Alvis–Curtis duality explained
In mathematics, the Alvis–Curtis duality is a duality operation on the characters of a reductive group over a finite field, introduced by and studied by his student . introduced a similar duality operation for Lie algebras.
Alvis–Curtis duality has order 2 and is an isometry on generalized characters.
discusses Alvis–Curtis duality in detail.
Definition
The dual ζ* of a character ζ of a finite group G with a split BN-pair is defined to be
Here the sum is over all subsets
J of the set
R of simple roots of the Coxeter system of
G. The character ζ is the
truncation of ζ to the parabolic subgroup
PJ of the subset
J, given by restricting ζ to
PJ and then taking the space of invariants of the unipotent radical of
PJ, and ζ is the induced representation of
G. (The operation of truncation is the adjoint functor of
parabolic induction.)
Examples
- The dual of the trivial character 1 is the Steinberg character.
- showed that the dual of a Deligne–Lusztig character R is εGεTR.
- The dual of a cuspidal character χ is (–1)|Δ|χ, where Δ is the set of simple roots.
- The dual of the Gelfand–Graev character is the character taking value |ZF|ql on the regular unipotent elements and vanishing elsewhere.