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In mathematics, Schur polynomials, named after Issai Schur, are certain symmetric polynomials in ''n'' variables, indexed by partitions, that generalize the
elementary symmetric polynomial In mathematics, specifically in commutative algebra, the elementary symmetric polynomials are one type of basic building block for symmetric polynomials, in the sense that any symmetric polynomial can be expressed as a polynomial in elementary s ...
s and the complete homogeneous symmetric polynomials. In
representation theory Representation theory is a branch of mathematics that studies abstract algebraic structures by ''representing'' their elements as linear transformations of vector spaces, and studies modules over these abstract algebraic structures. In essen ...
they are the characters of polynomial irreducible representations of the
general linear group In mathematics, the general linear group of degree ''n'' is the set of invertible matrices, together with the operation of ordinary matrix multiplication. This forms a group, because the product of two invertible matrices is again invertible ...
s. The Schur polynomials form a linear basis for the space of all symmetric polynomials. Any product of Schur polynomials can be written as a linear combination of Schur polynomials with non-negative integral coefficients; the values of these coefficients is given combinatorially by the Littlewood–Richardson rule. More generally, skew Schur polynomials are associated with pairs of partitions and have similar properties to Schur polynomials.


Definition (Jacobi's bialternant formula)

Schur polynomials are indexed by
integer partition In number theory and combinatorics, a partition of a positive integer , also called an integer partition, is a way of writing as a sum of positive integers. Two sums that differ only in the order of their summands are considered the same part ...
s. Given a partition , where , and each is a non-negative integer, the functions a_ (x_1, x_2, \dots , x_n) = \det \left \begin x_1^ & x_2^ & \dots & x_n^ \\ x_1^ & x_2^ & \dots & x_n^ \\ \vdots & \vdots & \ddots & \vdots \\ x_1^ & x_2^ & \dots & x_n^ \end \right are alternating polynomials by properties of the
determinant In mathematics, the determinant is a scalar value that is a function of the entries of a square matrix. It characterizes some properties of the matrix and the linear map represented by the matrix. In particular, the determinant is nonzero if ...
. A polynomial is alternating if it changes sign under any transposition of the variables. Since they are alternating, they are all divisible by the Vandermonde determinant a_ (x_1, x_2, \dots , x_n) = \det \left \begin x_1^ & x_2^ & \dots & x_n^ \\ x_1^ & x_2^ & \dots & x_n^ \\ \vdots & \vdots & \ddots & \vdots \\ 1 & 1 & \dots & 1 \end \right= \prod_ (x_j-x_k). The Schur polynomials are defined as the ratio s_ (x_1, x_2, \dots , x_n) = \frac . This is known as the bialternant formula of Jacobi. It is a special case of the Weyl character formula. This is a symmetric function because the numerator and denominator are both alternating, and a polynomial since all alternating polynomials are divisible by the Vandermonde determinant.


Properties

The degree Schur polynomials in variables are a linear basis for the space of homogeneous degree symmetric polynomials in variables. For a partition , the Schur polynomial is a sum of monomials, : s_\lambda(x_1,x_2,\ldots,x_n)=\sum_T x^T = \sum_T x_1^\cdots x_n^ where the summation is over all semistandard Young tableaux of shape . The exponents give the weight of , in other words each counts the occurrences of the number in . This can be shown to be equivalent to the definition from the first Giambelli formula using the Lindström–Gessel–Viennot lemma (as outlined on that page). Schur polynomials can be expressed as linear combinations of monomial symmetric functions with non-negative integer coefficients called Kostka numbers, : s_\lambda= \sum_\mu K_m_\mu.\ The Kostka numbers are given by the number of semi-standard Young tableaux of shape ''λ'' and weight ''μ''.


Jacobi−Trudi identities

The first Jacobi−Trudi formula expresses the Schur polynomial as a determinant in terms of the complete homogeneous symmetric polynomials, : s_ = \det(h_)_^ = \det\left \begin h_ & h_ & \dots & h_ \\ h_ & h_ & \dots & h_ \\ \vdots & \vdots & \ddots & \vdots \\ h_ & h_ & \dots & h_ \end \right where . The second Jacobi-Trudi formula expresses the Schur polynomial as a determinant in terms of the
elementary symmetric polynomial In mathematics, specifically in commutative algebra, the elementary symmetric polynomials are one type of basic building block for symmetric polynomials, in the sense that any symmetric polynomial can be expressed as a polynomial in elementary s ...
s, : s_ = \det(e_)_^ = \det\left \begin e_ & e_ & \dots & e_ \\ e_ & e_ & \dots & e_ \\ \vdots & \vdots & \ddots & \vdots \\ e_ & e_ & \dots & e_ \end \right where and is the conjugate partition to . In both identities, functions with negative subscripts are defined to be zero.


