Lawrence–Krammer representation

In mathematics the Lawrence–Krammer representation is a representation of the braid groups. It fits into a family of representations called the Lawrence representations. The first Lawrence representation is the Burau representation and the second is the Lawrence–Krammer representation.

The Lawrence–Krammer representation is named after Ruth Lawrence and Daan Krammer.[1]

Definition edit

Consider the braid group   to be the mapping class group of a disc with n marked points,  . The Lawrence–Krammer representation is defined as the action of   on the homology of a certain covering space of the configuration space  . Specifically, the first integral homology group of   is isomorphic to  , and the subgroup of   invariant under the action of   is primitive, free abelian, and of rank 2. Generators for this invariant subgroup are denoted by  .

The covering space of Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "http://localhost:6011/en.wikipedia.org/v1/":): {\displaystyle C_2 P_n} corresponding to the kernel of the projection map

 

is called the Lawrence–Krammer cover and is denoted  . Diffeomorphisms of  act on  , thus also on  , moreover they lift uniquely to diffeomorphisms of   which restrict to the identity on the co-dimension two boundary stratum (where both points are on the boundary circle). The action of   on

 

thought of as a

 -module,

is the Lawrence–Krammer representation. The group   is known to be a free  -module, of rank  .

Matrices edit

Using Bigelow's conventions for the Lawrence–Krammer representation, generators for the group   are denoted   for  . Letting   denote the standard Artin generators of the braid group, we obtain the expression:

 

Faithfulness edit

Stephen Bigelow and Daan Krammer have given independent proofs that the Lawrence–Krammer representation is faithful.

Geometry edit

The Lawrence–Krammer representation preserves a non-degenerate sesquilinear form which is known to be negative-definite Hermitian provided   are specialized to suitable unit complex numbers (q near 1 and t near i). Thus the braid group is a subgroup of the unitary group of square matrices of size  . Recently it has been shown that the image of the Lawrence–Krammer representation is a dense subgroup of the unitary group in this case.

The sesquilinear form has the explicit description:

 

References edit

  1. ^ Bigelow, Stephen (2003), "The Lawrence–Krammer representation", Topology and geometry of manifolds, Proc. Sympos. Pure Math., vol. 71, Providence, RI: Amer. Math. Soc., pp. 51–68, MR 2024629

Further reading edit