Kirillov model

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In mathematics, the Kirillov model, studied by Kirillov (1963), is a realization of a representation of GL2 over a local field on a space of functions on the local field. If G is the algebraic group GL2 and F is a non-Archimedean local field, and τ is a fixed nontrivial character of the additive group of F and π is an irreducible representation of G(F), then the Kirillov model for π is a representation π on a space of locally constant functions f on F* with compact support in F such that

[math]\displaystyle{ \pi\left(\begin{pmatrix}a & b \\ 0 & 1\end{pmatrix}\right)f(x) = \tau(bx)f(ax). }[/math]

(Jacquet Langlands) showed that an irreducible representation of dimension greater than 1 has an essentially unique Kirillov model. Over a local field, the space of functions with compact support in F* has codimension 0, 1, or 2 in the Kirillov model, depending on whether the irreducible representation is cuspidal, special, or principal.

The Whittaker model can be constructed from the Kirillov model, by defining the image Wξ of a vector ξ of the Kirillov model by

Wξ(g) = π(g)ξ(1)

where π(g) is the image of g in the Kirillov model.

(Bernstein 1984) defined the Kirillov model for the general linear group GLn using the mirabolic subgroup. More precisely, a Kirillov model for a representation of the general linear group is an embedding of it in the representation of the mirabolic group induced from a non-degenerate character of the group of upper triangular matrices.

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