On Reflection Subgroups Of Finite Coxeter Groups


Download On Reflection Subgroups Of Finite Coxeter Groups PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get On Reflection Subgroups Of Finite Coxeter Groups book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

Reflection Groups and Coxeter Groups


Reflection Groups and Coxeter Groups

Author: James E. Humphreys

language: en

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Release Date: 1992-10


DOWNLOAD





This graduate textbook presents a concrete and up-to-date introduction to the theory of Coxeter groups. The book is self-contained, making it suitable either for courses and seminars or for self-study. The first part is devoted to establishing concrete examples. Finite reflection groups acting on Euclidean spaces are discussed, and the first part ends with the construction of the affine Weyl groups, a class of Coxeter groups that plays a major role in Lie theory. The second part (which is logically independent of, but motivated by, the first) develops from scratch the properties of Coxeter groups in general, including the Bruhat ordering and the seminal work of Kazhdan and Lusztig on representations of Hecke algebras associated with Coxeter groups is introduced. Finally a number of interesting complementary topics as well as connections with Lie theory are sketched. The book concludes with an extensive bibliography on Coxeter groups and their applications.

On Reflection Subgroups of Finite Coxeter Groups


On Reflection Subgroups of Finite Coxeter Groups

Author: J. Matthew Douglass

language: de

Publisher:

Release Date: 2011


DOWNLOAD





Finite Reflection Groups


Finite Reflection Groups

Author: L.C. Grove

language: en

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Release Date: 1996-06-20


DOWNLOAD





Chapter 1 introduces some of the terminology and notation used later and indicates prerequisites. Chapter 2 gives a reasonably thorough account of all finite subgroups of the orthogonal groups in two and three dimensions. The presentation is somewhat less formal than in succeeding chapters. For instance, the existence of the icosahedron is accepted as an empirical fact, and no formal proof of existence is included. Throughout most of Chapter 2 we do not distinguish between groups that are "geo metrically indistinguishable," that is, conjugate in the orthogonal group. Very little of the material in Chapter 2 is actually required for the sub sequent chapters, but it serves two important purposes: It aids in the development of geometrical insight, and it serves as a source of illustrative examples. There is a discussion offundamental regions in Chapter 3. Chapter 4 provides a correspondence between fundamental reflections and funda mental regions via a discussion of root systems. The actual classification and construction of finite reflection groups takes place in Chapter 5. where we have in part followed the methods of E. Witt and B. L. van der Waerden. Generators and relations for finite reflection groups are discussed in Chapter 6. There are historical remarks and suggestions for further reading in a Post lude.