Translation functor

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In mathematical representation theory, a (Zuckerman) translation functor is a functor taking representations of a Lie algebra to representations with a possibly different central character. Translation functors were introduced independently by Zuckerman (1977) and Jantzen (1979). Roughly speaking, the functor is given by taking a tensor product with a finite-dimensional representation, and then taking a subspace with some central character.

Definition

By the Harish-Chandra isomorphism, the characters of the center Z of the universal enveloping algebra of a complex reductive Lie algebra can be identified with the points of LC/W, where L is the weight lattice and W is the Weyl group. If λ is a point of LC/W then write χλ for the corresponding character of Z.

A representation of the Lie algebra is said to have central character χλ if every vector v is a generalized eigenvector of the center Z with eigenvalue χλ; in other words if zZ and vV then (z − χλ(z))n(v)=0 for some n.

The translation functor ψμλ takes representations V with central character χλ to representations with central character χμ. It is constructed in two steps:

  • First take the tensor product of V with an irreducible finite dimensional representation with extremal weight λ−μ (if one exists).
  • Then take the generalized eigenspace of this with eigenvalue χμ.

References