisfy | These satisfy | ||
− | + | \begin{equation} \tag{a1} \left\{ \begin{array} { l } { \partial _ { i } ^ { 2 } = 0, } \\ { \partial _ { i } \partial _ { j } = \partial _ { j } \partial _ { i } \text { if } | i - j | > 1, } \\ { \partial _ { i } \partial _ { i + 1 } \partial _ { i } = \partial _ { i + 1 } \partial _ { i } \partial _ { i + 1 }. } \end{array} \right. \end{equation} | |
− | If | + | If $f _ { w } \in \ZZ [ x _ { 1 } , \dots , x _ { n } ]$ is a representative of the [[Schubert cycle|Schubert cycle]] $\sigma_w$, then |
− | + | \begin{equation*} | |
+ | \partial _ { i }\, f _ { w } = \left\{ \begin{array} { l l } { 0 } & { \text{if} \ \ell ( s _ { i } w ) > \ell ( w ), } \\ | ||
+ | { f _ { s _ { i } w } } & { \text{if} \ \ell( s _ { i } w ) < \ell( w ), } \end{array} \right. | ||
+ | \end{equation*} | ||
− | where | + | where $\ell ( w )$ is the length of a permutation $w$ and $f _ { s _ { i } w }$ represents the Schubert cycle $\sigma _ { s _ { i } w} $. Given a fixed polynomial representative of the Schubert cycle $\sigma_{w_n}$ (the class of a point as $w_n \in \mathcal{S}_n$ is the longest element), successive application of divided difference operators gives polynomial representatives of all Schubert cycles, which are independent of the choices involved, by (a1). |
− | The choice of the representative | + | The choice of the representative $\mathfrak{S}_{w_n}=x_1^{n-1} x_2^{n-2} \cdots x_{n-1}$ for $w_n$ gives the Schubert polynomials. Since $\partial _ { n } \ldots \partial _ { 1 } \mathfrak { S } _ { w _ { n + 1 } } = \mathfrak { S } _ { w _ { n } }$, Schubert polynomials are independent of $n$ and give polynomials $\mathfrak { S } _ { w } \in \ZZ [ x _ { 1 } , x _ { 2 } , \ldots ]$ for $w \in \mathcal{S} _ { \infty } = \cup \mathcal{S} _ { n }$. These form a basis for this polynomial ring, and every Schur polynomial is also a Schubert polynomial. |
− | The transition formula gives another recursive construction of Schubert polynomials. For | + | The transition formula gives another recursive construction of Schubert polynomials. For $w \in \mathcal{S} _ { \infty }$, let $r$ be the last descent of $w$ ($w ( r ) > w ( r + 1 ) < w ( r + 2 ) < \dots$) and define $s > r$ by $w ( s ) < w ( r ) < w ( s + 1 )$. Set $v = w ( r , s )$, where $( r , s )$ is the transposition. Then |
− | + | \begin{equation*} \mathfrak { S } _ { w } = x _ { r } \mathfrak { S } _ { v } + \sum \mathfrak { S } _ { v ( q , r ) }, \end{equation*} | |
− | the sum over all < | + | the sum over all $q < r$ with $\ell(v(q,r)=\ell(v)+1=\ell(w)$. This formula gives an algorithm to compute $\mathfrak { S } _ { w }$ as the permutations that appear on the right-hand side are either shorter than $w$ or precede it in reverse [[Lexicographic order|lexicographic order]], and the minimal such permutation $u$ of length $m$ has $\mathfrak { S } _ { u } = x _ {1 } ^ {m }$. |
− | The transition formula shows that the Schubert polynomial | + | The transition formula shows that the Schubert polynomial $\mathfrak { S } _ { w }$ is a sum of monomials with non-negative integral coefficients. There are several explicit formulas for the coefficient of a monomial in a Schubert polynomial, either in terms of the weak order of the symmetric group [[#References|[a3]]], [[#References|[a5]]], [[#References|[a12]]], an intersection number [[#References|[a15]]] or the Bruhat order [[#References|[a4]]]. An elegant conjectural formula of A. Kohnert [[#References|[a16]]] remains unproven (as of 2000). The Schubert polynomial $\mathfrak { S } _ { w }$ for $w \in \mathcal{S} _ { n }$ is also the normal form reduction of any polynomial representative of the Schubert cycle $\sigma_w$ with respect to the degree-reverse lexicographic term order on $\ZZ [ x _ { 1 } , \ldots , x _ { n } ]$ with $x _ { 1 } < \ldots < x _ { n }$. |
