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Littlewood–Richardson rule

In mathematics, the Littlewood–Richardson rule is a combinatorial description of the coefficients that arise when decomposing a product of two Schur functions as a linear combination of other Schur functions. These coefficients are natural numbers, which the Littlewood–Richardson rule describes as counting certain skew tableaux. They occur in many other mathematical contexts, for instance as multiplicity in the decomposition of tensor products of finite-dimensional representations of general linear groups, or in the decomposition of certain induced representations in the representation theory of the symmetric group, or in the area of algebraic combinatorics dealing with Young tableaux and symmetric polynomials.

Littlewood–Richardson coefficients depend on three partitions, say , of which and describe the Schur functions being multiplied, and gives the Schur function of which this is the coefficient in the linear combination; in other words they are the coefficients such that

The Littlewood–Richardson rule states that is equal to the number of Littlewood–Richardson tableaux of skew shape and of weight .

History edit

Unfortunately the Littlewood–Richardson rule is much harder to prove than was at first suspected. The author was once told that the Littlewood–Richardson rule helped to get men on the moon but was not proved until after they got there.

Gordon James (1987)

The Littlewood–Richardson rule was first stated by D. E. Littlewood and A. R. Richardson (1934, theorem III p. 119) but though they claimed it as a theorem they only proved it in some fairly simple special cases. Robinson (1938) claimed to complete their proof, but his argument had gaps, though it was so obscurely written that these gaps were not noticed for some time, and his argument is reproduced in the book (Littlewood 1950). Some of the gaps were later filled by Macdonald (1995). The first rigorous proofs of the rule were given four decades after it was found, by Schützenberger (1977) and Thomas (1974), after the necessary combinatorial theory was developed by C. Schensted (1961), Schützenberger (1963), and Knuth (1970) in their work on the Robinson–Schensted correspondence. There are now several short proofs of the rule, such as (Gasharov 1998), and (Stembridge 2002) using Bender-Knuth involutions. Littelmann (1994) used the Littelmann path model to generalize the Littlewood–Richardson rule to other semisimple Lie groups.

The Littlewood–Richardson rule is notorious for the number of errors that appeared prior to its complete, published proof. Several published attempts to prove it are incomplete, and it is particularly difficult to avoid errors when doing hand calculations with it: even the original example in D. E. Littlewood and A. R. Richardson (1934) contains an error.

Littlewood–Richardson tableaux edit

 
A Littlewood–Richardson tableau

A Littlewood–Richardson tableau is a skew semistandard tableau with the additional property that the sequence obtained by concatenating its reversed rows is a lattice word (or lattice permutation), which means that in every initial part of the sequence any number   occurs at least as often as the number  . Another equivalent (though not quite obviously so) characterization is that the tableau itself, and any tableau obtained from it by removing some number of its leftmost columns, has a weakly decreasing weight. Many other combinatorial notions have been found that turn out to be in bijection with Littlewood–Richardson tableaux, and can therefore also be used to define the Littlewood–Richardson coefficients.

 
Another Littlewood–Richardson tableau

Example edit

Consider the case that  ,   and  . Then the fact that   can be deduced from the fact that the two tableaux shown at the right are the only two Littlewood–Richardson tableaux of shape   and weight  . Indeed, since the last box on the first nonempty line of the skew diagram can only contain an entry 1, the entire first line must be filled with entries 1 (this is true for any Littlewood–Richardson tableau); in the last box of the second row we can only place a 2 by column strictness and the fact that our lattice word cannot contain any larger entry before it contains a 2. For the first box of the second row we can now either use a 1 or a 2. Once that entry is chosen, the third row must contain the remaining entries to make the weight (3,2,1), in a weakly increasing order, so we have no choice left any more; in both case it turns out that we do find a Littlewood–Richardson tableau.

A more geometrical description edit

The condition that the sequence of entries read from the tableau in a somewhat peculiar order form a lattice word can be replaced by a more local and geometrical condition. Since in a semistandard tableau equal entries never occur in the same column, one can number the copies of any value from right to left, which is their order of occurrence in the sequence that should be a lattice word. Call the number so associated to each entry its index, and write an entry i with index j as i[j]. Now if some Littlewood–Richardson tableau contains an entry   with index j, then that entry i[j] should occur in a row strictly below that of   (which certainly also occurs, since the entry i − 1 occurs as least as often as the entry i does). In fact the entry i[j] should also occur in a column no further to the right than that same entry   (which at first sight appears to be a stricter condition). If the weight of the Littlewood–Richardson tableau is fixed beforehand, then one can form a fixed collection of indexed entries, and if these are placed in a way respecting those geometric restrictions, in addition to those of semistandard tableaux and the condition that indexed copies of the same entries should respect right-to-left ordering of the indexes, then the resulting tableaux are guaranteed to be Littlewood–Richardson tableaux.

