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Quiver (mathematics)

In mathematics, especially representation theory, a quiver is another name for a multidigraph; that is, a directed graph where loops and multiple arrows between two vertices are allowed. Quivers are commonly used in representation theory: a representation V of a quiver assigns a vector space V(x) to each vertex x of the quiver and a linear map V(a) to each arrow a.

In category theory, a quiver can be understood to be the underlying structure of a category, but without composition or a designation of identity morphisms. That is, there is a forgetful functor from Cat (the category of categories) to Quiv (the category of multidigraphs). Its left adjoint is a free functor which, from a quiver, makes the corresponding free category.

Definition edit

A quiver Γ consists of:

  • The set V of vertices of Γ
  • The set E of edges of Γ
  • Two functions:   giving the start or source of the edge, and another function,   giving the target of the edge.

This definition is identical to that of a multidigraph.

A morphism of quivers is a mapping from vertices to vertices which takes directed edges to directed edges. Formally, if   and   are two quivers, then a morphism   of quivers consists of two functions   and   such that the following diagrams commute:

   

That is,

 

and

 

Category-theoretic definition edit

The above definition is based in set theory; the category-theoretic definition generalizes this into a functor from the free quiver to the category of sets.

The free quiver (also called the walking quiver, Kronecker quiver, 2-Kronecker quiver or Kronecker category) Q is a category with two objects, and four morphisms: The objects are V and E. The four morphisms are     and the identity morphisms   and   That is, the free quiver is

 

A quiver is then a functor  

More generally, a quiver in a category C is a functor   The category Quiv(C) of quivers in C is the functor category where:

  • objects are functors  
  • morphisms are natural transformations between functors.

Note that Quiv is the category of presheaves on the opposite category Qop.

Path algebra edit

If Γ is a quiver, then a path in Γ is a sequence of arrows

 

such that the head of ai+1 is the tail of ai for i = 1, …, n−1, using the convention of concatenating paths from right to left.

If K is a field then the quiver algebra or path algebra K Γ is defined as a vector space having all the paths (of length ≥ 0) in the quiver as basis (including, for each vertex i of the quiver Γ, a trivial path ei of length 0; these paths are not assumed to be equal for different i), and multiplication given by concatenation of paths. If two paths cannot be concatenated because the end vertex of the first is not equal to the starting vertex of the second, their product is defined to be zero. This defines an associative algebra over K. This algebra has a unit element if and only if the quiver has only finitely many vertices. In this case, the modules over K Γ are naturally identified with the representations of Γ. If the quiver has infinitely many vertices, then K Γ has an approximate identity given by   where F ranges over finite subsets of the vertex set of Γ.

If the quiver has finitely many vertices and arrows, and the end vertex and starting vertex of any path are always distinct (i.e. Q has no oriented cycles), then K Γ is a finite-dimensional hereditary algebra over K. Conversely, if K is algebraically closed, then any finite-dimensional, hereditary, associative algebra over K is Morita equivalent to the path algebra of its Ext quiver (i.e., they have equivalent module categories).

Representations of quivers edit

A representation of a quiver Q is an association of an R-module to each vertex of Q, and a morphism between each module for each arrow.

A representation V of a quiver Q is said to be trivial if   for all vertices x in Q.

A morphism,   between representations of the quiver Q, is a collection of linear maps   such that for every arrow a in Q from x to y,   i.e. the squares that f forms with the arrows of V and V' all commute. A morphism, f, is an isomorphism, if f (x) is invertible for all vertices x in the quiver. With these definitions the representations of a quiver form a category.

If V and W are representations of a quiver Q, then the direct sum of these representations,   is defined by   for all vertices x in Q and   is the direct sum of the linear mappings V(a) and W(a).

A representation is said to be decomposable if it is isomorphic to the direct sum of non-zero representations.

A categorical definition of a quiver representation can also be given. The quiver itself can be considered a category, where the vertices are objects and paths are morphisms. Then a representation of Q is just a covariant functor from this category to the category of finite dimensional vector spaces. Morphisms of representations of Q are precisely natural transformations between the corresponding functors.

For a finite quiver Γ (a quiver with finitely many vertices and edges), let K Γ be its path algebra. Let ei denote the trivial path at vertex i. Then we can associate to the vertex i the projective K Γ-module K Γei consisting of linear combinations of paths which have starting vertex i. This corresponds to the representation of Γ obtained by putting a copy of K at each vertex which lies on a path starting at i and 0 on each other vertex. To each edge joining two copies of K we associate the identity map.

This theory was related to cluster algebras by Derksen, Weyman, and Zelevinsky.[1]

Quiver with relations edit

To enforce commutativity of some squares inside a quiver a generalization is the notion of quivers with relations (also named bound quivers). A relation on a quiver Q is a K linear combination of paths from Q. A quiver with relation is a pair (Q, I) with Q a quiver and   an ideal of the path algebra. The quotient K Γ / I is the path algebra of (Q, I).

