Koornwinder polynomials

From testwiki
Revision as of 16:40, 5 January 2024 by imported>OAbot (Open access bot: arxiv updated in citation with #oabot.)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

In mathematics, Macdonald-Koornwinder polynomials (also called Koornwinder polynomials) are a family of orthogonal polynomials in several variables, introduced by KoornwinderTemplate:Sfn and I. G. Macdonald,[1] that generalize the Askey–Wilson polynomials. They are the Macdonald polynomials attached to the non-reduced affine root system of type (CTemplate:Su, Cn), and in particular satisfy analogues of Macdonald's conjectures.Template:Sfnm In addition Jan Felipe van Diejen showed that the Macdonald polynomials associated to any classical root system can be expressed as limits or special cases of Macdonald-Koornwinder polynomials and found complete sets of concrete commuting difference operators diagonalized by them.Template:Sfn Furthermore, there is a large class of interesting families of multivariable orthogonal polynomials associated with classical root systems which are degenerate cases of the Macdonald-Koornwinder polynomials.Template:Sfn The Macdonald-Koornwinder polynomials have also been studied with the aid of affine Hecke algebras.Template:Sfnm

The Macdonald-Koornwinder polynomial in n variables associated to the partition λ is the unique Laurent polynomial invariant under permutation and inversion of variables, with leading monomial xλ, and orthogonal with respect to the density

1i<jn(xixj,xi/xj,xj/xi,1/xixj;q)(txixj,txi/xj,txj/xi,t/xixj;q)1in(xi2,1/xi2;q)(axi,a/xi,bxi,b/xi,cxi,c/xi,dxi,d/xi;q)

on the unit torus

|x1|=|x2|=|xn|=1,

where the parameters satisfy the constraints

|a|,|b|,|c|,|d|,|q|,|t|<1,

and (x;q) denotes the infinite q-Pochhammer symbol. Here leading monomial xλ means that μ≤λ for all terms xμ with nonzero coefficient, where μ≤λ if and only if μ1≤λ1, μ12≤λ12, …, μ1+…+μn≤λ1+…+λn. Under further constraints that q and t are real and that a, b, c, d are real or, if complex, occur in conjugate pairs, the given density is positive.

Citations

Template:Reflist

References

  1. Macdonald 1987, important special casesTemplate:Full citation needed