An algorithmic form of the rule edit

The Littlewood–Richardson as stated above gives a combinatorial expression for individual Littlewood–Richardson coefficients, but gives no indication of a practical method to enumerate the Littlewood–Richardson tableaux in order to find the values of these coefficients. Indeed, for given   there is no simple criterion to determine whether any Littlewood–Richardson tableaux of shape   and of weight   exist at all (although there are a number of necessary conditions, the simplest of which is  ); therefore it seems inevitable that in some cases one has to go through an elaborate search, only to find that no solutions exist.

Nevertheless, the rule leads to a quite efficient procedure to determine the full decomposition of a product of Schur functions, in other words to determine all coefficients   for fixed λ and μ, but varying ν. This fixes the weight of the Littlewood–Richardson tableaux to be constructed and the "inner part" λ of their shape, but leaves the "outer part" ν free. Since the weight is known, the set of indexed entries in the geometric description is fixed. Now for successive indexed entries, all possible positions allowed by the geometric restrictions can be tried in a backtracking search. The entries can be tried in increasing order, while among equal entries they can be tried by decreasing index. The latter point is the key to efficiency of the search procedure: the entry i[j] is then restricted to be in a column to the right of  , but no further to the right than   (if such entries are present). This strongly restricts the set of possible positions, but always leaves at least one valid position for  ; thus every placement of an entry will give rise to at least one complete Littlewood–Richardson tableau, and the search tree contains no dead ends.

A similar method can be used to find all coefficients   for fixed λ and ν, but varying μ.

Littlewood–Richardson coefficients edit

The Littlewood–Richardson coefficients cν
λμ
   appear in the following interrelated ways:

 
or equivalently cν
λμ
   is the inner product of sν and sλsμ.
 
  • The cν
    λμ
       appear as intersection numbers on a Grassmannian:
 
where σμ is the class of the Schubert variety of a Grassmannian corresponding to μ.
  • cν
    λμ
       is the number of times the irreducible representation VλVμ of the product of symmetric groups S|λ| × S|μ| appears in the restriction of the representation Vν of S|ν| to S|λ| × S|μ|. By Frobenius reciprocity this is also the number of times that Vν occurs in the representation of S|ν| induced from Vλ ⊗ Vμ.
  • The cν
    λμ
       appear in the decomposition of the tensor product (Fulton 1997) of two Schur modules (irreducible representations of special linear groups)
 
  • cν
    λμ
       is the number of standard Young tableaux of shape ν/μ that are jeu de taquin equivalent to some fixed standard Young tableau of shape λ.
  • cν
    λμ
       is the number of Littlewood–Richardson tableaux of shape ν/λ and of weight μ.
  • cν
    λμ
       is the number of pictures between μ and ν/λ.

Special cases edit

Pieri's formula edit

Pieri's formula, which is the special case of the Littlewood–Richardson rule in the case when one of the partitions has only one part, states that

 

where Sn is the Schur function of a partition with one row and the sum is over all partitions λ obtained from μ by adding n elements to its Ferrers diagram, no two in the same column.

Rectangular partitions edit

If both partitions are rectangular in shape, the sum is also multiplicity free (Okada 1998). Fix a, b, p, and q positive integers with p   q. Denote by   the partition with p parts of length a. The partitions indexing nontrivial components of   are those partitions   with length   such that

  •  
  •  
  •  

For example,

 

.

Generalizations edit

Reduced Kronecker coefficients of the symmetric group edit

The reduced Kronecker coefficient of the symmetric group   is a generalization of   to three arbitrary Young diagrams  , which is symmetric under permutations of the three diagrams.

Skew Schur functions edit

Zelevinsky (1981) extended the Littlewood–Richardson rule to skew Schur functions as follows:

 

where the sum is over all tableaux T on μ/ν such that for all j, the sequence of integers λ+ω(Tj) is non-increasing, and ω is the weight.

Newell-Littlewood numbers edit

Newell-Littlewood numbers are defined from Littlewood–Richardson coefficients by the cubic expression[1]

 

Newell-Littlewood numbers give some of the tensor product multiplicities of finite-dimensional representations of classical Lie groups of the types  .

The non-vanishing condition on Young diagram sizes   leads to

 

Newell-Littlewood numbers are generalizations of Littlewood–Richardson coefficients in the sense that

 

Newell-Littlewood numbers that involve a Young diagram with only one row obey a Pieri-type rule:   is the number of ways to remove   boxes from   (from different columns), then add   boxes (to different columns) to make  .[1]

Newell-Littlewood numbers are the structure constants of an associative and commutative algebra whose basis elements are partitions, with the product  . For example,

 
 

Examples edit

The examples of Littlewood–Richardson coefficients below are given in terms of products of Schur polynomials Sπ, indexed by partitions π, using the formula

 

All coefficients with ν at most 4 are given by:

  • S0Sπ = Sπ for any π. where S0=1 is the Schur polynomial of the empty partition
  • S1S1 = S2 + S11
  • S2S1 = S3 + S21
  • S11S1 = S111 + S21
  • S3S1 = S4 + S31
  • S21S1 = S31 + S22 + S211
  • S2S2 = S4 + S31 + S22
  • S2S11 = S31 + S211
  • S111S1 = S1111 + S211
  • S11S11 = S1111 + S211 + S22

Most of the coefficients for small partitions are 0 or 1, which happens in particular whenever one of the factors is of the form Sn or S11...1, because of Pieri's formula and its transposed counterpart. The simplest example with a coefficient larger than 1 happens when neither of the factors has this form:

  • S21S21 = S42 + S411 + S33 + 2S321 + S3111 + S222 + S2211.