Quiver Variety edit

Given the dimensions of the vector spaces assigned to every vertex, one can form a variety which characterizes all representations of that quiver with those specified dimensions, and consider stability conditions. These give quiver varieties, as constructed by King (1994).

Gabriel's theorem edit

A quiver is of finite type if it has only finitely many isomorphism classes of indecomposable representations. Gabriel (1972) classified all quivers of finite type, and also their indecomposable representations. More precisely, Gabriel's theorem states that:

  1. A (connected) quiver is of finite type if and only if its underlying graph (when the directions of the arrows are ignored) is one of the ADE Dynkin diagrams: An, Dn, E6, E7, E8.
  2. The indecomposable representations are in a one-to-one correspondence with the positive roots of the root system of the Dynkin diagram.

Dlab & Ringel (1973) found a generalization of Gabriel's theorem in which all Dynkin diagrams of finite dimensional semisimple Lie algebras occur. This was generalized to all quivers and their correponding Kac–Moody algebras by Victor Kac.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Derksen, Harm; Weyman, Jerzy; Zelevinsky, Andrei (2008-04-21), Quivers with potentials and their representations I: Mutations, doi:10.48550/arXiv.0704.0649, retrieved 2024-02-23. Published in J. Amer. Math. Soc. 23 (2010), p. 749-790.

Books edit

Kirillov, Alexander (2016), Quiver Representations and Quiver Varieties, American Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-1-4704-2307-0

Lecture Notes edit

Research edit

Sources edit

  • Derksen, Harm; Weyman, Jerzy (February 2005), "Quiver Representations" (PDF), Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 52 (2)
  • Dlab, Vlastimil; Ringel, Claus Michael (1973), On algebras of finite representation type, Carleton Mathematical Lecture Notes, vol. 2, Department of Mathematics, Carleton Univ., Ottawa, Ont., MR 0347907
  • Crawley-Boevey, William (1992), (PDF), Oxford University, archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-24, retrieved 2007-02-17
  • Gabriel, Peter (1972), "Unzerlegbare Darstellungen. I", Manuscripta Mathematica, 6 (1): 71–103, doi:10.1007/BF01298413, ISSN 0025-2611, MR 0332887. Errata[permanent dead link].
  • Victor Kac, "Root systems, representations of quivers and invariant theory". Invariant theory (Montecatini, 1982), pp. 74–108, Lecture Notes in Math. 996, Springer-Verlag, Berlin 1983. ISBN 3-540-12319-9[1]
  • King, Alastair (1994), "Moduli of representations of finite-dimensional algebras", Quart. J. Math., 45 (180): 515–530, doi:10.1093/qmath/45.4.515
  • Savage, Alistair (2006) [2005], "Finite-dimensional algebras and quivers", in Francoise, J.-P.; Naber, G. L.; Tsou, S.T. (eds.), Encyclopedia of Mathematical Physics, vol. 2, Elsevier, pp. 313–320, arXiv:math/0505082, Bibcode:2005math......5082S
  • Simson, Daniel; Skowronski, Andrzej; Assem, Ibrahim (2007), Elements of the Representation Theory of Associative Algebras, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-88218-7
  • Bernšteĭn, I. N.; Gelʹfand, I. M.; Ponomarev, V. A., "Coxeter functors, and Gabriel's theorem" (Russian), Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 28 (1973), no. 2(170), 19–33. Translation on Bernstein's website.
  • Quiver at the nLab
  1. ^ Gherardelli, Francesco; Centro Internazionale Matematico Estivo, eds. (1983). Invariant theory: proceedings of the 1st 1982 Session of the Centro Internazionale Matematico Estivo (C.I.M.E.), held at Montecatini, Italy, June 10-18, 1982. Lecture notes in mathematics. Berlin Heidelberg: Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-12319-4.

