In mathematics, Plancherel measure is a measure defined on the set of irreducible unitary representations of a locally compact group , that describes how the regular representation breaks up into irreducible unitary representations. In some cases the term Plancherel measure is applied specifically in the context of the group being the finite symmetric group – see below. It is named after the Swiss mathematician Michel Plancherel for his work in representation theory.

Definition for finite groups edit

Let   be a finite group, we denote the set of its irreducible representations by  . The corresponding Plancherel measure over the set   is defined by

 

where  , and   denotes the dimension of the irreducible representation  . [1]

Definition on the symmetric group edit

An important special case is the case of the finite symmetric group  , where   is a positive integer. For this group, the set   of irreducible representations is in natural bijection with the set of integer partitions of  . For an irreducible representation associated with an integer partition  , its dimension is known to be equal to  , the number of standard Young tableaux of shape  , so in this case Plancherel measure is often thought of as a measure on the set of integer partitions of given order n, given by

  [2]

The fact that those probabilities sum up to 1 follows from the combinatorial identity

 

which corresponds to the bijective nature of the Robinson–Schensted correspondence.

Application edit

Plancherel measure appears naturally in combinatorial and probabilistic problems, especially in the study of longest increasing subsequence of a random permutation  . As a result of its importance in that area, in many current research papers the term Plancherel measure almost exclusively refers to the case of the symmetric group  .

Connection to longest increasing subsequence edit

Let   denote the length of a longest increasing subsequence of a random permutation   in   chosen according to the uniform distribution. Let   denote the shape of the corresponding Young tableaux related to   by the Robinson–Schensted correspondence. Then the following identity holds:

 

where   denotes the length of the first row of  . Furthermore, from the fact that the Robinson–Schensted correspondence is bijective it follows that the distribution of   is exactly the Plancherel measure on  . So, to understand the behavior of  , it is natural to look at   with   chosen according to the Plancherel measure in  , since these two random variables have the same probability distribution. [3]

Poissonized Plancherel measure edit

Plancherel measure is defined on   for each integer  . In various studies of the asymptotic behavior of   as  , it has proved useful [4] to extend the measure to a measure, called the Poissonized Plancherel measure, on the set   of all integer partitions. For any  , the Poissonized Plancherel measure with parameter   on the set   is defined by

 

for all  . [2]

Plancherel growth process edit

The Plancherel growth process is a random sequence of Young diagrams   such that each   is a random Young diagram of order   whose probability distribution is the nth Plancherel measure, and each successive   is obtained from its predecessor   by the addition of a single box, according to the transition probability

 

for any given Young diagrams   and   of sizes n − 1 and n, respectively. [5]

So, the Plancherel growth process can be viewed as a natural coupling of the different Plancherel measures of all the symmetric groups, or alternatively as a random walk on Young's lattice. It is not difficult to show that the probability distribution of   in this walk coincides with the Plancherel measure on  . [6]

Compact groups edit

The Plancherel measure for compact groups is similar to that for finite groups, except that the measure need not be finite. The unitary dual is a discrete set of finite-dimensional representations, and the Plancherel measure of an irreducible finite-dimensional representation is proportional to its dimension.

Abelian groups edit

The unitary dual of a locally compact abelian group is another locally compact abelian group, and the Plancherel measure is proportional to the Haar measure of the dual group.

Semisimple Lie groups edit

The Plancherel measure for semisimple Lie groups was found by Harish-Chandra. The support is the set of tempered representations, and in particular not all unitary representations need occur in the support.

References edit

  1. ^ Borodin, Alexei; Okounkov, Andrei; Olshanski, Grigori (2000). "Asymptotics of Plancherel measures for symmetric groups". Journal of the American Mathematical Society. 13:491–515. 13 (3): 481–515. doi:10.1090/S0894-0347-00-00337-4. S2CID 14183320.
  2. ^ a b Johansson, Kurt (2001). "Discrete orthogonal polynomial ensembles and the Plancherel measure". Annals of Mathematics. 153 (1): 259–296. arXiv:math/9906120. doi:10.2307/2661375. JSTOR 2661375. S2CID 14120881.
  3. ^ Logan, B. F.; Shepp, L. A. (1977). "A variational problem for random Young tableaux". Advances in Mathematics. 26 (2): 206–222. doi:10.1016/0001-8708(77)90030-5.
  4. ^ Baik, Jinho; Deift, Percy; Johansson, Kurt (1999). "On the distribution of the length of the longest increasing subsequence of random permutations". Journal of the American Mathematical Society. 12:1119–1178. 12 (4): 1119–1178. doi:10.1090/S0894-0347-99-00307-0. S2CID 11355968.
  5. ^ Vershik, A. M.; Kerov, S. V. (1985). "The asymptotics of maximal and typical dimensions irreducible representations of the symmetric group". Funct. Anal. Appl. 19:21–31. doi:10.1007/BF01086021. S2CID 120927640.
  6. ^ Kerov, S. (1996). "A differential model of growth of Young diagrams". Proceedings of St.Petersburg Mathematical Society.