For larger partitions the coefficients become more complicated. For example,

  • S321S321 = S642 +S6411 +S633 +2S6321 +S63111 +S6222 +S62211 +S552 +S5511 +2S543 +4S5421 +2S54111 +3S5331 +3S5322 +4S53211 +S531111 +2S52221 +S522111 +S444 +3S4431 +2S4422 +3S44211 +S441111 +3S4332 +3S43311 +4S43221 +2S432111 +S42222 +S422211 +S3333 +2S33321 +S333111 +S33222 +S332211 with 34 terms and total multiplicity 62, and the largest coefficient is 4
  • S4321S4321 is a sum of 206 terms with total multiplicity is 930, and the largest coefficient is 18.
  • S54321S54321 is a sum of 1433 terms with total multiplicity 26704, and the largest coefficient (that of S86543211) is 176.
  • S654321S654321 is a sum of 10873 terms with total multiplicity is 1458444 (so the average value of the coefficients is more than 100, and they can be as large as 2064).

The original example given by Littlewood & Richardson (1934, p. 122-124) was (after correcting for 3 tableaux they found but forgot to include in the final sum)

  • S431S221 = S652 + S6511 + S643 + 2S6421 + S64111 + S6331 + S6322 + S63211 + S553 + 2S5521 + S55111 + 2S5431 + 2S5422 + 3S54211 + S541111 + S5332 + S53311 + 2S53221 + S532111 + S4432 + S44311 + 2S44221 + S442111 + S43321 + S43222 + S432211

with 26 terms coming from the following 34 tableaux:

....11 ....11 ....11 ....11 ....11 ....11 ....11 ....11 ....11 ...22 ...22 ...2 ...2 ...2 ...2 ... ... ... .3 . .23 .2 .3 . .22 .2 .2 3 3 2 2 3 23 2 3 3 ....1 ....1 ....1 ....1 ....1 ....1 ....1 ....1 ....1 ...12 ...12 ...12 ...12 ...2 ...1 ...1 ...2 ...1 .23 .2 .3 . .13 .22 .2 .1 .2 3 2 2 2 3 23 23 2 3 3 ....1 ....1 ....1 ....1 ....1 ....1 ....1 ....1 ...2 ...2 ...2 ... ... ... ... ... .1 .3 . .12 .12 .1 .2 .2 2 1 1 23 2 22 13 1 3 2 2 3 3 2 2 3 3 .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... ...1 ...1 ...1 ...1 ...1 ... ... ... .12 .12 .1 .2 .2 .11 .1 .1 23 2 22 13 1 22 12 12 3 3 2 2 3 23 2 3 3 

Calculating skew Schur functions is similar. For example, the 15 Littlewood–Richardson tableaux for ν=5432 and λ=331 are

...11 ...11 ...11 ...11 ...11 ...11 ...11 ...11 ...11 ...11 ...11 ...11 ...11 ...11 ...11 ...2 ...2 ...2 ...2 ...2 ...2 ...2 ...2 ...2 ...2 ...2 ...2 ...2 ...2 ...2 .11 .11 .11 .12 .11 .12 .13 .13 .23 .13 .13 .12 .12 .23 .23 12 13 22 12 23 13 12 24 14 14 22 23 33 13 34 

so S5432/331 = Σcν
λμ
  Sμ = S52 + S511 + S4111 + S2221 + 2S43 + 2S3211 + 2S322 + 2S331 + 3S421 (Fulton 1997, p. 64).

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Gao, Shiliang; Orelowitz, Gidon; Yong, Alexander (2021). "Newell-Littlewood numbers". Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 374 (9): 6331–6366. arXiv:2005.09012v1. doi:10.1090/tran/8375. S2CID 218684561.

