18.769 | Spring 2009 | Graduate

Topics in Lie Theory: Tensor Categories

Syllabus

Course Meeting Times

Lectures: 2 sessions / week, 1.5 hours / session

Description

An important feature of category theory is that it allows one to imitate, at a higher level, many classical notions of elementary algebra. “Higher level” means that one allows maps (morphisms) not only between algebraic structures, but also between their elements. Such imitation is called categorification. The very notion of a category is a categorification, in this sense, of the notion of a set. Further, monoidal categories categorify monoids, and tensor categories (i.e., monoidal categories with a compatible additive structure), categorify associative rings.

Tensor categories are ubiquitous in mathematics. They arise in representation theory (representation categories of classical and quantum groups), algebraic geometry (categories of coherent sheaves on algebraic varieties, categories of local systems, categories of motives), topology (topological quantum field theory, invariants of knots, links, and 3-manifolds) the theory of operator algebras (bimodule categories for subfactors), 2-dimensional conformal field theory (fusion categories of modules over a vertex operator algebra), quantum statistical mechanics (nonabelian anyons in the quantum Hall effect), etc.

This course will be an attempt to give a detailed introduction to the theory of tensor categories and to review some of its connections to other subjects, time permitting (with a focus on representation-theoretic applications). In particular, we will discuss categorifications of such notions from ring theory as: module, morphism of modules, Morita equivalence of rings, commutative ring, the center of a ring, the centralizer of a subring, the double centralizer property, graded ring, etc.

Topics

We will develop from scratch the theory of monoidal and tensor categories and module categories, covering the following topics:

  1. Monoidal categories: the definition, MacLane’s coherence theorem, monoidal functors and their natural transformations, equivalence of monoidal categories, rigid monoidal categories, pivotal and spherical categories, dimensions, examples (Hopf algebras/quantum groups).
  2. Tensor categories: Grothendieck rings, fiber functors and reconstruction theory for Hopf algebras.
  3. Tensor categories with finitely many simple objects, Frobenius-Perron dimensions, fusion categories, examples.
  4. Module categories: the definition, examples, properties, algebras in categories, categories of module functors, dual categories. Morita equivalence of tensor categories.

Prerequisites

Before beginning this course, you are expected to know basic category theory, basic algebra, and fundamentals of group representations. Hopf algebras will often appear in the course, but no previous knowledge of them is expected.

Assignments

There will be five homework problem sets assigned during the course. It is ok to collaborate on homework if you creatively participate in solving it and understand what you write.

Calendar

SES # TOPICS
1 Basics of monoidal categories
2

Monoidal functors

MacLane’s strictness theorem

3

MacLane coherence theorem

Rigid monoidal categories

Invertible objects

Tensor and multitensor categories

4

Tensor product and tensor functors

Unit object

Grothendieck rings

Groupoids

Finite abelian categories

Fiber functors

Coalgebras

5 Bialgebras and Hopf algebras
6

Quantum groups

Skew-primitive elements

Pointed tensor categories

Coradical filtration

Chevalley’s theorem and Chevalley property

7

Andruskeiwitsch-Schneider conjecture

Cartier-Kostant theorem

Quasi-bialgebras and quasi-Hopf algebras

8

Quantum traces

Pivotal categories and dimensions

Spherical categories

Multitensor cateogries

Multifusion rings

Frobenius-Perron theorem

9

Tensor categories

Deligne’s tensor product

Finite (multi)tensor categories

Categorical freeness

10

Distinguished invertible object

Integrals in quasi-Hopf algebras

Cartan matrix

Basics of Module categories

11

Exact module categories

Algebras in categories

Internal Hom

12

Main Theorem

Categories of module functors

Dual categories

Course Info

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Spring 2009
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Lecture Notes