Semistandard Tableau
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mathematics Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, a Young tableau (; plural: tableaux) is a
combinatorial Combinatorics is an area of mathematics primarily concerned with counting, both as a means and as an end to obtaining results, and certain properties of finite structures. It is closely related to many other areas of mathematics and has many ...
object useful in
representation theory Representation theory is a branch of mathematics that studies abstract algebra, abstract algebraic structures by ''representing'' their element (set theory), elements as linear transformations of vector spaces, and studies Module (mathematics), ...
and
Schubert calculus In mathematics, Schubert calculus is a branch of algebraic geometry introduced in the nineteenth century by Hermann Schubert in order to solve various counting problems of projective geometry and, as such, is viewed as part of enumerative geometr ...
. It provides a convenient way to describe the
group representation In the mathematical field of representation theory, group representations describe abstract groups in terms of bijective linear transformations of a vector space to itself (i.e. vector space automorphisms); in particular, they can be used ...
s of the
symmetric Symmetry () in everyday life refers to a sense of harmonious and beautiful proportion and balance. In mathematics, the term has a more precise definition and is usually used to refer to an object that is invariant under some transformations ...
and general linear groups and to study their properties. Young tableaux were introduced by Alfred Young, a
mathematician A mathematician is someone who uses an extensive knowledge of mathematics in their work, typically to solve mathematical problems. Mathematicians are concerned with numbers, data, quantity, mathematical structure, structure, space, Mathematica ...
at
Cambridge University The University of Cambridge is a Public university, public collegiate university, collegiate research university in Cambridge, England. Founded in 1209, the University of Cambridge is the List of oldest universities in continuous operation, wo ...
, in 1900. They were then applied to the study of the symmetric group by
Georg Frobenius Ferdinand Georg Frobenius (26 October 1849 – 3 August 1917) was a German mathematician, best known for his contributions to the theory of elliptic functions, differential equations, number theory, and to group theory. He is known for the famou ...
in 1903. Their theory was further developed by many mathematicians, including Percy MacMahon,
W. V. D. Hodge Sir William Vallance Douglas Hodge (; 17 June 1903 – 7 July 1975) was a British mathematician, specifically a geometer. His discovery of far-reaching topological relations between algebraic geometry and differential geometry—an area no ...
, G. de B. Robinson,
Gian-Carlo Rota Gian-Carlo Rota (April 27, 1932 – April 18, 1999) was an Italian-American mathematician and philosopher. He spent most of his career at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he worked in combinatorics, functional analysis, proba ...
,
Alain Lascoux Alain Lascoux (17 October 1944 – 20 October 2013) was a French mathematician at Université de Paris VII, University of Marne la Vallée and Nankai University. His research was primarily in algebraic combinatorics, particularly Affine Hecke alge ...
,
Marcel-Paul Schützenberger Marcel-Paul "Marco" Schützenberger (24 October 1920 – 29 July 1996) was a French mathematician and Doctor of Medicine. He worked in the fields of formal language, combinatorics, and information theory.Herbert Wilf, Dominique Foata, ''et al.'', ...
and Richard P. Stanley.


Definitions

''Note: this article uses the English convention for displaying Young diagrams and tableaux''.


