University of Sydney
School of Mathematics and Statistics
Robert Howlett
University of Sydney
Normalizers of parabolic subgroups of Coxeter groups.
Friday 4th September, 12-1pm, Carslaw 273.
This talk will describe joint work of the speaker and
Brigitte Brink. Preprints can be obtained on request,
or downloaded from
http://www.maths.usyd.edu.au/u/bobh/
A Coxeter group is a group W given by a generating set S
subject to defining relations which specify that each
element of S is an involution and that st raised to
the m(s,t)th power is the identity (for various pairs of
generators {s,t} and integers m(s,t) > 1). Thus, in
particular, there are two kinds of relations: those that
involve a single generator and those that involve a pair
of generators.
The aim of the present work is to describe the normalizers
of parabolic subgroups. These are the subgroups of W which
are generated by subsets of S. "Describe" means (at
least) to give presentations for these normalizers;
preferably, the presentations will clarify the structure of
the normalizers. It turns out to be best to describe instead
groupoids whose elements correspond to elements w in W and
pairs A, B of parabolic subgroups for which wA = Bw; there
will be one such groupoid for each class of conjugate
parabolic subgroups.
Let P(J) be the parabolic subgroup generated by the subset
J of S. Fix a class of conjugate P(J)'s. It turns out that
the corresponding groupoid is generated by certain elements
v[s,J] corresponding to subsets J (with P(J) in the fixed
class) and elements s of S not in J. Each generator carries
with it a bijection from J to another set K such that P(K)
is also in the class, and K is a subset of the union of
J and {s}. Defining relations can be be given in terms of
these generators. They are of two kinds. If
v[s J]P(J) = P(K)v[s,J] then v[s,J] is the inverse of v[t,K],
where t is such that the union of K and {t} equals the union
of J and {s}. (So if K = J then v[s,J] is an involution.)
These relations live inside the parabolic subgroup
P(J,s)=P(K,t), in which P(J) and P(K) have corank 1. The other
kind of defining relations are derived from parabolic
subgroups P(J,s,t) in which P(J) has corank two; each such
subgroup contributes at most one relation, and the relation is
easily computed from a little knowledge of properties of
maximal length elements of finite Coxeter groups.