References edit

  • Fulton, William (1997), Young tableaux, London Mathematical Society Student Texts, vol. 35, Cambridge University Press, p. 121, ISBN 978-0-521-56144-0, MR 1464693
  • Gasharov, Vesselin (1998), "A short proof of the Littlewood-Richardson rule", European Journal of Combinatorics, 19 (4): 451–453, doi:10.1006/eujc.1998.0212, ISSN 0195-6698, MR 1630540
  • James, Gordon (1987), "The representation theory of the symmetric groups", The Arcata Conference on Representations of Finite Groups (Arcata, Calif., 1986), Proc. Sympos. Pure Math., vol. 47, Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society, pp. 111–126, MR 0933355
  • Knuth, Donald E. (1970), "Permutations, matrices, and generalized Young tableaux", Pacific Journal of Mathematics, 34 (3): 709–727, doi:10.2140/pjm.1970.34.709, ISSN 0030-8730, MR 0272654
  • Littelmann, Peter (1994), "A Littlewood-Richardson rule for symmetrizable Kac-Moody algebras" (PDF), Invent. Math., 116: 329–346, Bibcode:1994InMat.116..329L, doi:10.1007/BF01231564, S2CID 85546837
  • Littlewood, Dudley E. (1950), The theory of group characters and matrix representations of groups, AMS Chelsea Publishing, Providence, RI, ISBN 978-0-8218-4067-2, MR 0002127
  • Littlewood, D. E.; Richardson, A. R. (1934), "Group Characters and Algebra", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Containing Papers of a Mathematical or Physical Character, The Royal Society, 233 (721–730): 99–141, Bibcode:1934RSPTA.233...99L, doi:10.1098/rsta.1934.0015, ISSN 0264-3952, JSTOR 91293
  • Macdonald, I. G. (1995), Symmetric functions and Hall polynomials, Oxford Mathematical Monographs (2nd ed.), The Clarendon Press Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-853489-1, MR 1354144, archived from the original on 2012-12-11
  • Okada, Soichi (1998), "Applications of minor summation formulas to rectangular-shaped representations of classical groups", Journal of Algebra, 205 (2): 337–367, doi:10.1006/jabr.1997.7408, ISSN 0021-8693, MR 1632816
  • Robinson, G. de B. (1938), "On the Representations of the Symmetric Group", American Journal of Mathematics, The Johns Hopkins University Press, 60 (3): 745–760, doi:10.2307/2371609, ISSN 0002-9327, JSTOR 2371609 Zbl0019.25102
  • Schensted, C. (1961), "Longest increasing and decreasing subsequences", Canadian Journal of Mathematics, 13: 179–191, doi:10.4153/CJM-1961-015-3, ISSN 0008-414X, MR 0121305
  • Schützenberger, M. P. (1963), "Quelques remarques sur une construction de Schensted", Mathematica Scandinavica, 12: 117–128, doi:10.7146/math.scand.a-10676, ISSN 0025-5521, MR 0190017
  • Schützenberger, Marcel-Paul (1977), "La correspondance de Robinson", Combinatoire et représentation du groupe symétrique (Actes Table Ronde CNRS, Univ. Louis-Pasteur Strasbourg, Strasbourg, 1976), Lecture Notes in Mathematics, vol. 579, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. 59–113, doi:10.1007/BFb0090012, ISBN 978-3-540-08143-2, MR 0498826
  • Stembridge, John R. (2002), "A concise proof of the Littlewood-Richardson rule" (PDF), Electronic Journal of Combinatorics, 9 (1): Note 5, 4 pp. (electronic), doi:10.37236/1666, ISSN 1077-8926, MR 1912814
  • Thomas, Glânffrwd P. (1974), Baxter algebras and Schur functions, Ph.D. Thesis, Swansea: University College of Swansea
  • van Leeuwen, Marc A. A. (2001), "The Littlewood-Richardson rule, and related combinatorics" (PDF), Interaction of combinatorics and representation theory, MSJ Mem., vol. 11, Tokyo: Math. Soc. Japan, pp. 95–145, MR 1862150
  • Zelevinsky, A. V. (1981), "A generalization of the Littlewood-Richardson rule and the Robinson-Schensted-Knuth correspondence", Journal of Algebra, 69 (1): 82–94, doi:10.1016/0021-8693(81)90128-9, ISSN 0021-8693, MR 0613858

External links edit

  • An online program, decomposing products of Schur functions using the Littlewood–Richardson rule