The Giambelli identity

Another determinantal identity is Giambelli's formula, which expresses the Schur function for an arbitrary partition in terms of those for the ''hook partitions'' contained within the Young diagram. In Frobenius' notation, the partition is denoted : (a_1, \ldots, a_r\mid b_1, \ldots, b_r) where, for each diagonal element in position , denotes the number of boxes to the right in the same row and denotes the number of boxes beneath it in the same column (the ''arm'' and ''leg'' lengths, respectively). The Giambelli identity expresses the Schur function corresponding to this partition as the determinant : s_ = \det ( s_) of those for hook partitions.


The Cauchy identity

The Cauchy identity for Schur functions (now in infinitely many variables), and its dual state that :\sum_\lambda s_\lambda(x) s_(y) = \sum_\lambda m_\lambda(x) h_(y)= \prod_ (1-x_i y_j)^, and :\sum_\lambda s_\lambda(x) s_(y) = \sum_\lambda m_\lambda(x) e_(y) = \prod_ (1+x_i y_j), where the sum is taken over all partitions ''λ'', and h_(x), e_(x) denote the ''complete symmetric functions'' and ''elementary symmetric functions'', respectively. If the sum is taken over products of Schur polynomials in n variables (x_1, \dots, x_n), the sum includes only partitions of length \ell(\lambda) \le n since otherwise the Schur polynomials vanish. There are many generalizations of these identities to other families of symmetric functions. For example, Macdonald polynomials, Schubert polynomials and Grothendieck polynomials admit Cauchy-like identities.


Further identities

The Schur polynomial can also be computed via a specialization of a formula for
Hall–Littlewood polynomials In mathematics, the Hall–Littlewood polynomials are symmetric functions depending on a parameter ''t'' and a partition λ. They are Schur functions when ''t'' is 0 and monomial symmetric functions when ''t'' is 1 and are special cases of ...
, : s_(x_1,\dotsc,x_n) = \sum_ w\left( x^\lambda \prod_ \frac \right) where S^_n is the subgroup of permutations such that \lambda_=\lambda_i for all ''i'', and ''w'' acts on variables by permuting indices.


The Murnaghan−Nakayama rule

The Murnaghan–Nakayama rule expresses a product of a power-sum symmetric function with a Schur polynomial, in terms of Schur polynomials: :p_r \cdot s_\lambda = \sum_ (-1)^s_\mu where the sum is over all partitions ''μ'' such that ''μ''/''λ'' is a rim-hook of size ''r'' and ''ht''(''μ''/''λ'') is the number of rows in the diagram ''μ''/''λ''.


The Littlewood–Richardson rule and Pieri's formula

The Littlewood–Richardson coefficients depend on three partitions, say \lambda,\mu,\nu, of which \lambda and \mu describe the Schur functions being multiplied, and \nu gives the Schur function of which this is the coefficient in the linear combination; in other words they are the coefficients c_^\nu such that :s_\lambda s_\mu=\sum_\nu c_^\nu s_\nu. The Littlewood–Richardson rule states that c_^\nu is equal to the number of Littlewood–Richardson tableaux of skew shape \nu/\lambda and of weight \mu.
Pieri's formula In mathematics, Pieri's formula, named after Mario Pieri, describes the product of a Schubert cycle by a special Schubert cycle in the Schubert calculus, or the product of a Schur polynomial by a complete symmetric function. In terms of Schur fu ...
is a special case of the Littlewood-Richardson rule, which expresses the product h_r s_ in terms of Schur polynomials. The dual version expresses e_r s_ in terms of Schur polynomials.


Specializations

Evaluating the Schur polynomial in gives the number of semi-standard Young tableaux of shape with entries in . One can show, by using the Weyl character formula for example, that s_\lambda(1,1,\dots,1) = \prod_ \frac. In this formula, , the tuple indicating the width of each row of the Young diagram, is implicitly extended with zeros until it has length . The sum of the elements is . See also the
Hook length formula In combinatorial mathematics, the hook length formula is a formula for the number of standard Young tableaux whose shape is a given Young diagram. It has applications in diverse areas such as representation theory, probability, and algorithm an ...
which computes the same quantity for fixed ''λ''.


