superpotentials
We have
associated to a subgroup of the modular group
a quiver (that is, an oriented graph). For example, one verifies that the fundamental domain of the subgroup
(an index 3 subgroup) is depicted on the right by the region between the thick lines with the identification of edges as indicated. The associated quiver is then
![\xymatrix{i \ar[rr]^a \ar[dd]^b & & 1 \ar@/^/[ld]^h \ar@/_/[ld]_i \\
& \rho \ar@/^/[lu]^d \ar@/_/[lu]_e \ar[rd]^f & \\
0 \ar[ru]^g & & i+1 \ar[uu]^c} \xymatrix{i \ar[rr]^a \ar[dd]^b & & 1 \ar@/^/[ld]^h \ar@/_/[ld]_i \\
& \rho \ar@/^/[lu]^d \ar@/_/[lu]_e \ar[rd]^f & \\
0 \ar[ru]^g & & i+1 \ar[uu]^c}](/latexrender/pictures/ad479ae010a6c65ee9f54ad24d81bd77.gif)
The corresponding “dessin d’enfant” are the green edges in the picture. But, the red dot on the left boundary is identied with the red dot on the lower circular boundary, so the dessin of the modular subgroup
is
![\xymatrix{| \ar@{-}[r] & \bullet \ar@{-}@/^8ex/[r] \ar@{-}@/_8ex/[r] & -} \xymatrix{| \ar@{-}[r] & \bullet \ar@{-}@/^8ex/[r] \ar@{-}@/_8ex/[r] & -}](/latexrender/pictures/eb0cd35215ed8b87c510b3f372a262c1.gif)
Here, the three red dots (all of them even points in the
Dedekind tessellation) give (after the identification) the two points indicated by a
whereas the blue dot (an odd point in the tessellation) is depicted by a
. There is another ‘quiver-like’ picture associated to this dessin, a quilt of the modular subgroup
as studied by
John Conway and
Tim Hsu.
On the left, a quilt-diagram copied from Hsu’s book
Quilts : central extensions, braid actions, and finite groups, exercise 3.3.9. This ‘quiver’ has also 5 vertices and 7 arrows as our quiver above, so is there a connection?
A quilt is a gadget to study transitive permutation representations of the braid group
(rather than its quotient, the modular group
where
is the cyclic center of
. The
-stabilizer subgroup of all elements in a transitive permutation representation of
is the same and hence of the form
where M is called the modulus of the representation. The arrow-data of a quilt, that is the direction of certain edges and their labeling with numbers from
(which have to satisfy some requirements, the flow rules, but more about that another time) encode the Z-action on the permutation representation. The dimension of the representation is
where
is the number of half-edges in the dessin. In the above example, the modulus is 5 and the dessin has 3 (half)edges, so it depicts a 15-dimensional permutation representation of
.
If we forget the Z-action (that is, the arrow information), we get a permutation representation of the modular group (that is a dessin). So, if we delete the labels and directions on the edges we get what Hsu calls a modular quilt, that is, a picture consisting of thick edges (the dessin) together with dotted edges which are called the seams of the modular quilt. The modular quilt is merely another way to depict a fundamental domain of the corresponding subgroup of the modular group. For the above example, we have the indicated correspondences between the fundamental domain of
in the upper half-plane (on the left) and as a modular quilt (on the right)

That is, we can also get our quiver (or its opposite quiver) from the modular quilt by fixing the orientation of one 2-cell. For example, if we fix the orientation of the 2-cell
we get our quiver back from the modular quilt
![\xymatrix{i \ar[rr]^a \ar[dd]^b & & 1 \ar@/^/[ld]^h \ar@/_/[ld]_i \\
& \rho \ar@/^/[lu]^d \ar@/_/[lu]_e \ar[rd]^f & \\
0 \ar[ru]^g & & i+1 \ar[uu]^c} \xymatrix{i \ar[rr]^a \ar[dd]^b & & 1 \ar@/^/[ld]^h \ar@/_/[ld]_i \\
& \rho \ar@/^/[lu]^d \ar@/_/[lu]_e \ar[rd]^f & \\
0 \ar[ru]^g & & i+1 \ar[uu]^c}](/latexrender/pictures/ad479ae010a6c65ee9f54ad24d81bd77.gif)
does not depend on the choice of embedding of the dessin (or associated
cuboid tree diagram) in the upper half-plane. For, one can get the modular quilt from the dessin by adding one extra vertex for every connected component of the complement of the dessin (in the example, the two vertices corresponding to 0 and 1) and drawing a triangulation from them (the dotted lines or ’seams’).
braid group, Conway, Dedekind, groups, inform, modular, permutation representation, quivers, representations
1 comment
Posted in groups, modular
Written on Wed, 02 January 2008 at 1:33 pm
Tags: braid group, Conway, Dedekind, groups, inform, modular, permutation representation, quivers, representations
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January 2nd, 2008 at 3:05 pm
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