Okay, this blog entry is over two and a half years old, but I’ve been reading it over and trying to put it together for the nLab. Ignorance compels me to ask some questions.
First, to me, these Schur functors were always the Schur functors attached to Young diagrams, and I didn’t know that every endofunctor on (finite-dimensional vector spaces over – let me stick to the classical case for a minute) was a direct sum of ’s.
I’d like to understand that a bit better. First: is it literally every endofunctor? At first glance, that’s surprising to me. Is there a nice way of seeing that? Is it that every endofunctor is a finite direct sum of irreducibles?
In this blog discussion, there was some talk about the generality in which one could work: there were some comments on what new subtle features arise in nonzero characteristic over what happens in the classical case. For various reasons (which I’m coming to), I decided to play it safe by restricting attention to symmetric monoidal categories enriched in vector spaces over (with some exactness assumptions, pretty mild ones will do I think). Because of subtleties that can arise in characteristic , it felt to me like hoping for a clean general theory which applied to general symmetric monoidal abelian categories might be overreaching or asking for trouble, but I’d like to be better educated about this.
On the other hand, as Noah Snyder pointed out, you can carry the basic constructions quite far just by working with symmetric monoidal additive categories in which idempotents split. This is a very mild exactness assumption (it just means we pass if need be to the “Karoubi envelope” or Cauchy completion in the sense of Lawvere). Notice in particular that we get the Schur functor ( a partition of an -element set) by splitting the idempotent symmetrizer
that is available if homs are valued in vector spaces over .
This may have consequences for the conjecture John made about defining the category of Schur functors, which was:
A Schur functor is a pseudonatural transformation
where
is the 2-functor given by the inclusion of the 2-category
in the 2-category
More generally and concisely: the category of Schur functors and Schur natural transformations is
In other words, it’s the category whose objects are pseudonatural transformations from to , and whose morphisms are modifications between those.
First of all, I wonder whether John meant the 1-cells of to be symmetric monoidal (right exact) functors. I think of the 1-cells in as being suitable “change of base” functors which should preserve the construction of the basic gadgets , which involves tensor products and tensor powers.
Second: the colimits involved in the construction are absolute coequalizers. Namely, we have that
where is an idempotent symmetrizer projection, but this image can be construed as the coequalizer of the pair
which is a split coequalizer since is idempotent. Now, split coequalizers are preserved by any functor!
So if what I’m thinking is correct, we really don’t need right exactness at all in the definition of 1-cells of . To define , we can take perhaps
and as before.
It seems to me there may be some point to weakening the abelian hypothesis on 0-cells of to just Cauchy completeness (along the lines of what Noah said in his comment), and perhaps strengthening the hypothesis on the 1-cells to include preservation of direct sums (insofar as the claim is that general Schur functors are direct sums of irreducible ones, perhaps we should demand compatibility with direct sums, i.e., linearity of the functors). So, 1-cells would be additive, but right exactness may be more than what we really need.
Comments on the current nLab entry are welcome and appreciated.
Re: Schur Functors
I’m a bit worried about what happens in nonzero characteristic. Do things like symmetrizing and antisymmetrizing really work the same when you can’t divide by some prime p? Or do you get different sorts of ‘Schur functors’ in nonzero characteristic?
You never do divide by p. In the most basic examples, Sym2 resp. Alt2, you tensor the tensor square and mod out by {a⊗ b-b⊗ a} resp. by {a⊗a}, for all a,b in the module.
The more general definition, on pp. 104-107, is also as a quotient, of a big tensor product by a submodule generated by a bunch of things with leading coefficient 1. Perhaps they’re a module Grobner basis and so those coefficients 1 are the only ones you need worry about. (I don’t know this to be true.)
The characteristic p issues I understand to arise here are that you can’t argue that the resulting modules have unique “highest” weights any more, with which to prove irreducibility, now that weights wrap around.