The torus equivariant cohomology rings of Springer varieties (Q290627)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
The torus equivariant cohomology rings of Springer varieties
scientific article

    Statements

    The torus equivariant cohomology rings of Springer varieties (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    3 June 2016
    0 references
    The Springer variety of type \(A\) is a closed subvariety of the flag variety \(\mathrm{Flags} (\mathbb C^n)\) of \(\mathbb C^n\) determined by a nilpotent operator on \(\mathbb C^n\), where the flag variety \(\mathrm{Flags} (\mathbb C^n)\) is the collection of nested linear subspaces \(V_{\bullet} = (0 = V_0 \subset V_1 \subset \cdots \subset V_{n-1} \subset V_n = \mathbb C^n)\) of \(\mathbb C^n\) such that \(\dim_{\mathbb C} V_i = i\) for all i. More precisely, the Springer variety of type \(A\) associated to a nilpotent operator \(N : \mathbb C^n \rightarrow \mathbb C^n\) is a closed subvariety of the flag variety \(\mathrm{Flags} (\mathbb C^n)\) defined by \[ \{V_{\bullet}\in\mathrm{Flags} (\mathbb C^n)\, |\, N V_i \subseteq V_{i-1}\,\text{for all }\, i, 1\leq i \leq n\}. \] When the operator \(N\) is in Jordan canonical form with Jordan blocks of weakly decreasing size \(\lambda = (\lambda_1, \ldots, \lambda_{\ell})\), the Springer variety is denoted by \(S_{\lambda}\). In the 1970s, Springer constructed a representation of the \(n\)-th symmetric group \(S_n\) on the cohomology \(H^* (S_{\lambda}; \mathbb C)\) considered as a complex vector space, and this representation on the top degree part is the irreducible representation of type \(\lambda\). DeConcini and Procesi used this representation to give a presentation of the cohomology ring \(H^* (S_{\lambda}; \mathbb C)\) as a quotient of a polynomial ring by an ideal. Tanisaki gave another set of generators of this ideal which simplifies their presentation; this ideal is now called Tanisaki's ideal. In this paper the authors give an explicit presentation of the \(T^{\ell}\)-equivariant cohomology ring \({H^*}_{T^{\ell}} (S_{\lambda}; \mathbb Z)\) where \(T^{\ell}\) is the torus that is constant on each Jordan block of \(N\). In more detail, they give a presentation as the quotient of a polynomial ring by an ideal whose generators generalize the generators of Tanisaki's ideal. The main technique in this paper is localization; the inclusion map \({S_{\lambda}}^{T^{\ell}} \rightarrow S_{\lambda}\) from the fixed point set induces an injection \({H^*}_{T^{\ell}} (S_{\lambda}; \mathbb Z)\rightarrow {H^*}_{T^{\ell}} ({S_{\lambda}}^{T^{\ell}}; \mathbb Z)\) on the equivariant cohomology rings where the target ring is isomorphic to a finite direct sum of copies of \({H^*}_{T^{\ell}} (\mathrm{pt}; \mathbb Z)\). In many situations, computations are easier in the target ring. This is a well-known tool to study torus equivariant cohomology rings.
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    Springer variety
    0 references
    Tanisaki's ideal
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references