littlewood, richardson, rule, mathematics, combinatorial, description, coefficients, that, arise, when, decomposing, product, schur, functions, linear, combination, other, schur, functions, these, coefficients, natural, numbers, which, describes, counting, cer. In mathematics the Littlewood Richardson rule is a combinatorial description of the coefficients that arise when decomposing a product of two Schur functions as a linear combination of other Schur functions These coefficients are natural numbers which the Littlewood Richardson rule describes as counting certain skew tableaux They occur in many other mathematical contexts for instance as multiplicity in the decomposition of tensor products of finite dimensional representations of general linear groups or in the decomposition of certain induced representations in the representation theory of the symmetric group or in the area of algebraic combinatorics dealing with Young tableaux and symmetric polynomials Littlewood Richardson coefficients depend on three partitions say l m n displaystyle lambda mu nu of which l displaystyle lambda and m displaystyle mu describe the Schur functions being multiplied and n displaystyle nu gives the Schur function of which this is the coefficient in the linear combination in other words they are the coefficients c l m n displaystyle c lambda mu nu such that s l s m n c l m n s n displaystyle s lambda s mu sum nu c lambda mu nu s nu The Littlewood Richardson rule states that c l m n displaystyle c lambda mu nu is equal to the number of Littlewood Richardson tableaux of skew shape n l displaystyle nu lambda and of weight m displaystyle mu Contents 1 History 1 1 Littlewood Richardson tableaux 1 2 Example 1 3 A more geometrical description 2 An algorithmic form of the rule 3 Littlewood Richardson coefficients 4 Special cases 4 1 Pieri s formula 4 2 Rectangular partitions 5 Generalizations 5 1 Reduced Kronecker coefficients of the symmetric group 5 2 Skew Schur functions 5 3 Newell Littlewood numbers 6 Examples 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory editUnfortunately the Littlewood Richardson rule is much harder to prove than was at first suspected The author was once told that the Littlewood Richardson rule helped to get men on the moon but was not proved until after they got there Gordon James 1987 The Littlewood Richardson rule was first stated by D E Littlewood and A R Richardson 1934 theorem III p 119 but though they claimed it as a theorem they only proved it in some fairly simple special cases Robinson 1938 claimed to complete their proof but his argument had gaps though it was so obscurely written that these gaps were not noticed for some time and his argument is reproduced in the book Littlewood 1950 Some of the gaps were later filled by Macdonald 1995 The first rigorous proofs of the rule were given four decades after it was found by Schutzenberger 1977 and Thomas 1974 after the necessary combinatorial theory was developed by C Schensted 1961 Schutzenberger 1963 and Knuth 1970 in their work on the Robinson Schensted correspondence There are now several short proofs of the rule such as Gasharov 1998 and Stembridge 2002 using Bender Knuth involutions Littelmann 1994 used the Littelmann path model to generalize the Littlewood Richardson rule to other semisimple Lie groups The Littlewood Richardson rule is notorious for the number of errors that appeared prior to its complete published proof Several published attempts to prove it are incomplete and it is particularly difficult to avoid errors when doing hand calculations with it even the original example in D E Littlewood and A R Richardson 1934 contains an error Littlewood Richardson tableaux edit nbsp A Littlewood Richardson tableauA Littlewood Richardson tableau is a skew semistandard tableau with the additional property that the sequence obtained by concatenating its reversed rows is a lattice word or lattice permutation which means that in every initial part of the sequence any number i displaystyle i nbsp occurs at least as often as the number i 1 displaystyle i 1 nbsp Another equivalent though not quite obviously so characterization is that the tableau itself and any tableau obtained from it by removing some number of its leftmost columns has a weakly decreasing weight Many other combinatorial notions have been found that turn out to be in bijection with Littlewood Richardson tableaux and can therefore also be used to define the Littlewood Richardson coefficients nbsp Another Littlewood Richardson tableauExample edit Consider the case that l 2 1 displaystyle lambda 2 1 nbsp m 3 2 1 displaystyle mu 3 2 1 nbsp and n 4 3 2 displaystyle nu 4 3 2 nbsp Then the fact that c l m n 2 displaystyle c lambda mu nu 2 nbsp can be deduced from the fact that the two tableaux shown at the right are the only two Littlewood Richardson tableaux of shape n l displaystyle nu lambda nbsp and weight m displaystyle mu nbsp Indeed since the last box on the first nonempty line of the skew diagram can only contain an entry 1 the entire first line must be filled with entries 1 this is true for any Littlewood Richardson tableau in the last box of the second row we can only place a 2 by column strictness and the fact that our lattice word