− | The above-mentioned results of [[#References|[a6]]], [[#References|[a1]]], [[#References|[a8]]] are valid more generally for any flag manifold | + | The above-mentioned results of [[#References|[a6]]], [[#References|[a1]]], [[#References|[a8]]] are valid more generally for any flag manifold $G / B$ with $G$ a semi-simple [[Reductive group|reductive group]] and $B$ a [[Borel subgroup|Borel subgroup]]. When $G$ is an orthogonal or [[Symplectic group|symplectic group]], there are competing theories of Schubert polynomials [[#References|[a2]]], [[#References|[a10]]], [[#References|[a17]]], each with own merits. There are also double Schubert polynomials suited for computations of degeneracy loci [[#References|[a11]]], quantum Schubert polynomials [[#References|[a9]]], [[#References|[a7]]] and universal Schubert polynomials [[#References|[a14]]]. |
====References==== | ====References==== | ||
− | <table>< | + | <table> |
+ | <tr><td valign="top">[a1]</td> <td valign="top"> I.N. Bernshtein, I.M. Gel'fand, S.I. Gel'fand, "Schubert cells and cohomology of the spaces $G / P$" ''Russian Math. Surveys'' , '''28''' : 3 (1973) pp. 1–26</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a2]</td> <td valign="top"> S. Billey, M. Haiman, "Schubert polynomials for the classical groups" ''J. Amer. Math. Soc.'' , '''8''' : 2 (1995) pp. 443–482</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a3]</td> <td valign="top"> S. Billey, W. Jockush, R. Stanley, "Some combinatorial properties of Schubert polynomials" ''J. Algebraic Combin.'' , '''2''' : 4 (1993) pp. 345–374</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a4]</td> <td valign="top"> N. Bergeron, F. Sottile, "Skew Schubert functions and the Pieri formula for flag manifolds" ''Trans. Amer. Math. Soc.'' (to appear)</td></tr> | ||
+ | <tr><td valign="top">[a5]</td> <td valign="top"> N. Bergeron, "A combinatorial construction of the Schubert polynomials" ''J. Combin. Th. A'' , '''60''' (1992) pp. 168–182 {{ZBL|0771.05097}}</td></tr> | ||
+ | <tr><td valign="top">[a6]</td> <td valign="top"> A. Borel, "Sur la cohomologie des espaces fibrés principaux et des espaces homogènes des groupes de Lie compacts" ''Ann. Math.'' , '''57''' (1953) pp. 115–207</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a7]</td> <td valign="top"> I. Ciocan–Fontanine, "On quantum cohomology rings of partial flag varieties" ''Duke Math. J.'' , '''98''' : 3 (1999) pp. 485–524</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a8]</td> <td valign="top"> M. Demazure, "Désingularization des variétés de Schubert généralisées" ''Ann. Sci. École Norm. Sup. (4)'' , '''7''' (1974) pp. 53–88</td></tr> | ||
