Homology of Littlewood complexes

Abstract

Let V be a symplectic vector space of dimension 2n. Given a partition λ with at most n parts, there is an associated irreducible representation S[λ](V) of Sp(V). This representation admits a resolution by a natural complex Lλ, which we call the Littlewood complex, whose terms are restrictions of representations of GL(V). When λ has more than n parts, the representation S[λ](V) is not defined, but the Littlewood complex Lλ still makes sense. The purpose of this paper is to compute its homology. We find that either Lλ is acyclic or that it has a unique non-zero homology group, which forms an irreducible representation of Sp(V). The non-zero homology group, if it exists, can be computed by a rule reminiscent of that occurring in the Borel-Weil-Bott theorem. This result can be interpreted as the computation of the "derived specialization" of irreducible representations of Sp(∞), and as such categorifies earlier results of Koike-Terada on universal character rings. We prove analogous results for orthogonal and general linear groups. Along the way, we will see two topics from commutative algebra: the minimal free resolutions of determinantal ideals and Koszul homology.

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