quiver, mathematics, mathematics, especially, representation, theory, quiver, another, name, multidigraph, that, directed, graph, where, loops, multiple, arrows, between, vertices, allowed, quivers, commonly, used, representation, theory, representation, quive. In mathematics especially representation theory a quiver is another name for a multidigraph that is a directed graph where loops and multiple arrows between two vertices are allowed Quivers are commonly used in representation theory a representation V of a quiver assigns a vector space V x to each vertex x of the quiver and a linear map V a to each arrow a In category theory a quiver can be understood to be the underlying structure of a category but without composition or a designation of identity morphisms That is there is a forgetful functor from Cat the category of categories to Quiv the category of multidigraphs Its left adjoint is a free functor which from a quiver makes the corresponding free category Contents 1 Definition 2 Category theoretic definition 3 Path algebra 4 Representations of quivers 5 Quiver with relations 5 1 Quiver Variety 6 Gabriel s theorem 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Books 8 2 Lecture Notes 8 3 Research 9 SourcesDefinition editA quiver G consists of The set V of vertices of G The set E of edges of G Two functions s E V displaystyle s E to V nbsp giving the start or source of the edge and another function t E V displaystyle t E to V nbsp giving the target of the edge This definition is identical to that of a multidigraph A morphism of quivers is a mapping from vertices to vertices which takes directed edges to directed edges Formally if G V E s t displaystyle Gamma V E s t nbsp and G V E s t displaystyle Gamma V E s t nbsp are two quivers then a morphism m mv me displaystyle m m v m e nbsp of quivers consists of two functions mv V V displaystyle m v V to V nbsp and me E E displaystyle m e E to E nbsp such that the following diagrams commute nbsp nbsp That is mv s s me displaystyle m v circ s s circ m e nbsp and mv t t me displaystyle m v circ t t circ m e nbsp Category theoretic definition editThe above definition is based in set theory the category theoretic definition generalizes this into a functor from the free quiver to the category of sets The free quiver also called the walking quiver Kronecker quiver 2 Kronecker quiver or Kronecker category Q is a category with two objects and four morphisms The objects are V and E The four morphisms are s E V displaystyle s E to V nbsp t E V displaystyle t E to V nbsp and the identity morphisms idV V V displaystyle mathrm id V V to V nbsp and idE E E displaystyle mathrm id E E to E nbsp That is the free quiver is Es tV displaystyle E begin matrix s 6pt rightrightarrows 4pt t end matrix V nbsp A quiver is then a functor G Q Set displaystyle Gamma Q to mathbf Set nbsp More generally a quiver in a category C is a functor G Q C displaystyle Gamma Q to C nbsp The category Quiv C of quivers in C is the functor category where objects are functors G Q C displaystyle Gamma Q to C nbsp morphisms are natural transformations between functors Note that Quiv is the category of presheaves on the opposite category Qop Path algebra editIf G is a quiver then a path in G is a sequence of arrows anan 1 a3a2a1 displaystyle a n a n 1 dots a 3 a 2 a 1 nbsp such that the head of ai 1 is the tail of ai for i 1 n 1 using the convention of concatenating paths from right to left If K is a field then the quiver algebra or path algebra K G is defined as a vector space having all the paths of length 0 in the quiver as basis including for each vertex i of the quiver G a trivial path ei of length 0 these paths are not assumed to be equal for different i and multiplication given by concatenation of paths If two paths cannot be concatenated because the end vertex of the first is not equal to the starting vertex of the second their product is defined to be zero This defines an associative algebra over K This algebra has a unit element if and only if the quiver has only finitely many vertices In this case the modules over K G are naturally identified with the representations of G If the quiver has infinitely many vertices then K G has an approximate identity given by eF v F1v textstyle e F sum v in F 1 v nbsp where F ranges over finite subsets of the vertex set of G If the quiver has finitely many vertices and arrows and the end vertex and starting vertex of any path are always distinct i e Q has no oriented cycles then K G is a finite dimensional hereditary algebra over K Conversely if K is algebraically closed then any finite dimensional hereditary associative algebra over K is Morita equivalent to the path algebra of its Ext quiver i e they have equivalent module categories Representations of quivers editA representation of a quiver Q is an association of an R module to each vertex of Q and a morphism between each module for each arrow A representation V of a quiver Q is said to be trivial if V x 0 displaystyle V x 0 nbsp for all vertices x in Q A morphism f V V displaystyle f V to V nbsp between representations of the quiver Q is a collection of linear maps f x V x V x displaystyle f x V x to V x nbsp such that for every arrow a in Q from x to y V a f x f y V a displaystyle V a f x f y V a nbsp i e the squares that f forms with the arrows of V and V all commute A morphism f is an isomorphism if f x is invertible for all vertices x in the quiver With these definitions the representations of a quiver form a category If V and W are representations of a quiver Q then the direct sum of these representations V W displaystyle V oplus W nbsp is defined by V W x V x W x displaystyle V oplus W x V x oplus W x nbsp for all vertices x in Q and V W a displaystyle