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Monday, January 21, 2013

Bosonization Part III, Co-Bosonization

A few days ago I sketched out some of the basic category theoretic ideas behind the theory of bosonization of quantum groups. Today I want to talk about the dual version, co-bosonization.

First note that this whole theory is trivial, as dualizing such a theory is a straightforward and obvious process, but I'm working through the proofs of bosonization in a dualized setting by hand, just so I can learn Quantum Groups.

So let (H,\mathcal{R}) be a dually quasitriangular Hopf algebra (I called this a co-braided Hopf algebra in an earlier post on braided categories) and let \mathcal{C} = ^H\mathcal{M} by the braided category of H-comodules. If (V, \beta_V: v \mapsto \sum h^{(1,v)}\otimes v^{(1)}) and (W, \beta_W: w \mapsto \sum h^{(1,w)}\otimes w^{(1)}) are objects in the category, then the braiding is given by

\displaystyle \Psi_{V,W}(v\otimes w) = \sum \mathcal{R}\left(h^{(1,v)} \otimes h^{(1,w)}\right) w^{(1)} \otimes v^{(1)}

I won't give the proof here (I may not give it at all!). As before, a Hopf algebra B in the category ^H\mathcal{M} means that B, B\otimes B and all the structure maps are morphisms in the category, thus any twist involved is actually an invocation of the braiding \Psi.

Also as before, ^B \mathcal{C} is the category of B-comodules within the category \mathcal{C}, and the idea behind co-bosonization is to find a Hopf algebra \text{cobos}(B) such that ^B\mathcal{C} \cong \, ^{\text{cobos}(B)}\mathcal{M}.

We're going to propose what this new Hopf algebra \text{cobos}(B) should be. I won't give any proofs in this post (because I haven't done them yet), but hopefully I've dualized things correctly and I'm not stating anything that's not true. We'll start with the tensor product B \otimes H and we'll put an coalgebra structure on it by first noting that in the bosonization case, the coalgebra \Delta B \otimes H \rightarrow (B\otimes H) \otimes (B \otimes H) is

\displaystyle \left(\text{Id}_B \otimes \Psi_{B,H} \otimes \text{Id}_H\right) \circ \left( \Delta_B \otimes \Delta_H \right)

This coproduct almost makes sense here, we just need to treat H as a co-module of itself (so the braiding makes sense). But this is no difficult matter, because every Hopf algebra coacts on itself as a coalgebra by

\displaystyle \beta_H (h) = \sum h_{(1)} S(h_{(3)}) \otimes h_{(2)}

So we just use the dual-braiding \Psi instead of the original one, and write

\displaystyle \Delta (b \otimes h) = \sum \mathcal{R}\left( h^{(1,b_{(2)})} \otimes h^{(1,h_{(2)})} \right) b_{(1)} \otimes h_{(1)}^{(1)} \otimes b_{(2)}^{(1)} \otimes h_{(2)}

Now on to the product for \text{cobos}(B) = B \otimes H: in the bosonization case (were H acts, rather than coacts, on B), the product is given by

\displaystyle (b \otimes h) (c\otimes g) = \sum b(h_{(1)} \triangleright c) \otimes h_{(2)}g

This doesn't immediately make sense in our case, but we have the following proposition:

Proposition. There exists a monoidal functor (functor that respect the tensor product of objects) ^H \mathcal{M} \rightarrow ^H_H\mathcal{M}, the crossed modules we mentioned for the quantum double, by (V, \beta_V) \mapsto (V,\beta_V,\triangleright), where h \triangleright v = \sum \mathcal{R}\left( h \otimes h^{(1,v)} \right)v^{(1)}

Hence we do have an action of H on B, and we can write the product

\displaystyle (b \otimes h) (c \otimes g) = \sum \mathcal{R}\left( h_{(1)} \otimes h^{(1,c)}\right) bc^{(1)} \otimes h_{(2)}g

The unit and counit are obvious in this case (1 \otimes 1 and \epsilon(b \otimes h) = \epsilon(b)\epsilon(h)), but we still need an antipode. Again, we refer to bosonization and try to find the correct dual notion. In bosonization, the antipode S: B \otimes H \rightarrow B \otimes H is given by:

\displaystyle B\otimes H \xrightarrow{S_B \otimes S_H} B \otimes H \xrightarrow{\Psi_{B,H}} H \otimes B \xrightarrow{\Delta_H \otimes \text{Id}_B} H \otimes H \otimes B \xrightarrow{\text{Id}_H \otimes \Psi_{H,B}} H \otimes B \otimes H \xrightarrow{\triangleright \otimes \text{Id}_H} B \otimes H

This makes perfect sense for co-bosonization without modification. To summarize, we need proofs for the claims

  1. That \Psi is the braiding for the category ^H \mathcal{M}. (I have this.)
  2. That the product and coproduct as defined above give us a bialgebra \text{cos}(B) for B a Hopf algebra in the category ^H \mathcal{M}. (Not yet proved.)
  3. That the above antipode gives us a Hopf algebra \text{cos}(B). (Not yet proved.)
  4. That ^B\mathcal{C} = ^{\text{cos}(B)}\mathcal{M}. (Not yet proved).