+ | <tr><td valign="top">[a9]</td> <td valign="top"> S. Fomin, S. Gelfand, A. Postnikov, "Quantum Schubert polynomials" ''J. Amer. Math. Soc.'' , '''10''' (1997) pp. 565–596</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a10]</td> <td valign="top"> S. Fomin, A.N. Kirillov, "Combinatorial $B _ { n }$-analogs of Schubert polynomials" ''Trans. Amer. Math. Soc.'' , '''348''' (1996) pp. 3591–3620</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a11]</td> <td valign="top"> W. Fulton, P. Pragacz, "Schubert varieties and degeneracy loci" , ''Lecture Notes in Mathematics'' , '''1689''' , Springer (1998)</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a12]</td> <td valign="top"> S. Fomin, R. Stanley, "Schubert polynomials and the nilCoxeter algebra" ''Adv. Math.'' , '''103''' (1994) pp. 196–207</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a13]</td> <td valign="top"> W. Fulton, "Young tableaux" , Cambridge Univ. Press (1997)</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a14]</td> <td valign="top"> W. Fulton, "Universal Schubert polynomials" ''Duke Math. J.'' , '''96''' : 3 (1999) pp. 575–594</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a15]</td> <td valign="top"> A. Kirillov, T. Maeno, "Quantum double Schubert polynomials, quantum Schubert polynomials, and the Vafa–Intriligator formula" ''Discr. Math.'' , '''217''' : 1–3 (2000) pp. 191–223 (Formal Power Series and Algebraic Combinatorics (Vienna, 1997))</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a16]</td> <td valign="top"> A. Kohnert, "Weintrauben, polynome, tableaux" ''Bayreuth Math. Schrift.'' , '''38''' (1990) pp. 1–97</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a17]</td> <td valign="top"> A. Lascoux, P. Pragacz, J. Ratajski, "Symplectic Schubert polynomials à la polonaise, appendix to operator calculus for $\widetilde{Q}$-polynomials and Schubert polynomials" ''Adv. Math.'' , '''140''' (1998) pp. 1–43</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a18]</td> <td valign="top"> A. Lascoux, M.-P. Schützenberger, "Polynômes de Schubert" ''C.R. Acad. Sci. Paris'' , '''294''' (1982) pp. 447–450</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a19]</td> <td valign="top"> I.G. Macdonald, "Notes on Schubert polynomials" ''Lab. Combin. et d'Inform. Math. (LACIM) Univ. Québec'' (1991)</td></tr> | ||
+ | <tr><td valign="top">[a20]</td> <td valign="top"> L. Manivel, "Fonctions symétriques, polynômes de Schubert et lieux de dégénérescence" ''Cours Spécialisés Soc. Math. France'' , '''3''' (1998)</td></tr> | ||
+ | </table> |
Latest revision as of 09:23, 10 November 2023
Polynomials introduced by A. Lascoux and M.-P. Schützenberger [a18] as distinguished polynomial representatives of Schubert cycles (cf. also Schubert cycle) in the cohomology ring of the manifold $\mathcal{F}_n$ of complete flags in $\CC^{n}$. This extended work by I.N. Bernshtein, I.M. Gel'fand and S.I. Gel'fand [a1] and M. Demazure [a8], who gave algorithms for computing representatives of Schubert cycles in the co-invariant algebra, which is isomorphic to the cohomology ring of $\mathcal{F}_n$ [a6]:
\begin{equation*} H ^ { * } ( \mathcal{F}_n , \ZZ ) \simeq \ZZ [ x _ { 1 } , \dots , x _ { n } ] / \ZZ^ { + } [ x _ { 1 } , \dots , x _ { n } ] ^ { \mathcal{S} _ { n } }. \end{equation*}
Here, $\ZZ ^ { + } [ x _ { 1 } , \ldots , x _ { n } ] ^ { \mathcal{S} _ { n } }$ is the ideal generated by the non-constant polynomials that are symmetric in $x _ { 1 } , \ldots , x _ { n }$. See [a19] for an elegant algebraic treatment of Schubert polynomials, and [a13] and [a20] for a more geometric treatment.