Diagrams

A Young diagram (also called a
Ferrers diagram In number theory and combinatorics, a partition of a non-negative 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 ...
, particularly when represented using dots) is a finite collection of boxes, or cells, arranged in left-justified rows, with the row lengths in non-increasing order. Listing the number of boxes in each row gives a partition of a non-negative integer , the total number of boxes of the diagram. The Young diagram is said to be of shape , and it carries the same information as that partition. Containment of one Young diagram in another defines a
partial ordering In mathematics, especially order theory, a partial order on a set is an arrangement such that, for certain pairs of elements, one precedes the other. The word ''partial'' is used to indicate that not every pair of elements needs to be comparable; ...
on the set of all partitions, which is in fact a lattice structure, known as
Young's lattice In mathematics, Young's lattice is a lattice that is formed by all integer partitions. It is named after Alfred Young, who, in a series of papers ''On quantitative substitutional analysis,'' developed the representation theory of the symmetric ...
. Listing the number of boxes of a Young diagram in each column gives another partition, the conjugate or ''transpose'' partition of ; one obtains a Young diagram of that shape by reflecting the original diagram along its main diagonal. There is almost universal agreement that in labeling boxes of Young diagrams by pairs of integers, the first index selects the row of the diagram, and the second index selects the box within the row. Nevertheless, two distinct conventions exist to display these diagrams, and consequently tableaux: the first places each row below the previous one, the second stacks each row on top of the previous one. Since the former convention is mainly used by
Anglophones The English-speaking world comprises the 88 countries and territories in which English is an official, administrative, or cultural language. In the early 2000s, between one and two billion people spoke English, making it the largest language ...
while the latter is often preferred by
Francophone The Francophonie or Francophone world is the whole body of people and organisations around the world who use the French language regularly for private or public purposes. The term was coined by Onésime Reclus in 1880 and became important a ...
s, it is customary to refer to these conventions respectively as the ''English notation'' and the ''French notation''; for instance, in his book on
symmetric function In mathematics, a function of n variables is symmetric if its value is the same no matter the order of its arguments. For example, a function f\left(x_1,x_2\right) of two arguments is a symmetric function if and only if f\left(x_1,x_2\right) = f\ ...
s, Macdonald advises readers preferring the French convention to "read this book upside down in a mirror" (Macdonald 1979, p. 2). This nomenclature probably started out as jocular. The English notation corresponds to the one universally used for matrices, while the French notation is closer to the convention of
Cartesian coordinates In geometry, a Cartesian coordinate system (, ) in a plane is a coordinate system that specifies each point uniquely by a pair of real numbers called ''coordinates'', which are the signed distances to the point from two fixed perpendicular o ...
; however, French notation differs from that convention by placing the vertical coordinate first. The figure on the right shows, using the English notation, the Young diagram corresponding to the partition (5, 4, 1) of the number 10. The conjugate partition, measuring the column lengths, is (3, 2, 2, 2, 1).


Arm and leg length

In many applications, for example when defining Jack functions, it is convenient to define the arm length ''a''λ(''s'') of a box ''s'' as the number of boxes to the right of ''s'' in the diagram λ in English notation. Similarly, the leg length ''l''λ(''s'') is the number of boxes below ''s''. The hook length of a box ''s'' is the number of boxes to the right of ''s'' or below ''s'' in English notation, including the box ''s'' itself; in other words, the hook length is ''a''λ(''s'') + ''l''λ(''s'') + 1.


Tableaux

A Young tableau is obtained by filling in the boxes of the Young diagram with symbols taken from some ''alphabet'', which is usually required to be a
totally ordered set In mathematics, a total order or linear order is a partial order in which any two elements are comparable. That is, a total order is a binary relation \leq on some set X, which satisfies the following for all a, b and c in X: # a \leq a ( ref ...
. Originally that alphabet was a set of indexed variables , , ..., but now one usually uses a set of numbers for brevity. In their original application to representations of the symmetric group, Young tableaux have distinct entries, arbitrarily assigned to boxes of the diagram. A tableau is called standard if the entries in each row and each column are increasing. The number of distinct standard Young tableaux on entries is given by the involution numbers :1, 1, 2, 4, 10, 26, 76, 232, 764, 2620, 9496, ... . In other applications, it is natural to allow the same number to appear more than once (or not at all) in a tableau. A tableau is called semistandard, or ''column strict'', if the entries weakly increase along each row and strictly increase down each column. Recording the number of times each number appears in a tableau gives a sequence known as the weight of the tableau. Thus the standard Young tableaux are precisely the semistandard tableaux of weight (1,1,...,1), which requires every integer up to to occur exactly once. In a standard Young tableau, the integer k is a descent if k+1 appears in a row strictly below k. The sum of the descents is called the major index of the tableau.


Variations

There are several variations of this definition: for example, in a row-strict tableau the entries strictly increase along the rows and weakly increase down the columns. Also, tableaux with ''decreasing'' entries have been considered, notably, in the theory of
plane partition In mathematics and especially in combinatorics, a plane partition is a two-dimensional array of nonnegative integers \pi_ (with positive number, positive integer indices ''i'' and ''j'') that is nonincreasing in both indices. This means that : \pi ...
s. There are also generalizations such as domino tableaux or ribbon tableaux, in which several boxes may be grouped together before assigning entries to them.


