Student Discrete Math Seminar
This seminar is not currently active. If you would like to start organizing this, you should (1) talk to other grad students and make sure there is enough interest that you will have speakers every week and (2) talk to the Galois Group president to get funding for snacks for the seminar. (Note that the student run research seminar, or SRRS, is an active student run weekly seminar and most people wanting to present do so there as of the 23-24 school year.)
Logistics
Information can be found at Math department courses webpage and the UC Davis Math Dept's Seminar Page.
Please join us for the Student Discrete Math
Seminar. Although we don't have pizza, the talks are always interesting.
Talk to the organizers if you have any questions or would like to speak at the seminar.
Topic Ideas
The most commonly asked question, especially for new graduate students, is: "I would
like to speak, but I don't know what to talk about! What can I give a talk on?"
Below we have some suggestions. Disclaimers: This list does not in any way attempt to cover
all of Discrete Mathematics, but instead focuses on research areas that are more
related to UC Davis specialties. In fact, the list does not even exhaust all of the topics
that UC Davis does specialize in, but only what we happened to think of at the time.
You are encouraged to seek out other topics and papers. Although there has been an attempt
to organize and categorize, many papers and books belong in several categories, so take it
all with several grains of salt.
The list is a work in progress - check back often for updates.
New Suggestions (Spring 2011)
The papers listed here: http://www.math.ucdavis.edu/~deloera/forstudents.htm
Lascoux, Alain; Leclerc, Bernard; Thibon, Jean-Yves. Crystal graphs and $q$-analogues of weight multiplicities for the root system $A_n$. Lett. Math. Phys. 35 (1995), no. 4, 359–374.
Brenti, Francesco; Fomin, Sergey; Postnikov, Alexander. Mixed Bruhat operators and Yang-Baxter equations for Weyl groups. Internat. Math. Res. Notices 1999, no. 8, 419–441.
Jason Bandlow, Anne Schilling, Mike Zabrocki. The Murnaghan-Nakayama rule for k-Schur functions. Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A, 118(5) (2011) 1588-1607.
Quantum Groups and Representation Theory, Crystals
Littelmann, Peter, A Littlewood-Richardson rule for symmetrizable Kac-Moody algebras. Invent. Math. 116 (1994), no. 1-3, 329--346 MR1253196
Cristian Lenart, Alexander Postnikov, A Combinatorial Model for Crystals of Kac-Moody Algebras
http://arxiv.org/abs/math/0502147v4
Arun Ram, Alcove walks, Hecke algebras, Spherical functions, crystals and column strict tableaux, Pure and Applied Mathematics Quarterly 2 no. 4 (Special Issue: In honor of Robert MacPherson, Part 2 of 3) (2006) 963-1013.
John Stembridge, A Local Characterization of Simply-Laced Crystals, http://www.math.lsa.umich.edu/~jrs/papers/xtal.ps.gz
Masaki Kashiwara, On Crystal Bases
RSK and related algorithms
Edelmann and Greene, Balanced Tableaux
Sarah Mason, A Decomposition of Schur functions and an analogue of the RSK Algorithm
Books
Hong and Kang, Introduction to Quantum Groups and Crystal Bases
Fulton and Harris, Representation Theory
Sagan, The Symmetric Group
Bjorner and Brenti, Combinatorics of Coxeter Groups
Humphreys, Reflection Groups and Coxeter Groups
Humphreys, Lie Algebras
Bump, Lie Groups
Erdmann, Introduction to Lie Algebras
Fulton, Young Tableaux
Finally, perhaps your best resource is older grad students:
The following is an old listing of topics. We'll leave it up until we finish the new, more organized list.
- the Edelmann-Greene paper on what we now call Edelmann-Greene
insertion (actually maybe some of what i'm (Alex Woo) thinking about is
actually in the Billey-Jockhush-Stanley paper),
- the Billey-Warrington paper on 321-hexagon-avoiding permutations.
Kazhdan-Lusztig polynomials for 321-hexagon-avoiding permutations;
http://arxiv.org/abs/math.CO/0005052
- There is an extensive list of papers at the lower part of the
webpage
http://www.math.ucdavis.edu/~vazirani/S05/KL.details.html
- other interesting papers might be Sarah Mason's recent work on a
different RSK type algorithm related to nonsymmetric Schur functions.