For each $i = 1 , \dots , n - 1$, let $s_i$ be the transposition $( i , i + 1 )$ in the symmetric group $\mathcal{S} _ { n }$, which acts on $\ZZ [ x _ { 1 } , \ldots , x _ { n } ]$. The divided difference operator $\partial_{i}$ is defined by
\begin{equation*} \partial _ { i } f = \frac { f - s _ { i } f } { x _ { i } - x _ { i + 1} }. \end{equation*}
These satisfy
\begin{equation} \tag{a1} \left\{ \begin{array} { l } { \partial _ { i } ^ { 2 } = 0, } \\ { \partial _ { i } \partial _ { j } = \partial _ { j } \partial _ { i } \text { if } | i - j | > 1, } \\ { \partial _ { i } \partial _ { i + 1 } \partial _ { i } = \partial _ { i + 1 } \partial _ { i } \partial _ { i + 1 }. } \end{array} \right. \end{equation}
If $f _ { w } \in \ZZ [ x _ { 1 } , \dots , x _ { n } ]$ is a representative of the Schubert cycle $\sigma_w$, then
\begin{equation*} \partial _ { i }\, f _ { w } = \left\{ \begin{array} { l l } { 0 } & { \text{if} \ \ell ( s _ { i } w ) > \ell ( w ), } \\ { f _ { s _ { i } w } } & { \text{if} \ \ell( s _ { i } w ) < \ell( w ), } \end{array} \right. \end{equation*}
where $\ell ( w )$ is the length of a permutation $w$ and $f _ { s _ { i } w }$ represents the Schubert cycle $\sigma _ { s _ { i } w} $. Given a fixed polynomial representative of the Schubert cycle $\sigma_{w_n}$ (the class of a point as $w_n \in \mathcal{S}_n$ is the longest element), successive application of divided difference operators gives polynomial representatives of all Schubert cycles, which are independent of the choices involved, by (a1).
The choice of the representative $\mathfrak{S}_{w_n}=x_1^{n-1} x_2^{n-2} \cdots x_{n-1}$ for $w_n$ gives the Schubert polynomials. Since $\partial _ { n } \ldots \partial _ { 1 } \mathfrak { S } _ { w _ { n + 1 } } = \mathfrak { S } _ { w _ { n } }$, Schubert polynomials are independent of $n$ and give polynomials $\mathfrak { S } _ { w } \in \ZZ [ x _ { 1 } , x _ { 2 } , \ldots ]$ for $w \in \mathcal{S} _ { \infty } = \cup \mathcal{S} _ { n }$. These form a basis for this polynomial ring, and every Schur polynomial is also a Schubert polynomial.
The transition formula gives another recursive construction of Schubert polynomials. For $w \in \mathcal{S} _ { \infty }$, let $r$ be the last descent of $w$ ($w ( r ) > w ( r + 1 ) < w ( r + 2 ) < \dots$) and define $s > r$ by $w ( s ) < w ( r ) < w ( s + 1 )$. Set $v = w ( r , s )$, where $( r , s )$ is the transposition. Then
\begin{equation*} \mathfrak { S } _ { w } = x _ { r } \mathfrak { S } _ { v } + \sum \mathfrak { S } _ { v ( q , r ) }, \end{equation*}
the sum over all $q < r$ with $\ell(v(q,r)=\ell(v)+1=\ell(w)$. This formula gives an algorithm to compute $\mathfrak { S } _ { w }$ as the permutations that appear on the right-hand side are either shorter than $w$ or precede it in reverse lexicographic order, and the minimal such permutation $u$ of length $m$ has $\mathfrak { S } _ { u } = x _ {1 } ^ {m }$.
The transition formula shows that the Schubert polynomial $\mathfrak { S } _ { w }$ is a sum of monomials with non-negative integral coefficients. There are several explicit formulas for the coefficient of a monomial in a Schubert polynomial, either in terms of the weak order of the symmetric group [a3], [a5], [a12], an intersection number [a15] or the Bruhat order [a4]. An elegant conjectural formula of A. Kohnert [a16] remains unproven (as of 2000). The Schubert polynomial $\mathfrak { S } _ { w }$ for $w \in \mathcal{S} _ { n }$ is also the normal form reduction of any polynomial representative of the Schubert cycle $\sigma_w$ with respect to the degree-reverse lexicographic term order on $\ZZ [ x _ { 1 } , \ldots , x _ { n } ]$ with $x _ { 1 } < \ldots < x _ { n }$.
