Representation theory of finite groups through (basic) algebraic geometry
Abstract
We introduce a new approach to representation theory of finite groups that uses some basic algebraic geometry and allows to do all the theory without using characters. With this approach, to any finite group we associate a finite number of points and show that any field containing the coordinates of those points works fine as the ground field for the representations of . We apply this point of view to the symmetric group , finding easy equations for the different symmetries of functions in variables. As a byproduct, we give an easy proof of a recent result by Tocino that states that the hyperdeterminant of a -dimensional matrix is zero for all but two types of symmetry.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2009.02774,
title = {Representation theory of finite groups through (basic) algebraic geometry},
author = {Enrique Arrondo},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2009.02774},
year = {2024}
}
Comments
Added a new proof of Lemma 1.10, not needing algebraic geometry, but just elementary linear algebra, as kindly suggested by Hiraku Atobe. Comments still welcome