Skew tableaux

A skew shape is a pair of partitions (, ) such that the Young diagram of contains the Young diagram of ; it is denoted by . If and , then the containment of diagrams means that for all . The skew diagram of a skew shape is the set-theoretic difference of the Young diagrams of and : the set of squares that belong to the diagram of but not to that of . A skew tableau of shape is obtained by filling the squares of the corresponding skew diagram; such a tableau is semistandard if entries increase weakly along each row, and increase strictly down each column, and it is standard if moreover all numbers from 1 to the number of squares of the skew diagram occur exactly once. While the map from partitions to their Young diagrams is injective, this is not the case for the map from skew shapes to skew diagrams; therefore the shape of a skew diagram cannot always be determined from the set of filled squares only. Although many properties of skew tableaux only depend on the filled squares, some operations defined on them do require explicit knowledge of and , so it is important that skew tableaux do record this information: two distinct skew tableaux may differ only in their shape, while they occupy the same set of squares, each filled with the same entries. Young tableaux can be identified with skew tableaux in which is the empty partition (0) (the unique partition of 0). Any skew semistandard tableau of shape with positive integer entries gives rise to a sequence of partitions (or Young diagrams), by starting with , and taking for the partition places further in the sequence the one whose diagram is obtained from that of by adding all the boxes that contain a value  ≤  in ; this partition eventually becomes equal to . Any pair of successive shapes in such a sequence is a skew shape whose diagram contains at most one box in each column; such shapes are called horizontal strips. This sequence of partitions completely determines , and it is in fact possible to define (skew) semistandard tableaux as such sequences, as is done by Macdonald (Macdonald 1979, p. 4). This definition incorporates the partitions and in the data comprising the skew tableau.


Overview of applications

Young tableaux have numerous applications in
combinatorics Combinatorics is an area of mathematics primarily concerned with counting, both as a means and as an end to obtaining results, and certain properties of finite structures. It is closely related to many other areas of mathematics and has many ...
,
representation theory Representation theory is a branch of mathematics that studies abstract algebra, abstract algebraic structures by ''representing'' their element (set theory), elements as linear transformations of vector spaces, and studies Module (mathematics), ...
, and
algebraic geometry Algebraic geometry is a branch of mathematics which uses abstract algebraic techniques, mainly from commutative algebra, to solve geometry, geometrical problems. Classically, it studies zero of a function, zeros of multivariate polynomials; th ...
. Various ways of counting Young tableaux have been explored and lead to the definition of and identities for Schur functions. Many combinatorial algorithms on tableaux are known, including Schützenberger's
jeu de taquin In the mathematical field of combinatorics, jeu de taquin is a construction due to which defines an equivalence relation on the set of skew standard Young tableaux. A jeu de taquin slide is a transformation where the numbers in a tableau are move ...
and the Robinson–Schensted–Knuth correspondence. Lascoux and Schützenberger studied an
associative In mathematics, the associative property is a property of some binary operations that rearranging the parentheses in an expression will not change the result. In propositional logic, associativity is a valid rule of replacement for express ...
product on the set of all semistandard Young tableaux, giving it the structure called the ''
plactic monoid In mathematics, the plactic monoid is the monoid of all words in the alphabet of positive integers modulo Knuth equivalence. Its elements can be identified with semistandard Young tableaux. It was discovered by (who called it the tableau alg ...
'' (French: ''le monoïde plaxique''). In representation theory, standard Young tableaux of size describe bases in irreducible representations of the
symmetric group In abstract algebra, the symmetric group defined over any set is the group whose elements are all the bijections from the set to itself, and whose group operation is the composition of functions. In particular, the finite symmetric grou ...
on letters. The standard monomial basis in a finite-dimensional
irreducible representation In mathematics, specifically in the representation theory of groups and algebras, an irreducible representation (\rho, V) or irrep of an algebraic structure A is a nonzero representation that has no proper nontrivial subrepresentation (\rho, _W, ...
of the
general linear group In mathematics, the general linear group of degree n is the set of n\times n invertible matrices, together with the operation of ordinary matrix multiplication. This forms a group, because the product of two invertible matrices is again inve ...
are parametrized by the set of semistandard Young tableaux of a fixed shape over the alphabet . This has important consequences for
invariant theory Invariant theory is a branch of abstract algebra dealing with actions of groups on algebraic varieties, such as vector spaces, from the point of view of their effect on functions. Classically, the theory dealt with the question of explicit descr ...
, starting from the work of Hodge on the
homogeneous coordinate ring In algebraic geometry, the homogeneous coordinate ring is a certain commutative ring assigned to any projective variety. If ''V'' is an algebraic variety given as a subvariety of projective space of a given dimension ''N'', its homogeneous coordina ...
of the
Grassmannian In mathematics, the Grassmannian \mathbf_k(V) (named in honour of Hermann Grassmann) is a differentiable manifold that parameterizes the set of all k-dimension (vector space), dimensional linear subspaces of an n-dimensional vector space V over a ...
and further explored by
Gian-Carlo Rota Gian-Carlo Rota (April 27, 1932 – April 18, 1999) was an Italian-American mathematician and philosopher. He spent most of his career at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he worked in combinatorics, functional analysis, proba ...
with collaborators, de Concini and Procesi, and Eisenbud. The
Littlewood–Richardson rule In mathematics, the Littlewood–Richardson rule is a combinatorial description of the coefficients that arise when decomposing a product of two Schur functions as a linear combination of other Schur functions. These coefficients are natural number ...
describing (among other things) the decomposition of
tensor product In mathematics, the tensor product V \otimes W of two vector spaces V and W (over the same field) is a vector space to which is associated a bilinear map V\times W \rightarrow V\otimes W that maps a pair (v,w),\ v\in V, w\in W to an element of ...
s of irreducible representations of into irreducible components is formulated in terms of certain skew semistandard tableaux. Applications to algebraic geometry center around
Schubert calculus In mathematics, Schubert calculus is a branch of algebraic geometry introduced in the nineteenth century by Hermann Schubert in order to solve various counting problems of projective geometry and, as such, is viewed as part of enumerative geometr ...
on Grassmannians and
flag varieties In mathematics, a generalized flag variety (or simply flag variety) is a homogeneous space whose points are flags in a finite-dimensional vector space ''V'' over a field F. When F is the real or complex numbers, a generalized flag variety is a smo ...
. Certain important
cohomology class In mathematics, specifically in homology theory and algebraic topology, cohomology is a general term for a sequence of abelian groups, usually one associated with a topological space, often defined from a cochain complex. Cohomology can be viewe ...
es can be represented by
Schubert polynomial In mathematics, Schubert polynomials are generalizations of Schur polynomials that represent cohomology classes of Schubert cycles in flag varieties. They were introduced by and are named after Hermann Schubert. Background described the histo ...
s and described in terms of Young tableaux.