cannot contain any larger entry before it contains a 2 For the first box of the second row we can now either use a 1 or a 2 Once that entry is chosen the third row must contain the remaining entries to make the weight 3 2 1 in a weakly increasing order so we have no choice left any more in both case it turns out that we do find a Littlewood Richardson tableau A more geometrical description edit The condition that the sequence of entries read from the tableau in a somewhat peculiar order form a lattice word can be replaced by a more local and geometrical condition Since in a semistandard tableau equal entries never occur in the same column one can number the copies of any value from right to left which is their order of occurrence in the sequence that should be a lattice word Call the number so associated to each entry its index and write an entry i with index j as i j Now if some Littlewood Richardson tableau contains an entry i gt 1 displaystyle i gt 1 nbsp with index j then that entry i j should occur in a row strictly below that of i 1 j displaystyle i 1 j nbsp which certainly also occurs since the entry i 1 occurs as least as often as the entry i does In fact the entry i j should also occur in a column no further to the right than that same entry i 1 j displaystyle i 1 j nbsp which at first sight appears to be a stricter condition If the weight of the Littlewood Richardson tableau is fixed beforehand then one can form a fixed collection of indexed entries and if these are placed in a way respecting those geometric restrictions in addition to those of semistandard tableaux and the condition that indexed copies of the same entries should respect right to left ordering of the indexes then the resulting tableaux are guaranteed to be Littlewood Richardson tableaux An algorithmic form of the rule editThe Littlewood Richardson as stated above gives a combinatorial expression for individual Littlewood Richardson coefficients but gives no indication of a practical method to enumerate the Littlewood Richardson tableaux in order to find the values of these coefficients Indeed for given l m n displaystyle lambda mu nu nbsp there is no simple criterion to determine whether any Littlewood Richardson tableaux of shape n l displaystyle nu lambda nbsp and of weight m displaystyle mu nbsp exist at all although there are a number of necessary conditions the simplest of which is l m n displaystyle lambda mu nu nbsp therefore it seems inevitable that in some cases one has to go through an elaborate search only to find that no solutions exist Nevertheless the rule leads to a quite efficient procedure to determine the full decomposition of a product of Schur functions in other words to determine all coefficients c l m n displaystyle c lambda mu nu nbsp for fixed l and m but varying n This fixes the weight of the Littlewood Richardson tableaux to be constructed and the inner part l of their shape but leaves the outer part n free Since the weight is known the set of indexed entries in the geometric description is fixed Now for successive indexed entries all possible positions allowed by the geometric restrictions can be tried in a backtracking search The entries can be tried in increasing order while among equal entries they can be tried by decreasing index The latter point is the key to efficiency of the search procedure the entry i j is then restricted to be in a column to the right of i j 1 displaystyle i j 1 nbsp but no further to the right than i 1 j displaystyle i 1 j nbsp if such entries are present This strongly restricts the set of possible positions but always leaves at least one valid position for i j displaystyle i j nbsp thus every placement of an entry will give rise to at least one complete Littlewood Richardson tableau and the search tree contains no dead ends A similar method can be used to find all coefficients c l m n displaystyle c lambda mu nu nbsp for fixed l and n but varying m Littlewood Richardson coefficients editThe Littlewood Richardson coefficients cnlm appear in the following interrelated ways They are the structure constants for the product in the ring of symmetric functions with respect to the basis of Schur functionss l s m c l m n s n displaystyle s lambda s mu sum c lambda mu nu s nu nbsp dd or equivalently cnlm is the inner product of sn and slsm They express skew Schur functions in terms of Schur functionss n l m c l m n s m displaystyle s nu lambda sum mu c lambda mu nu s mu nbsp dd The cnlm appear as intersection numbers on a Grassmannian s l s m c l m n s n displaystyle sigma lambda sigma mu sum c lambda mu nu sigma nu nbsp dd where sm is the class of the Schubert variety of a Grassmannian corresponding to m cnlm is the number of times the irreducible representation Vl Vm of the product of symmetric groups S l S m appears in the restriction of the representation Vn of S n to S l S m By Frobenius reciprocity this is also the number of times that Vn occurs in the representation of S n induced from Vl Vm The cnlm appear in the decomposition of the tensor product Fulton 1997 of two Schur modules irreducible representations of special linear groups E l E m n E n c l m n displaystyle E lambda otimes E mu bigoplus nu E nu oplus c lambda mu nu nbsp dd cnlm is the