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Latest revision as of 11:35, 7 July 2024

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Quivers, invariants and quotient correspondence
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    Quivers, invariants and quotient correspondence (English)
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    11 March 2014
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    A quiver \(Q\) is a directed graph having a finite number of vertices \(V\), a set of arrows \(A\), and two functions \(h,t:A\to V\). Any image of \(h\) is called the \textit{head} of the corresponding arrow, likewise any image of \(t\) is called a \textit{tail}. \(Q\) is said to be of \textit{ladder type} if \(V\) is the disjoint union of a set of heads \(H\) with a set of tails \(T\). With respect to a fixed dimension vector for \(Q\) (assigning to each vertex a natural number), there is a product of general linear groups with respect to \(H\) (denoted by \(G_H\)) and also with respect to \(T\) (denoted by \(G_T\)). The author likewise defines products of Grassmannians \(X_T\) and \(X_H\) where \(G_H\) and \(G_T\) respectively act. The main theorem of this paper states that the set of GIT quotients of \(X_T\) by \(G_H\) and the set of GIT quotients of \(X_H\) by \(G_T\) are in one-to-one correspondence. The proof comes down to the observation that the moduli space of representations of \(Q\), since \(Q\) is of ladder type, can be obtained by first taking a quotient by \(G_H\) resulting in \(X_H\) and then by \(G_T\), or by first taking the quotient by \(G_T\) resulting in \(X_T\) and then by \(G_H\). Later a similar theorem is described with respect to parabolic subgroups of the general linear group and with Grassmannians replaced by flag varieties. The remainder of the paper is devoted to algebraic and representation theoretic interpretations of these geometric results.
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    GIT quotients
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    quotient correspondences
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    representation theory
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    branching rules
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