Applications in representation theory

Young diagrams are in one-to-one correspondence with
irreducible representation In mathematics, specifically in the representation theory of groups and algebras, an irreducible representation (\rho, V) or irrep of an algebraic structure A is a nonzero representation that has no proper nontrivial subrepresentation (\rho, _W, ...
s of the
symmetric group In abstract algebra, the symmetric group defined over any set is the group whose elements are all the bijections from the set to itself, and whose group operation is the composition of functions. In particular, the finite symmetric grou ...
over the
complex number In mathematics, a complex number is an element of a number system that extends the real numbers with a specific element denoted , called the imaginary unit and satisfying the equation i^= -1; every complex number can be expressed in the for ...
s. They provide a convenient way of specifying the
Young symmetrizer In mathematics, a Young symmetrizer is an element of the group algebra of the symmetric group S_n whose natural action on tensor products V^ of a complex vector space V has as image an irreducible representation of the group of invertible linear ...
s from which the
irreducible representations In mathematics, specifically in the representation theory of groups and algebras, an irreducible representation (\rho, V) or irrep of an algebraic structure A is a nonzero representation that has no proper nontrivial subrepresentation (\rho, _W, ...
are built. Many facts about a representation can be deduced from the corresponding diagram. Below, we describe two examples: determining the dimension of a representation and restricted representations. In both cases, we will see that some properties of a representation can be determined by using just its diagram. Young tableaux are involved in the use of the symmetric group in quantum chemistry studies of atoms, molecules and solids. Young diagrams also parametrize the irreducible polynomial representations of the
general linear group In mathematics, the general linear group of degree n is the set of n\times n invertible matrices, together with the operation of ordinary matrix multiplication. This forms a group, because the product of two invertible matrices is again inve ...
(when they have at most nonempty rows), or the irreducible representations of the
special linear group In mathematics, the special linear group \operatorname(n,R) of degree n over a commutative ring R is the set of n\times n Matrix (mathematics), matrices with determinant 1, with the group operations of ordinary matrix multiplication and matrix ...
(when they have at most nonempty rows), or the irreducible complex representations of the
special unitary group In mathematics, the special unitary group of degree , denoted , is the Lie group of unitary matrices with determinant 1. The matrices of the more general unitary group may have complex determinants with absolute value 1, rather than real 1 ...
(again when they have at most nonempty rows). In these cases semistandard tableaux with entries up to play a central role, rather than standard tableaux; in particular it is the number of those tableaux that determines the dimension of the representation.


