Combinatorics and topology related to involutions in Coxeter groups


Book Description

This dissertation consists of three papers in combinatorial Coxeter group theory. A Coxeter group is a group W generated by a set S, where all relations can be derived from the relations s2 = e for all s ?? S, and (ss?)m(s,s?) = e for some pairs of generators s ? s? in S, where e ?? W is the identity element and m(s, s?) is an integer satisfying that m(s, s?) = m(s?, s) ? 2. Two prominent examples of Coxeter groups are provided by the symmetric group Sn (i.e., the set of permutations of {1, 2, . . . , n}) and finite reflection groups (i.e., finite groups generated by reflections in some real euclidean space). There are also important infinite Coxeter groups, e.g., affine reflection groups. Every Coxeter group can be equipped with various natural partial orders, the most important of which is the Bruhat order. Any subset of a Coxeter group can then be viewed as an induced subposet. In Paper A, we study certain posets of this kind, namely, unions of conjugacy classes of involutions in the symmetric group. We obtain a complete classification of the posets that are pure (i.e., all maximal chains have the same length). In particular, we prove that the set of involutions with exactly one fixed point is pure, which settles a conjecture of Hultman in the affirmative. When the posets are pure, we give their rank functions. We also give a short, new proof of the EL-shellability of the set of fixed-point-free involutions, established by Can, Cherniavsky, and Twelbeck. Paper B also deals with involutions in Coxeter groups. Given an involutive automorphism ? of a Coxeter system (W, S), let ?(?) = {w ?? W | ?(w) = w?1} be the set of twisted involutions. In particular, ?(id) is the set of ordinary involutions in W. It is known that twisted involutions can be represented by words in the alphabet = { | s ?? S}, called -expressions. If ss? has finite order m(s, s?), let a braid move be the replacement of ? ? by ? ? ?, both consisting of m(s, s?) letters. We prove a word property for ?(?), for any Coxeter system (W, S) with any ?. More precisely, we provide a minimal set of moves, easily determined from the Coxeter graph of (W, S), that can be added to the braid moves in order to connect all reduced -expressions for any given w ?? ?(?). This improves upon a result of Hamaker, Marberg, and Pawlowski, and generalises similar statements valid in certain types due to Hu, Zhang, Wu, and Marberg. In Paper C, we investigate the topology of (the order complexes of) certain posets, called pircons. A special partial matching (SPM) on a poset is a matching of the Hasse diagram satisfying certain extra conditions. An SPM without fixed points is precisely a special matching as defined by Brenti. Let a pircon be a poset in which every non-trivial principal order ideal is finite and admits an SPM. Thus pircons generalise Marietti’s zircons. Our main result is that every open interval in a pircon is a PL ball or a PL sphere. An important subset of ?(?) is the set ??(?) = {?(w?1)w | w ?? W} of twisted identities. We prove that if ? does not flip any edges with odd labels in the Coxeter graph, then ??(?), with the order induced by the Bruhat order on W, is a pircon. Hence, its open intervals are PL balls or spheres, which confirms a conjecture of Hultman. It is also demonstrated that Bruhat orders on Rains and Vazirani’s quasiparabolic W-sets (under a boundedness assumption) form pircons. In particular, this applies to all parabolic quotients of Coxeter groups.




Combinatorics and Topology Related to Involutions in Coxeter Groups


Book Description

This dissertation consists of three papers in combinatorial Coxeter group theory. A Coxeter group is a group W generated by a set S , where all relations can be derived from the relations s 2 = e for all s.




Quotients of Coxeter Complexes and $P$-Partitions


Book Description

This is a study of some of the combinatorial and topological properties of finite Coxeter complexes. The author begins by studying some of the general topological and algebraic properties of quotients of Coxeter complexes, and determines when they are pseudomanifolds (with or without boundary) and when they are Cohen-Macaulay or Gorenstein over a field. The paper also examines quotients of Coxeter complexes by cyclic subgroups generated by Coxeter elements.