The above-mentioned results of [a6], [a1], [a8] are valid more generally for any flag manifold $G / B$ with $G$ a semi-simple reductive group and $B$ a Borel subgroup. When $G$ is an orthogonal or symplectic group, there are competing theories of Schubert polynomials [a2], [a10], [a17], each with own merits. There are also double Schubert polynomials suited for computations of degeneracy loci [a11], quantum Schubert polynomials [a9], [a7] and universal Schubert polynomials [a14].
References
[a1] | I.N. Bernshtein, I.M. Gel'fand, S.I. Gel'fand, "Schubert cells and cohomology of the spaces $G / P$" Russian Math. Surveys , 28 : 3 (1973) pp. 1–26 |
[a2] | S. Billey, M. Haiman, "Schubert polynomials for the classical groups" J. Amer. Math. Soc. , 8 : 2 (1995) pp. 443–482 |
[a3] | S. Billey, W. Jockush, R. Stanley, "Some combinatorial properties of Schubert polynomials" J. Algebraic Combin. , 2 : 4 (1993) pp. 345–374 |
[a4] | N. Bergeron, F. Sottile, "Skew Schubert functions and the Pieri formula for flag manifolds" Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. (to appear) |
[a5] | N. Bergeron, "A combinatorial construction of the Schubert polynomials" J. Combin. Th. A , 60 (1992) pp. 168–182 Zbl 0771.05097 |
[a6] | A. Borel, "Sur la cohomologie des espaces fibrés principaux et des espaces homogènes des groupes de Lie compacts" Ann. Math. , 57 (1953) pp. 115–207 |
[a7] | I. Ciocan–Fontanine, "On quantum cohomology rings of partial flag varieties" Duke Math. J. , 98 : 3 (1999) pp. 485–524 |
[a8] | M. Demazure, "Désingularization des variétés de Schubert généralisées" Ann. Sci. École Norm. Sup. (4) , 7 (1974) pp. 53–88 |
[a9] | S. Fomin, S. Gelfand, A. Postnikov, "Quantum Schubert polynomials" J. Amer. Math. Soc. , 10 (1997) pp. 565–596 |
[a10] | S. Fomin, A.N. Kirillov, "Combinatorial $B _ { n }$-analogs of Schubert polynomials" Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. , 348 (1996) pp. 3591–3620 |
[a11] | W. Fulton, P. Pragacz, "Schubert varieties and degeneracy loci" , Lecture Notes in Mathematics , 1689 , Springer (1998) |
[a12] | S. Fomin, R. Stanley, "Schubert polynomials and the nilCoxeter algebra" Adv. Math. , 103 (1994) pp. 196–207 |
[a13] | W. Fulton, "Young tableaux" , Cambridge Univ. Press (1997) |
[a14] | W. Fulton, "Universal Schubert polynomials" Duke Math. J. , 96 : 3 (1999) pp. 575–594 |
[a15] | A. Kirillov, T. Maeno, "Quantum double Schubert polynomials, quantum Schubert polynomials, and the Vafa–Intriligator formula" Discr. Math. , 217 : 1–3 (2000) pp. 191–223 (Formal Power Series and Algebraic Combinatorics (Vienna, 1997)) |
[a16] | A. Kohnert, "Weintrauben, polynome, tableaux" Bayreuth Math. Schrift. , 38 (1990) pp. 1–97 |
[a17] | A. Lascoux, P. Pragacz, J. Ratajski, "Symplectic Schubert polynomials à la polonaise, appendix to operator calculus for $\widetilde{Q}$-polynomials and Schubert polynomials" Adv. Math. , 140 (1998) pp. 1–43 |
[a18] | A. Lascoux, M.-P. Schützenberger, "Polynômes de Schubert" C.R. Acad. Sci. Paris , 294 (1982) pp. 447–450 |
[a19] | I.G. Macdonald, "Notes on Schubert polynomials" Lab. Combin. et d'Inform. Math. (LACIM) Univ. Québec (1991) |
[a20] | L. Manivel, "Fonctions symétriques, polynômes de Schubert et lieux de dégénérescence" Cours Spécialisés Soc. Math. France , 3 (1998) |
Schubert polynomials. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Schubert_polynomials&oldid=14636