Irregular and singular loci of commuting varieties (Q1024599): Difference between revisions

From MaRDI portal
Importer (talk | contribs)
Created a new Item
 
Added link to MaRDI item.
links / mardi / namelinks / mardi / name
 

Revision as of 22:06, 30 January 2024

scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Irregular and singular loci of commuting varieties
scientific article

    Statements

    Irregular and singular loci of commuting varieties (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    17 June 2009
    0 references
    Let \(\mathfrak g\) be a noncommutative reductive Lie algebra. The commuting variety \(\mathcal C=\mathcal C(\mathfrak g)\subset \mathfrak g\times \mathfrak g\) is defined as the set of pairs of commuting elements: \(\mathcal C=\{(x,y): [x,y]=0\}\). This paper is devoted to the study of the singularities of \(\mathcal C\). The author proves that the variety \(\mathcal C\) is always singular, and obtains a lower bound for the codimension of the singular locus \(\mathcal C^{\mathrm{sing}}\subset \mathcal C\). Namely, he shows that \(\mathrm{codim}_{\mathcal C}\mathcal C^{\mathrm{sing}}\geq 5-l\), where \(l=l(\mathfrak g)\) is the ``lacety'' of \(\mathfrak g\): i.e., \(l=1\) for \(\mathfrak g\) simply-laced, \(l=2\) for a non-simply laced algebra \(\mathfrak g\) not containing simple ideals of type \(\mathrm G_2\), and 3 otherwise. In particular, \(\mathrm{codim}_{\mathcal C}\mathcal C^{\mathrm{sing}}\) is always greater than or equal to 2, so this may be considered as an evidence in favor of the long-standing conjecture stating the normality of \(\mathcal C\). To prove this, the author considers the natural action of the adjoint group \(G\) of \(\mathfrak g\) on \(\mathcal C\) and defines the set \(\mathcal C^{\mathrm{irr}}\subset\mathcal C\) of irregular points as the set of points inside \(\mathcal C\) whose \(G\)-stabilizers for this action have the dimension greater than \(\mathrm{rk}\; G\), i.e. the dimension of the stabilizer for a generic point in \(\mathcal C\). Then he proves the inclusion \(\mathcal C^{\mathrm{sing}}\subset\mathcal C^{\mathrm{irr}}\) and estimates the dimension of \(\mathcal C^{\mathrm{irr}}\) by Lie-algebraic methods. Finally, he proves that the variety \(\mathcal C\) is always rational.
    0 references
    commuting variety
    0 references
    singular locus
    0 references
    decomposition class
    0 references
    irregular element
    0 references
    semisimple element
    0 references
    nilpotent element
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references