Example

The following extended example should help clarify these ideas. Consider the case ''n'' = 3, ''d'' = 4. Using Ferrers diagrams or some other method, we find that there are just four partitions of 4 into at most three parts. We have : s_ (x_1, x_2, x_3) = \frac \; \det \left \begin x_1^4 & x_2^4 & x_3^4 \\ x_1^2 & x_2^2 & x_3^2 \\ x_1 & x_2 & x_3 \end \right= x_1 \, x_2 \, x_3 \, (x_1 + x_2 + x_3) : s_ (x_1, x_2, x_3) = \frac \; \det \left \begin x_1^4 & x_2^4 & x_3^4 \\ x_1^3 & x_2^3 & x_3^3 \\ 1 & 1 & 1 \end \right x_1^2 \, x_2^2 + x_1^2 \, x_3^2 + x_2^2 \, x_3^2 + x_1^2 \, x_2 \, x_3 + x_1 \, x_2^2 \, x_3 + x_1 \, x_2 \, x_3^2 and so on, where \Delta is the Vandermonde determinant a_(x_1,x_2,x_3) . Summarizing: # s_ = e_1 \, e_3 # s_ = e_2^2 - e_1 \, e_3 # s_ = e_1^2 \, e_2 - e_2^2 - e_1 \, e_3 # s_ = e_1^4 - 3 \, e_1^2 \, e_2 + 2 \, e_1 \, e_3 + e_2^2. Every homogeneous degree-four symmetric polynomial in three variables can be expressed as a unique ''linear combination'' of these four Schur polynomials, and this combination can again be found using a
Gröbner basis In mathematics, and more specifically in computer algebra, computational algebraic geometry, and computational commutative algebra, a Gröbner basis is a particular kind of generating set of an ideal in a polynomial ring over a field . A Grö ...
for an appropriate elimination order. For example, :\phi(x_1, x_2, x_3) = x_1^4 + x_2^4 + x_3^4 is obviously a symmetric polynomial which is homogeneous of degree four, and we have :\phi = s_ - s_ + s_.\,\!


Relation to representation theory

The Schur polynomials occur in the
representation theory of the symmetric group In mathematics, the representation theory of the symmetric group is a particular case of the representation theory of finite groups, for which a concrete and detailed theory can be obtained. This has a large area of potential applications, from s ...
s,
general linear group In mathematics, the general linear group of degree ''n'' is the set of invertible matrices, together with the operation of ordinary matrix multiplication. This forms a group, because the product of two invertible matrices is again invertible ...
s, and
unitary group In mathematics, the unitary group of degree ''n'', denoted U(''n''), is the group of unitary matrices, with the group operation of matrix multiplication. The unitary group is a subgroup of the general linear group . Hyperorthogonal group i ...
s. The Weyl character formula implies that the Schur polynomials are the characters of finite-dimensional irreducible representations of the general linear groups, and helps to generalize Schur's work to other compact and semisimple
Lie group In mathematics, a Lie group (pronounced ) is a group that is also a differentiable manifold. A manifold is a space that locally resembles Euclidean space, whereas groups define the abstract concept of a binary operation along with the addit ...
s. Several expressions arise for this relation, one of the most important being the expansion of the Schur functions ''s''λ in terms of the symmetric power functions p_k=\sum_i x_i^k. If we write χ for the character of the representation of the symmetric group indexed by the partition λ evaluated at elements of cycle type indexed by the partition ρ, then :s_\lambda = \sum_ \frac p_\nu = \sum_\chi^\lambda_\rho \prod_k \frac, where ρ = (1''r''1, 2''r''2, 3''r''3, ...) means that the partition ρ has ''r''''k'' parts of length ''k''. A proof of this can be found in R. Stanley's Enumerative Combinatorics Volume 2, Corollary 7.17.5. The integers χ can be computed using the Murnaghan–Nakayama rule.


Schur positivity

Due to the connection with representation theory, a symmetric function which expands positively in Schur functions are of particular interest. For example, the skew Schur functions expand positively in the ordinary Schur functions, and the coefficients are Littlewood–Richardson coefficients. A special case of this is the expansion of the complete homogeneous symmetric functions ''h''λ in Schur functions. This decomposition reflects how a permutation module is decomposed into irreducible representations.


Methods for proving Schur positivity

There are several approaches to prove Schur positivity of a given symmetric function ''F''. If ''F'' is described in a combinatorial manner, a direct approach is to produce a bijection with semi-standard Young tableaux. The Edelman–Greene correspondence and the Robinson–Schensted–Knuth correspondence are examples of such bijections. A bijection with more structure is a proof using so called
crystals A crystal or crystalline solid is a solid material whose constituents (such as atoms, molecules, or ions) are arranged in a highly ordered microscopic structure, forming a crystal lattice that extends in all directions. In addition, macros ...
. This method can be described as defining a certain graph structure described with local rules on the underlying combinatorial objects. A similar idea is the notion of dual equivalence. This approach also uses a graph structure, but on the objects representing the expansion in the fundamental quasisymmetric basis. It is closely related to the RSK-correspondence.