number of standard Young tableaux of shape n m that are jeu de taquin equivalent to some fixed standard Young tableau of shape l cnlm is the number of Littlewood Richardson tableaux of shape n l and of weight m cnlm is the number of pictures between m and n l Special cases editPieri s formula edit Pieri s formula which is the special case of the Littlewood Richardson rule in the case when one of the partitions has only one part states that S m S n l S l displaystyle S mu S n sum lambda S lambda nbsp where Sn is the Schur function of a partition with one row and the sum is over all partitions l obtained from m by adding n elements to its Ferrers diagram no two in the same column Rectangular partitions edit If both partitions are rectangular in shape the sum is also multiplicity free Okada 1998 Fix a b p and q positive integers with p displaystyle geq nbsp q Denote by a p displaystyle a p nbsp the partition with p parts of length a The partitions indexing nontrivial components of s a p s b q displaystyle s a p s b q nbsp are those partitions l displaystyle lambda nbsp with length p q displaystyle leq p q nbsp such that l q 1 l q 2 l p a displaystyle lambda q 1 lambda q 2 cdots lambda p a nbsp l q m a x a b displaystyle lambda q geq mathrm max a b nbsp l i l p q i 1 a b i 1 q displaystyle lambda i lambda p q i 1 a b quad i 1 dots q nbsp For example nbsp Generalizations editReduced Kronecker coefficients of the symmetric group edit The reduced Kronecker coefficient of the symmetric group C l m n displaystyle bar C lambda mu nu nbsp is a generalization of c l m n displaystyle c lambda mu nu nbsp to three arbitrary Young diagrams l m n displaystyle lambda mu nu nbsp which is symmetric under permutations of the three diagrams Skew Schur functions edit Zelevinsky 1981 extended the Littlewood Richardson rule to skew Schur functions as follows s l s m n l w T j P s l w T displaystyle s lambda s mu nu sum lambda omega T geq j in P s lambda omega T nbsp where the sum is over all tableaux T on m n such that for all j the sequence of integers l w T j is non increasing and w is the weight Newell Littlewood numbers edit Newell Littlewood numbers are defined from Littlewood Richardson coefficients by the cubic expression 1 N m n l a b g c a b m c a g n c b g l displaystyle N mu nu lambda sum alpha beta gamma c alpha beta mu c alpha gamma nu c beta gamma lambda nbsp Newell Littlewood numbers give some of the tensor product multiplicities of finite dimensional representations of classical Lie groups of the types B C D displaystyle B C D nbsp The non vanishing condition on Young diagram sizes c l m n 0 l m n displaystyle c lambda mu nu neq 0 implies lambda mu nu nbsp leads to N m n l 0 l m n l m l m n 2 Z displaystyle N mu nu lambda neq 0 implies left begin array l lambda mu leq nu leq lambda mu lambda mu nu in 2 mathbb Z end array right nbsp Newell Littlewood numbers are generalizations of Littlewood Richardson coefficients in the sense that m n l N m n l c m n l displaystyle mu nu lambda implies N mu nu lambda c mu nu lambda nbsp Newell Littlewood numbers that involve a Young diagram with only one row obey a Pieri type rule N k m n displaystyle N k mu nu nbsp is the number of ways to remove k m n 2 displaystyle frac k mu nu 2 nbsp boxes from m displaystyle mu nbsp from different columns then add k m n 2 displaystyle frac k mu nu 2 nbsp boxes to different columns to make n displaystyle nu nbsp 1 Newell Littlewood numbers are the structure constants of an associative and commutative algebra whose basis elements are partitions with the product m n l N m n l l displaystyle mu times nu sum lambda N mu nu lambda lambda nbsp For example 1 k k 1 k 1 k 1 Newell Littlewood displaystyle 1 times k k 1 k 1 k 1 quad text Newell Littlewood nbsp 1 k k 1 k 1 Littlewood Richardson displaystyle 1 times k k 1 k 1 quad text Littlewood Richardson nbsp Examples editThe examples of Littlewood Richardson coefficients below are given in terms of products of Schur polynomials Sp indexed by partitions p using the formula S l S m c l m n S n displaystyle S lambda S mu sum c lambda mu nu S nu nbsp All coefficients with n at most 4 are given by S0Sp Sp for any p where S0 1 is the Schur polynomial of the empty partition S1S1 S2 S11 S2S1 S3 S21 S11S1 S111 S21 S3S1 S4 S31 S21S1 S31 S22 S211 S2S2 S4 S31 S22 S2S11 S31 S211 S111S1 S1111 S211 S11S11 S1111 S211 S22Most of the coefficients for small partitions are 0 or 1 which happens in particular whenever one of the factors is of the form Sn or S11 1 because of Pieri s formula and its transposed counterpart The simplest example with a coefficient larger than 1 happens when neither of the factors has this form S21S21 S42 S411 S33 2S321 S3111 S222 S2211 For larger partitions the coefficients become more complicated For example S321S321 S642 S6411 S633 2S6321 S63111 S6222 S62211 S552 S5511 2S543 4S5421 2S54111 3S5331 3S5322 4S53211 S531111 2S52221 S522111 S444 3S4431 2S4422 3S44211 S441111 3S4332 3S43311 4S43221 2S432111 S42222 S422211 S3333 2S33321 S333111 S33222 S332211 with 34 terms and total multiplicity 62 and the largest coefficient is 4 S4321S4321 is a sum of 206 terms with total multiplicity is 930 and the largest coefficient is 18 S54321S54321 is a sum of 1433 terms with