Or some papers on Key polynomials.
- Kevin Purbhoo's paper on root games
- Almost any section of Macdonald's book. You might also look at
Fulton's book or Jim Haglund's new book. There are several papers on
crystal graphs I can also suggest (for instance, in connection to the
Littlewood-Richardson rule).
Below are listed several papers related to the saturation
conjecture/theorem. (In a slightly weird format from cutting/pasting
from a bibtex file.) In particular there are several papers involving
polytopes, honeycombs, Littelmann paths, galleries, and buildings.
- Arkady Berenstein, Andrei
Zelevinsky "Tensor
product multiplicities, canonical bases and totally positive varieties"
- math.RT/9912012
( Invent. Math. 143 (2001), no. 1,
77--128.)
[We obtain a family of explicit "polyhedral"
combinatorial expressions for multiplicities in the tensor product of
two simple finite-dimensional modules over a complex semisimple Lie
algebra. Our answers use a new combinatorial concept of
$\ii$-trails which resemble Littelmann's paths but seem to be more
tractable. A remarkable observation by G. Lusztig notes that
combinatorics of the canonical basis is closely related to geometry of
the totally positive varieties. We formulate this relationship in terms of two mutually inverse transformations:
"tropicalization" and "geometric lifting."]
- Anders S. Buch "The
saturation conjecture (after A. Knutson and T. Tao)"
math.CO/9810180 (With
an appendix by William Fulton. Enseign. Math. (2) 46 (2000), no. 1-2,
43--60. ) [A nice exposition of the
hive model and Knutson-Tao's proof of the saturation conjecture (in
type A).]
- Joel Kamnitzer "Mirkovic-Vilonen
cycles and polytopes"
math.AG/0501365 [We give an explicit
description of the Mirkovic-Vilonen cycles on the affine Grassmannian
for arbitrary complex reductive groups. We also give a combinatorial
characterization of the MV polytopes. We prove that a polytope is an MV
polytope if and only if it a lattice polytope whose defining
hyperplanes are parallel to those of the Weyl polytopes and whose
2-faces are rank 2 MV polytopes. As an application, we give a bijection
between Lusztig's canonical basis and the set of MV polytopes.]
- M. Kapovich. "Generalized
triangle inequalities and their applications",
- Madrid, August 22-30, 2006. Eds. Marta Sanz-Solé, Javier Soria,
Juan L. Varona, Joan Verdera. Vol. 2, p. 719-742.
[survey article.
applications to decomposing tensor products of irreducible
representations and the saturation theorem in types beyond A.]
- Allen Knutson, Terence
Tao "The
honeycomb model of GL(n) tensor products I: proof of the saturation
conjecture"
math.RT/9807160
( J. Amer. Math. Soc. 12 (1999), no. 4, 1055--1090. )
[We introduce the honeycomb
model of BZ polytopes, which calculate Littlewood-Richardson
coefficients, the tensor product rule for GL(n). A particularly
well-behaved honeycomb is necessarily integral, which proves the
"saturation conjecture", extending results of Klyachko to give a
complete
answer to which L-R coefficients are positive. This in turn has as
a consequence Horn's conjecture from 1962 characterizing the
spectrum of the sum of two Hermitian matrices. ]
- Sophie Morier-Genoud's thesis:
"Relevement
Geometrique de L'involution de Schutzenberger et Applications"
[in French]?
- Arun Ram "Alcove
walks, Hecke algebras, spherical functions, crystals and column strict
tableaux"
math.RT/0601343
(Pure and Applied Mathematics Quarterly. Special Issue: In honor of
Robert MacPherson. Vol 2. (2006) 135-183.)
[This paper makes precise
the close connection between the affine
Hecke algebra, the path model, and the theory of crystals. Section 2 is
a
basic pictorial exposition of Weyl groups and affine Weyl groups and
Section 5
is an exposition of the theory of (a) symmetric functions, (b) crystals
and
(c) the path model. Sections 3 and 4 give an exposition of the affine
Hecke
algebra and recent results regarding the combinatorics of spherical
functions
on p-adic groups (Hall-Littlewood polynomials). The $q$-analogue of the
theory
of crystals developed in Section 4 specializes to the path model
version of
the ``classical'' crystal theory. The connection to the affine Hecke
algebra
and the approach to spherical functions for a $p$-adic group in
Nelsen-Ram was
made concrete by C. Schwer who told me that ``the periodic Hecke module
encodes the positively folded galleries'' of Gaussent-Littelmann. This
paper
is a further development of this point of view.]