V oplus W a nbsp is the direct sum of the linear mappings V a and W a A representation is said to be decomposable if it is isomorphic to the direct sum of non zero representations A categorical definition of a quiver representation can also be given The quiver itself can be considered a category where the vertices are objects and paths are morphisms Then a representation of Q is just a covariant functor from this category to the category of finite dimensional vector spaces Morphisms of representations of Q are precisely natural transformations between the corresponding functors For a finite quiver G a quiver with finitely many vertices and edges let K G be its path algebra Let ei denote the trivial path at vertex i Then we can associate to the vertex i the projective K G module K Gei consisting of linear combinations of paths which have starting vertex i This corresponds to the representation of G obtained by putting a copy of K at each vertex which lies on a path starting at i and 0 on each other vertex To each edge joining two copies of K we associate the identity map This theory was related to cluster algebras by Derksen Weyman and Zelevinsky 1 Quiver with relations editTo enforce commutativity of some squares inside a quiver a generalization is the notion of quivers with relations also named bound quivers A relation on a quiver Q is a K linear combination of paths from Q A quiver with relation is a pair Q I with Q a quiver and I KG displaystyle I subseteq K Gamma nbsp an ideal of the path algebra The quotient K G I is the path algebra of Q I Quiver Variety edit Given the dimensions of the vector spaces assigned to every vertex one can form a variety which characterizes all representations of that quiver with those specified dimensions and consider stability conditions These give quiver varieties as constructed by King 1994 Gabriel s theorem editMain article Gabriel s theorem A quiver is of finite type if it has only finitely many isomorphism classes of indecomposable representations Gabriel 1972 classified all quivers of finite type and also their indecomposable representations More precisely Gabriel s theorem states that A connected quiver is of finite type if and only if its underlying graph when the directions of the arrows are ignored is one of the ADE Dynkin diagrams An Dn E6 E7 E8 The indecomposable representations are in a one to one correspondence with the positive roots of the root system of the Dynkin diagram Dlab amp Ringel 1973 found a generalization of Gabriel s theorem in which all Dynkin diagrams of finite dimensional semisimple Lie algebras occur This was generalized to all quivers and their correponding Kac Moody algebras by Victor Kac See also editADE classification Adhesive category Assembly theory Graph algebra Group ring Incidence algebra Quiver diagram Semi invariant of a quiver Toric variety Derived noncommutative algebraic geometry Quivers help encode the data of derived noncommutative schemesReferences edit Derksen Harm Weyman Jerzy Zelevinsky Andrei 2008 04 21 Quivers with potentials and their representations I Mutations doi 10 48550 arXiv 0704 0649 retrieved 2024 02 23 Published in J Amer Math Soc 23 2010 p 749 790 Books edit Kirillov Alexander 2016 Quiver Representations and Quiver Varieties American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 1 4704 2307 0 Lecture Notes edit Crawley Boevey William Lectures on Representations of Quivers PDF archived from the original on 2017 08 20 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Quiver representations in toric geometryResearch edit Projective toric varieties as fine moduli spaces of quiver representationsSources edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Quivers graph theory Derksen Harm Weyman Jerzy February 2005 Quiver Representations PDF Notices of the American Mathematical Society 52 2 Dlab Vlastimil Ringel Claus Michael 1973 On algebras of finite representation type Carleton Mathematical Lecture Notes vol 2 Department of Mathematics Carleton Univ Ottawa Ont MR 0347907 Crawley Boevey William 1992 Notes on Quiver Representations PDF Oxford University archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 24 retrieved 2007 02 17 Gabriel Peter 1972 Unzerlegbare Darstellungen I Manuscripta Mathematica 6 1 71 103 doi 10 1007 BF01298413 ISSN 0025 2611 MR 0332887 Errata permanent dead link Victor Kac Root systems representations of quivers and invariant theory Invariant theory Montecatini 1982 pp 74 108 Lecture Notes in Math 996 Springer Verlag Berlin 1983 ISBN 3 540 12319 9 1 King Alastair 1994 Moduli of representations of finite dimensional algebras Quart J Math 45 180 515 530 doi 10 1093 qmath 45 4 515 Savage Alistair 2006 2005 Finite dimensional algebras and quivers in Francoise J P Naber G L Tsou S T eds Encyclopedia of Mathematical Physics vol 2 Elsevier pp 313 320 arXiv math 0505082 Bibcode 2005math 5082S Simson Daniel Skowronski Andrzej Assem Ibrahim 2007 Elements of the Representation Theory of Associative Algebras Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 88218 7 Bernsteĭn I N Gelʹfand I M Ponomarev V A Coxeter functors and Gabriel s theorem Russian Uspekhi Mat Nauk 28 1973 no 2 170 19 33 Translation on Bernstein s website Quiver at the nLab Gherardelli Francesco Centro Internazionale Matematico Estivo eds 1983 Invariant theory proceedings of the 1st 1982 Session of the Centro Internazionale Matematico Estivo C I M E held at Montecatini Italy June 10 18 1982 Lecture notes in mathematics Berlin Heidelberg Springer ISBN 978 3 540 12319 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quiver mathematics amp oldid 1211837040, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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