Dimension of a representation

The dimension of the irreducible representation of the symmetric group corresponding to a partition of is equal to the number of different standard Young tableaux that can be obtained from the diagram of the representation. This number can be calculated by the
hook length formula In combinatorics, combinatorial mathematics, the hook length formula is a formula for the number of Young tableau, standard Young tableaux whose shape is a given Young diagram. It has applications in diverse areas of mathematics, areas such as rep ...
. A hook length of a box in Young diagram of shape is the number of boxes that are in the same row to the right of it plus those boxes in the same column below it, plus one (for the box itself). By the hook-length formula, the dimension of an irreducible representation is divided by the product of the hook lengths of all boxes in the diagram of the representation: :\dim\pi_\lambda = \frac. The figure on the right shows hook-lengths for all boxes in the diagram of the partition 10 = 5 + 4 + 1. Thus :\dim\pi_\lambda = \frac = 288. Similarly, the dimension of the irreducible representation of corresponding to the partition ''λ'' of ''n'' (with at most ''r'' parts) is the number of semistandard Young tableaux of shape ''λ'' (containing only the entries from 1 to ''r''), which is given by the hook-length formula: : \dim W(\lambda) = \prod_ \frac, where the index ''i'' gives the row and ''j'' the column of a box., eq. 9.28 and appendix B.4 For instance, for the partition (5,4,1) we get as dimension of the corresponding irreducible representation of (traversing the boxes by rows): :\dim W(\lambda) = \frac = 66 528.


Restricted representations

A representation of the symmetric group on elements, is also a representation of the symmetric group on elements, . However, an irreducible representation of may not be irreducible for . Instead, it may be a
direct sum The direct sum is an operation between structures in abstract algebra, a branch of mathematics. It is defined differently but analogously for different kinds of structures. As an example, the direct sum of two abelian groups A and B is anothe ...
of several representations that are irreducible for . These representations are then called the factors of the restricted representation (see also
induced representation In group theory, the induced representation is a group representation, representation of a group, , which is constructed using a known representation of a subgroup . Given a representation of '','' the induced representation is, in a sense, the "m ...
). The question of determining this decomposition of the restricted representation of a given irreducible representation of ''S''''n'', corresponding to a partition of , is answered as follows. One forms the set of all Young diagrams that can be obtained from the diagram of shape by removing just one box (which must be at the end both of its row and of its column); the restricted representation then decomposes as a direct sum of the irreducible representations of corresponding to those diagrams, each occurring exactly once in the sum.


See also

*
Robinson–Schensted correspondence In mathematics, the Robinson–Schensted correspondence is a bijective correspondence between permutations and pairs of standard Young tableaux of the same shape. It has various descriptions, all of which are of algorithmic nature, it has many remar ...
*
Schur–Weyl duality Schur–Weyl duality is a mathematical theorem in representation theory that relates irreducible finite-dimensional representations of the general linear and symmetric groups. Schur–Weyl duality forms an archetypical situation in representatio ...


Notes


References

* William Fulton. ''Young Tableaux, with Applications to Representation Theory and Geometry''. Cambridge University Press, 1997, . * Lecture 4 * Howard Georgi, Lie Algebras in Particle Physics, 2nd Edition - Westview * Macdonald, I. G. ''Symmetric functions and Hall polynomials.'' Oxford Mathematical Monographs. The Clarendon Press, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1979. viii+180 pp. * Laurent Manivel. ''Symmetric Functions, Schubert Polynomials, and Degeneracy Loci''. American Mathematical Society. * * Jean-Christophe Novelli,
Igor Pak Igor Pak () (born 1971, Moscow, Soviet Union) is a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Los Angeles, working in combinatorics and discrete probability. He formerly taught at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Uni ...
, Alexander V. Stoyanovskii,
A direct bijective proof of the Hook-length formula
, ''Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science'' 1 (1997), pp. 53–67. * Bruce E. Sagan. ''The Symmetric Group''. Springer, 2001, * * {{cite journal , last = Yong , first = Alexander , title = What is...a Young Tableau? , journal =
Notices of the American Mathematical Society ''Notices of the American Mathematical Society'' is the membership journal of the American Mathematical Society (AMS), published monthly except for the combined June/July issue. The first volume was published in 1953. Each issue of the magazine ...
, date=February 2007 , volume = 54 , issue = 2 , pages =240–241 , url = http://www.ams.org/notices/200702/whatis-yong.pdf , access-date = 2008-01-16 *
Predrag Cvitanović Predrag Cvitanović (; born April 1, 1946) is a theoretical physicist regarded for his work in nonlinear dynamics, particularly his contributions to periodic orbit theory. Life Cvitanović earned his B.S. from MIT in 1969 and his Ph.D. at Corn ...
, ''Group Theory: Birdtracks, Lie's, and Exceptional Groups''. Princeton University Press, 2008.


External links

* Eric W. Weisstein.
Ferrers Diagram
. From MathWorld—A Wolfram Web Resource. * Eric W. Weisstein.

" From MathWorld—A Wolfram Web Resource.
Semistandard tableaux
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Standard tableaux
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