McKay graph


Affine (extended) Dynkin diagrams

In mathematics, the McKay graph of a finite-dimensional representation V of a finite group G is a weighted quiver encoding the structure of the representation theory of G. Each node represents an irreducible representation of G. If χ i, χ j are irreducible representations of G, then there is an arrow from χ i to χ j if and only if χ j is a constituent of the tensor product Then the weight nij of the arrow is the number of times this constituent appears in For finite subgroups H of the McKay graph of H is the McKay graph of the defining 2-dimensional representation of H.

If G has n irreducible characters, then the Cartan matrix cV of the representation V of dimension d is defined by where δ is the Kronecker delta. A result by Robert Steinberg states that if g is a representative of a conjugacy class of G, then the vectors are the eigenvectors of cV to the eigenvalues where χV is the character of the representation V.[1]

The McKay correspondence, named after John McKay, states that there is a one-to-one correspondence between the McKay graphs of the finite subgroups of and the extended Dynkin diagrams, which appear in the ADE classification of the simple Lie algebras.[2]

  1. ^ Steinberg, Robert (1985), "Subgroups of , Dynkin diagrams and affine Coxeter elements", Pacific Journal of Mathematics, 18: 587–598, doi:10.2140/pjm.1985.118.587
  2. ^ McKay, John (1982), "Representations and Coxeter Graphs", "The Geometric Vein", Coxeter Festschrift, Berlin: Springer-Verlag