Buildings and Hecke algebras. (Q2491799)
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English | Buildings and Hecke algebras. |
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Buildings and Hecke algebras. (English)
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29 May 2006
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Starting with \(G=\text{PGL}(n+1,F)\), where \(F\) is a local field, consider the group \(K=\text{GLP}(n+1,{\mathcal O})\) over the valuation ring of \(F\). It is known that the space of bi-\(K\)-invariant, compactly supported functions on \(G\) is a commutative algebra [\textit{I. G. Macdonald}, Publ. Ramanujan Inst. 2, 79 p. (1971; Zbl 0302.43018)] and after associating to \(G\) a so-called `building' \(\mathcal X\) that commutative algebra appears to be isomorphic to an algebra \(\mathcal A\) of averaging operators defined on the space of all functions \(G/K\to\mathbb{C}\). Later [\textit{D. I. Cartwright}, Monatsh. Math. 133, No. 2, 93-109 (2001; Zbl 1008.51019)] it was shown that \(\mathcal A\) is commutative and that the algebra homomorphisms \(h\colon{\mathcal A}\to\mathbb{C}\) can be expressed as classical Hall-Littlewood polynomials [\textit{I. G. Macdonald}, Symmetric functions and Hall polynomials. 2nd ed. Oxford: Clarendon Press (1995; Zbl 0824.05059)]. The aim of this paper is to put everything in a more general setting by a combinatorial study of two algebras of averaging operators associated to buildings, providing the close connection between those buildings and Hecke algebras. It is outside the scope of this review to go into detail: the paper develops the background needed step by step, building up to the `climax' given by the proof that the aforementioned algebra \(\mathcal A\) is isomorphic to the center of an appropriately parameterized affine Hecke algebra.
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locally finite regular buildings
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Hecke algebras
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Macdonald spherical functions
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association schemes
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hypergroups
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