Combinatorics of Coxeter Groups


Book Description

Includes a rich variety of exercises to accompany the exposition of Coxeter groups Coxeter groups have already been exposited from algebraic and geometric perspectives, but this book will be presenting the combinatorial aspects of Coxeter groups




The Geometry and Topology of Coxeter Groups


Book Description

The Geometry and Topology of Coxeter Groups is a comprehensive and authoritative treatment of Coxeter groups from the viewpoint of geometric group theory. Groups generated by reflections are ubiquitous in mathematics, and there are classical examples of reflection groups in spherical, Euclidean, and hyperbolic geometry. Any Coxeter group can be realized as a group generated by reflection on a certain contractible cell complex, and this complex is the principal subject of this book. The book explains a theorem of Moussong that demonstrates that a polyhedral metric on this cell complex is nonpositively curved, meaning that Coxeter groups are "CAT(0) groups." The book describes the reflection group trick, one of the most potent sources of examples of aspherical manifolds. And the book discusses many important topics in geometric group theory and topology, including Hopf's theory of ends; contractible manifolds and homology spheres; the Poincaré Conjecture; and Gromov's theory of CAT(0) spaces and groups. Finally, the book examines connections between Coxeter groups and some of topology's most famous open problems concerning aspherical manifolds, such as the Euler Characteristic Conjecture and the Borel and Singer conjectures.







Reflection Groups and Coxeter Groups


Book Description

This graduate textbook presents a concrete and up-to-date introduction to the theory of Coxeter groups. The book is self-contained, making it suitable either for courses and seminars or for self-study. The first part is devoted to establishing concrete examples. Finite reflection groups acting on Euclidean spaces are discussed, and the first part ends with the construction of the affine Weyl groups, a class of Coxeter groups that plays a major role in Lie theory. The second part (which is logically independent of, but motivated by, the first) develops from scratch the properties of Coxeter groups in general, including the Bruhat ordering and the seminal work of Kazhdan and Lusztig on representations of Hecke algebras associated with Coxeter groups is introduced. Finally a number of interesting complementary topics as well as connections with Lie theory are sketched. The book concludes with an extensive bibliography on Coxeter groups and their applications.




Rigidity and Symmetry


Book Description

This book contains recent contributions to the fields of rigidity and symmetry with two primary focuses: to present the mathematically rigorous treatment of rigidity of structures and to explore the interaction of geometry, algebra and combinatorics. Contributions present recent trends and advances in discrete geometry, particularly in the theory of polytopes. The rapid development of abstract polytope theory has resulted in a rich theory featuring an attractive interplay of methods and tools from discrete geometry, group theory, classical geometry, hyperbolic geometry and topology. Overall, the book shows how researchers from diverse backgrounds explore connections among the various discrete structures with symmetry as the unifying theme. The volume will be a valuable source as an introduction to the ideas of both combinatorial and geometric rigidity theory and its applications, incorporating the surprising impact of symmetry. It will appeal to students at both the advanced undergraduate and graduate levels, as well as post docs, structural engineers and chemists.




Generalised Ramsey numbers and Bruhat order on involutions


Book Description

This thesis consists of two papers within two different areas of combinatorics. Ramsey theory is a classic topic in graph theory, and Paper A deals with two of its most fundamental problems: to compute Ramsey numbers and to characterise critical graphs. More precisely, we study generalised Ramsey numbers for two sets ?1 and ?2 of cycles. We determine, in particular, all generalised Ramsey numbers R(?1, ?2) such that ?1 or ?2 contains a cycle of length at most 6, or the shortest cycle in each set is even. This generalises previous results of Erdös, Faudree, Rosta, Rousseau, and Schelp. Furthermore, we give a conjecture for the general case. We also characterise many (?1, ?2)-critical graphs. As special cases, we obtain complete characterisations of all (Cn,C3)-critical graphs for n ? 5, and all (Cn,C5)-critical graphs for n ? 6. In Paper B, we study the combinatorics of certain partially ordered sets. These posets are unions of conjugacy classes of involutions in the symmetric group Sn, with the order induced by the Bruhat order on Sn. We obtain a complete characterisation of the posets that are graded. In particular, we prove that the set of involutions with exactly one fixed point is graded, which settles a conjecture of Hultman in the affirmative. When the posets are graded, we give their rank functions. We also give a short, new proof of the EL-shellability of the set of fixed-point-free involutions, recently proved by Can, Cherniavsky, and Twelbeck.