Generalizations


Skew Schur functions

Skew Schur functions ''s''λ/μ depend on two partitions λ and μ, and can be defined by the property :\langle s_,s_\nu\rangle = \langle s_,s_\mu s_\nu\rangle. Here, the inner product is the Hall inner product, for which the Schur polynomials form an orthonormal basis. Similar to the ordinary Schur polynomials, there are numerous ways to compute these. The corresponding Jacobi-Trudi identities are :s_ = \det(h_)_^ :s_ = \det(e_)_^ There is also a combinatorial interpretation of the skew Schur polynomials, namely it is a sum over all semi-standard Young tableaux (or column-strict tableaux) of the skew shape \lambda/\mu. The skew Schur polynomials expands positively in Schur polynomials. A rule for the coefficients is given by the Littlewood-Richardson rule.


Double Schur polynomials

The double Schur polynomials can be seen as a generalization of the shifted Schur polynomials. These polynomials are also closely related to the factorial Schur polynomials. Given a partition , and a sequence one can define the double Schur polynomial as s_\lambda(x, , a) = \sum_T \prod_(x_ - a_) where the sum is taken over all ''reverse'' semi-standard Young tableaux of shape , and integer entries in . Here denotes the value in the box in and is the content of the box. A combinatorial rule for the Littlewood-Richardson coefficients (depending on the sequence ''a'') was given by A.I Molev. In particular, this implies that the shifted Schur polynomials have non-negative Littlewood-Richardson coefficients. The shifted Schur polynomials can be obtained from the double Schur polynomials by specializing and . The double Schur polynomials are special cases of the double Schubert polynomials.


Factorial Schur polynomials

The factorial Schur polynomials may be defined as follows. Given a partition λ, and a doubly infinite sequence …,''a''−1, ''a''0, ''a''1, … one can define the factorial Schur polynomial ''s''λ(''x'', ''a'') as s_\lambda(x, a) = \sum_T \prod_(x_ - a_) where the sum is taken over all semi-standard Young tableaux ''T'' of shape λ, and integer entries in 1, …, ''n''. Here ''T''(α) denotes the value in the box α in ''T'' and c(α) is the content of the box. There is also a determinant formula, s_\lambda(x, a) = \frac where (''y'', ''a'')''k'' = (''y'' − ''a''1) ... (''y'' − ''a''''k''). It is clear that if we let for all ''i'', we recover the usual Schur polynomial ''s''λ. The double Schur polynomials and the factorial Schur polynomials in ''n'' variables are related via the identity ''s''λ(''x'', , ''a'') = ''s''λ(''x'', ''u'') where ''a''''n''−''i''+1 = ''u''''i''.


Other generalizations

There are numerous generalizations of Schur polynomials: *
Hall–Littlewood polynomials In mathematics, the Hall–Littlewood polynomials are symmetric functions depending on a parameter ''t'' and a partition λ. They are Schur functions when ''t'' is 0 and monomial symmetric functions when ''t'' is 1 and are special cases of ...
* Shifted Schur polynomials * Flagged Schur polynomials * Schubert polynomials * Stanley symmetric functions (also known as stable Schubert polynomials) * Key polynomials (also known as Demazure characters) * Quasi-symmetric Schur polynomials * Row-strict Schur polynomials * Jack polynomials * Modular Schur polynomials * Loop Schur functions *
Macdonald polynomial In mathematics, Macdonald polynomials ''P''λ(''x''; ''t'',''q'') are a family of orthogonal symmetric polynomials in several variables, introduced by Macdonald in 1987. He later introduced a non-symmetric generalization in 1995. Macdonald origin ...
s * Schur polynomials for the symplectic and orthogonal group. * ''k''-Schur functions * Grothendieck polynomials ( ''K''-theoretical analogue of Schur polynomials) *
LLT polynomial In mathematics, an LLT polynomial is one of a family of symmetric functions introduced by Alain Lascoux, Bernard Leclerc, and Jean-Yves Thibon (1997) as ''q''-analogues of products of Schur functions. J. Haglund, M. Haiman, N. Loehr (2005) show ...
s


See also

* Schur functor * Littlewood–Richardson rule, where one finds some identities involving Schur polynomials.


References

* * * *{{Fulton-Harris Homogeneous polynomials Invariant theory Representation theory of finite groups Symmetric functions Orthogonal polynomials