- Guy Rousseau : "Euclidean
buildings"
Lecture notes from Summer School 2004: Non-positively curved
geometries, discrete groups and rigidities
http://www-fourier.ujf-grenoble.fr/ECOLETE/ecole2004/Rousseau.pdf
[Introduction to
buildings. All basic definitions can be found here.]
- Arkady Berenstein, David Kazhdan
Lecture notes on Geometric Crystals and their combinatorial analogues
math.QA/0610567
- A path model for geodesics in Euclidean buildings and its
applications to representation theory, Michael Kapovich and John J.
Millson, arXiv:math.RT/0411182
- {Gaussent, S. and Littelmann, P.}, {L{S} galleries, the path
model, and {MV} cycles}, {Duke Math. J.}, {Duke Mathematical Journal},
VOLUME {127}, YEAR {2005}, PAGES {35--88},
- {Littelmann, Peter}, {The path model for representations of
symmetrizable {K}ac-{M}oody algebras}, BOOKTITLE = {Proceedings of the
International Congress of Mathematicians, Vol.\ 1, 2 (Z\"urich, 1994)},
PAGES = {298--308}, PUBLISHER = {Birkh\"auser}, YEAR = {1995},
- {Littelmann, Peter}, {Paths and root operators in representation
theory}, {Ann. of Math. (2)}, VOLUME = {142}, YEAR = {1995}, PAGES =
{499--525},
- {Berenstein, Arkady and Zelevinsky, Andrei}, {Canonical bases for
the quantum group of type {$A\sb r$} and piecewise-linear
combinatorics}, {Duke Math. J.}, VOLUME = {82}, YEAR = {1996}, PAGES =
{473--502},
- {Berenstein, A. D. and Zelevinsky, A. V.}, {Tensor product
multiplicities and convex polytopes in partition space}, {J. Geom.
Phys.}, VOLUME = {5}, YEAR = {1988}, PAGES = {453--472},
- Galleries, Hall-Littlewood polynomials and structure constants of
the spherical Hecke algebra, {Christoph Schwer},
{arXiv:math.CO/0506287}
- {De Loera, Jes{\'u}s A. and McAllister, Tyrrell B.}, {Vertices of
{G}elfand-{T}setlin polytopes}, {Discrete Comput. Geom.}, VOLUME =
{32}, YEAR = {2004}, PAGES = {459--470},
- Knutson, Allen and Tao, Terence and Woodward, Christopher, A
positive proof of the {L}ittlewood-{R}ichardson rule using the
octahedron recurrence, {Electron. J. Combin.}, VOLUME = {11}, YEAR =
{2004},
- Knutson, Allen and Tao, Terence, {The honeycomb model of {${\rm
GL}\sb n({\bf C})$} tensor products. {I}. {P}roof of the saturation
conjecture}, {J. Amer. Math. Soc.}, VOLUME = {12}, YEAR = {1999}, PAGES
= {1055--1090},
- Knutson, Allen and Tao, Terence and Woodward, Christopher, {The
honeycomb model of {${\rm GL}\sb n(\mathbb C)$} tensor products. {II}.
{P}uzzles determine facets of the {L}ittlewood-{R}ichardson cone}, {J.
Amer. Math. Soc.}, VOLUME = {17}, YEAR = {2004}, PAGES = {19--48
(electronic)},
- Knutson, Allen and Tao, Terence , {Honeycombs and sums of
{H}ermitian matrices}, {Notices Amer. Math. Soc.}, VOLUME = {48}, YEAR
= {2001}, PAGES = {175--186},
- Buch, Anders Skovsted, {The saturation conjecture (after {A}.\
{K}nutson and {T}.\ {T}ao)}, {With an appendix by William Fulton},
{Enseign. Math. (2)}, VOLUME = {46}, YEAR = {2000}, PAGES = {43--60},
-
-
Regular triangulations and the secondary polytope - a good source is
chapter 7 of the Gelfand-Kapranoz-Zelevinsky book
Further suggestions are welcome!