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Symmetric Functions and Hall Polynomials 2nd Revised edition [Pehme köide]

(Queen Mary and Westfield College, London)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 488 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x157x25 mm, kaal: 732 g
  • Sari: Oxford Classic Texts in the Physical Sciences
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Oct-2015
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198739125
  • ISBN-13: 9780198739128
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 488 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x157x25 mm, kaal: 732 g
  • Sari: Oxford Classic Texts in the Physical Sciences
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Oct-2015
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198739125
  • ISBN-13: 9780198739128
This reissued classic text is the acclaimed second edition of Professor Ian Macdonald's groundbreaking monograph on symmetric functions and Hall polynomials.

The first edition was published in 1979, before being significantly expanded into the present edition in 1995. This text is widely regarded as the best source of information on Hall polynomials and what have come to be known as Macdonald polynomials, central to a number of key developments in mathematics and mathematical physics in the 21st century

Macdonald polynomials gave rise to the subject of double affine Hecke algebras (or Cherednik algebras) important in representation theory. String theorists use Macdonald polynomials to attack the so-called AGT conjectures. Macdonald polynomials have been recently used to construct knot invariants. They are also a central tool for a theory of integrable stochastic models that have found a number of applications in probability, such as random matrices, directed polymers in random media, driven lattice gases, and so on.



Macdonald polynomials have become a part of basic material that a researcher simply must know if (s)he wants to work in one of the above domains, ensuring this new edition will appeal to a very broad mathematical audience.

Featuring a new foreword by Professor Richard Stanley of MIT.

Arvustused

From reviews of the first edition: 'Despite the amount of material of such great potential interest to mathematicians...the theory of symmetric functions remains all but unknown to the persons it is most likely to benefit...Hopefully this beautifully written book will put an end to this state of affairs...I have no doubt that this book will become the definitive reference on symmetric functions and their applications.' * Bulletin of the AMS * ...In addition to providing a self-contained and coherent account of well-known and classical work, there is a great deal which is original. The book is dotted with gems, both old and new...It is a substantial and valuable volume and will be regarded as the authoritative source which has been long awaited in this subject. * LMS book reviews * From reviews of the second edition: 'Evidently this second edition will be the source and reference book for symmetric functions in the near future. * Zbl. Math. *

I SYMMETRIC FUNCTIONS
1 Partitions
1(16)
2 The ring of symmetric functions
17(23)
3 Schur functions
40(22)
4 Orthogonality
62(7)
5 Skew Schur functions
69(30)
6 Transition matrices
99(13)
7 The characters of the symmetric groups
112(23)
8 Plethysm
135(7)
9 The Littlewood--Richardson rule
142(37)
Appendix A Polynomial functors and polynomial representations
149(20)
Appendix B Characters of wreath products
169(10)
II HALL POLYNOMIALS
1 Finite 0-modules
179(3)
2 The Hall algebra
182(2)
3 The LR-sequence of a submodule
184(3)
4 The Hall polynomial
187(17)
Appendix (by A. Zelevinsky): Another proof of Hall's theorem
199(5)
III HALL--LITTLEWOOD SYMMETRIC FUNCTIONS
1 The symmetric polynomials Rλ
204(4)
2 Hall--Littlewood functions
208(7)
3 The Hall algebra again
215(7)
4 Orthogonality
222(4)
5 Skew Hall--Littlewood functions
226(12)
6 Transition matrices
238(8)
7 Green's polynomials
246(4)
8 Schur's Q-functions
250(19)
IV THE CHARACTERS OF GLn OVER A FINITE FIELD
1 The groups L and M
269(1)
2 Conjugacy classes
270(3)
3 Induction from parabolic subgroups
273(3)
4 The characteristic map
276(4)
5 Construction of the characters
280(4)
6 The irreducible characters
284(8)
Appendix: proof of (5.1)
291(1)
V THE HECKE RING OF GLn OVER A LOCAL FIELD
1 Local fields
292(1)
2 The Hecke ring H(G, K)
293(5)
3 Spherical functions
298(2)
4 Hecke series and zeta functions for GLn(F)
300(2)
5 Hecke series and zeta functions for GSp2n(F)
302(3)
VI SYMMETRIC FUNCTIONS WITH TWO PARAMETERS
1 Introduction
305(4)
2 Orthogonality
309(6)
3 The operators Drn
315(6)
4 The symmetric functions Pλ(x; q, t)
321(6)
5 Duality
327(4)
6 Pieri formulas
331(12)
7 The skew functions Pλ/μ, Qλ/μ
343(9)
8 Integral forms
352(16)
9 Another scalar product
368(8)
10 Jack's symmetric functions
376(12)
VII ZONAL POLYNOMIALS
1 Gelfand pairs and zonal spherical functions
388(13)
2 The Gelfand pair (S2n, Hn)
401(13)
3 The Gelfand pair (GLn(R), O(n))
414(10)
4 Integral formulas
424(16)
5 The complex case
440(6)
6 The quaternionic case
446(11)
Bibliography 457(10)
Notation 467(6)
Index 473
I. G. Macdonald, Emeritus Professor, Queen Mary and Westfield College, London