total multiplicity 26704 and the largest coefficient that of S86543211 is 176 S654321S654321 is a sum of 10873 terms with total multiplicity is 1458444 so the average value of the coefficients is more than 100 and they can be as large as 2064 The original example given by Littlewood amp Richardson 1934 p 122 124 was after correcting for 3 tableaux they found but forgot to include in the final sum S431S221 S652 S6511 S643 2S6421 S64111 S6331 S6322 S63211 S553 2S5521 S55111 2S5431 2S5422 3S54211 S541111 S5332 S53311 2S53221 S532111 S4432 S44311 2S44221 S442111 S43321 S43222 S432211with 26 terms coming from the following 34 tableaux 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 22 22 2 2 2 2 3 23 2 3 22 2 2 3 3 2 2 3 23 2 3 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 12 12 12 12 2 1 1 2 1 23 2 3 13 22 2 1 2 3 2 2 2 3 23 23 2 3 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 1 3 12 12 1 2 2 2 1 1 23 2 22 13 1 3 2 2 3 3 2 2 3 3 1 1 1 1 1 12 12 1 2 2 11 1 1 23 2 22 13 1 22 12 12 3 3 2 2 3 23 2 3 3 Calculating skew Schur functions is similar For example the 15 Littlewood Richardson tableaux for n 5432 and l 331 are 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 11 11 11 12 11 12 13 13 23 13 13 12 12 23 23 12 13 22 12 23 13 12 24 14 14 22 23 33 13 34 so S5432 331 Scnlm Sm S52 S511 S4111 S2221 2S43 2S3211 2S322 2S331 3S421 Fulton 1997 p 64 Notes edit a b Gao Shiliang Orelowitz Gidon Yong Alexander 2021 Newell Littlewood numbers Trans Amer Math Soc 374 9 6331 6366 arXiv 2005 09012v1 doi 10 1090 tran 8375 S2CID 218684561 References editFulton William 1997 Young tableaux London Mathematical Society Student Texts vol 35 Cambridge University Press p 121 ISBN 978 0 521 56144 0 MR 1464693 Gasharov Vesselin 1998 A short proof of the Littlewood Richardson rule European Journal of Combinatorics 19 4 451 453 doi 10 1006 eujc 1998 0212 ISSN 0195 6698 MR 1630540 James Gordon 1987 The representation theory of the symmetric groups The Arcata Conference on Representations of Finite Groups Arcata Calif 1986 Proc Sympos Pure Math vol 47 Providence R I American Mathematical Society pp 111 126 MR 0933355 Knuth Donald E 1970 Permutations matrices and generalized Young tableaux Pacific Journal of Mathematics 34 3 709 727 doi 10 2140 pjm 1970 34 709 ISSN 0030 8730 MR 0272654 Littelmann Peter 1994 A Littlewood Richardson rule for symmetrizable Kac Moody algebras PDF Invent Math 116 329 346 Bibcode 1994InMat 116 329L doi 10 1007 BF01231564 S2CID 85546837 Littlewood Dudley E 1950 The theory of group characters and matrix representations of groups AMS Chelsea Publishing Providence RI ISBN 978 0 8218 4067 2 MR 0002127 Littlewood D E Richardson A R 1934 Group Characters and Algebra Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series A Containing Papers of a Mathematical or Physical Character The Royal Society 233 721 730 99 141 Bibcode 1934RSPTA 233 99L doi 10 1098 rsta 1934 0015 ISSN 0264 3952 JSTOR 91293 Macdonald I G 1995 Symmetric functions and Hall polynomials Oxford Mathematical Monographs 2nd ed The Clarendon Press Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 853489 1 MR 1354144 archived from the original on 2012 12 11 Okada Soichi 1998 Applications of minor summation formulas to rectangular shaped representations of classical groups Journal of Algebra 205 2 337 367 doi 10 1006 jabr 1997 7408 ISSN 0021 8693 MR 1632816 Robinson G de B 1938 On the Representations of the Symmetric Group American Journal of Mathematics The Johns Hopkins University Press 60 3 745 760 doi 10 2307 2371609 ISSN 0002 9327 JSTOR 2371609 Zbl0019 25102 Schensted C 1961 Longest increasing and decreasing subsequences Canadian Journal of Mathematics 13 179 191 doi 10 4153 CJM 1961 015 3 ISSN 0008 414X MR 0121305 Schutzenberger M P 1963 Quelques remarques sur une construction de Schensted Mathematica Scandinavica 12 117 128 doi 10 7146 math scand a 10676 ISSN 0025 5521 MR 0190017 Schutzenberger Marcel Paul 1977 La correspondance de Robinson Combinatoire et representation du groupe symetrique Actes Table Ronde CNRS Univ Louis Pasteur Strasbourg Strasbourg 1976 Lecture Notes in Mathematics vol 579 Berlin New York Springer Verlag pp 59 113 doi 10 1007 BFb0090012 ISBN 978 3 540 08143 2 MR 0498826 Stembridge John R 2002 A concise proof of the Littlewood Richardson rule PDF Electronic Journal of Combinatorics 9 1 Note 5 4 pp electronic doi 10 37236 1666 ISSN 1077 8926 MR 1912814 Thomas Glanffrwd P 1974 Baxter algebras and Schur functions Ph D Thesis Swansea University College of Swansea van Leeuwen Marc A A 2001 The Littlewood Richardson rule and related combinatorics PDF Interaction of combinatorics and representation theory MSJ Mem vol 11 Tokyo Math Soc Japan pp 95 145 MR 1862150 Zelevinsky A V 1981 A generalization of the Littlewood Richardson rule and the Robinson Schensted Knuth correspondence Journal of Algebra 69 1 82 94 doi 10 1016 0021 8693 81 90128 9 ISSN 0021 8693 MR 0613858External links editAn online program decomposing products of Schur functions using the Littlewood Richardson rule Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Littlewood Richardson rule amp oldid 1136327620, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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