In mathematics, the symbolic method in invariant theory is an algorithm developed by Arthur Cayley,[1] Siegfried Heinrich Aronhold,[2] Alfred Clebsch,[3] and Paul Gordan[4] in the 19th century for computing invariants of algebraic forms. It is based on treating the form as if it were a power of a degree one form, which corresponds to embedding a symmetric power of a vector space into the symmetric elements of a tensor product of copies of it.
Symbolic notation
editThe symbolic method uses a compact, but rather confusing and mysterious notation for invariants, depending on the introduction of new symbols a, b, c, ... (from which the symbolic method gets its name) with apparently contradictory properties.
Example: the discriminant of a binary quadratic form
editThese symbols can be explained by the following example from Gordan.[5] Suppose that
is a binary quadratic form with an invariant given by the discriminant
The symbolic representation of the discriminant is
where a and b are the symbols. The meaning of the expression (ab)2 is as follows. First of all, (ab) is a shorthand form for the determinant of a matrix whose rows are a1, a2 and b1, b2, so
Squaring this we get
Next we pretend that
so that
and we ignore the fact that this does not seem to make sense if f is not a power of a linear form. Substituting these values gives
Higher degrees
editMore generally if
is a binary form of higher degree, then one introduces new variables a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2, with the properties
What this means is that the following two vector spaces are naturally isomorphic:
- The vector space of homogeneous polynomials in A0,...An of degree m
- The vector space of polynomials in 2m variables a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2, ... that have degree n in each of the m pairs of variables (a1, a2), (b1, b2), (c1, c2), ... and are symmetric under permutations of the m symbols a, b, ....,
The isomorphism is given by mapping an−j
1aj
2, bn−j
1bj
2, .... to Aj. This mapping does not preserve products of polynomials.
More variables
editThe extension to a form f in more than two variables x1, x2, x3,... is similar: one introduces symbols a1, a2, a3 and so on with the properties
Symmetric products
editThe rather mysterious formalism of the symbolic method corresponds to embedding a symmetric product Sn(V) of a vector space V into a tensor product of n copies of V, as the elements preserved by the action of the symmetric group. In fact this is done twice, because the invariants of degree n of a quantic of degree m are the invariant elements of SnSm(V), which gets embedded into a tensor product of mn copies of V, as the elements invariant under a wreath product of the two symmetric groups. The brackets of the symbolic method are really invariant linear forms on this tensor product, which give invariants of SnSm(V) by restriction.
See also
editReferences
edit- Gordan, Paul (1987) [1887]. Kerschensteiner, Georg (ed.). Vorlesungen über Invariantentheorie (2nd ed.). New York York: AMS Chelsea Publishing. ISBN 9780828403283. MR 0917266.
Footnotes
- ^ Cayley, Arthur (1846). "On linear transformations". Cambridge and Dublin Mathematical Journal: 104–122.
- ^ Aronhold, Siegfried Heinrich (1858). "Theorie der homogenen Functionen dritten Grades von drei Veränderlichen". Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik (in German). 1858 (55): 97–191. doi:10.1515/crll.1858.55.97. ISSN 0075-4102. S2CID 122247157.
- ^ Clebsch, A. (1861). "Ueber symbolische Darstellung algebraischer Formen". Journal für die Reine und Angewandte Mathematik (in German). 1861 (59): 1–62. doi:10.1515/crll.1861.59.1. ISSN 0075-4102. S2CID 119389672.
- ^ Gordan 1887.
- ^ Gordan 1887, v. 2, p.g. 1-3.
Further reading
edit- Dieudonné, Jean; Carrell, James B. (1970). "Invariant theory, old and new". Advances in Mathematics. 4: 1–80. doi:10.1016/0001-8708(70)90015-0. pp. 32–7, "Invariants of n-ary forms: the symbolic method. Reprinted as Dieudonné, Jean; Carrell, James B. (1971). Invariant theory, old and new. Academic Press. ISBN 0-12-215540-8.
- Dolgachev, Igor (2003). Lectures on invariant theory. London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series. Vol. 296. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511615436. ISBN 978-0-521-52548-0. MR 2004511. S2CID 118144995.
- Grace, John Hilton; Young, Alfred (1903), The Algebra of invariants, Cambridge University Press
- Hilbert, David (1993) [1897]. Theory of algebraic invariants. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521444576. MR 1266168.
- Koh, Sebastian S., ed. (2009) [1987]. Invariant Theory. Lecture Notes in Mathematics. Vol. 1278. Springer. ISBN 9783540183600.
- Kung, Joseph P. S.; Rota, Gian-Carlo (1984). "The invariant theory of binary forms". Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. New Series. 10 (1): 27–85. doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-1984-15188-7. ISSN 0002-9904. MR 0722856.