Yang–Baxter equation

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In physics, the Yang–Baxter equation (or star–triangle relation) is a consistency equation which was first introduced in the field of statistical mechanics. It depends on the idea that in some scattering situations, particles may preserve their momentum while changing their quantum internal states. It states that a matrix R, acting on two out of three objects, satisfies where \check{R} is R followed by a swap of the two objects. In one-dimensional quantum systems, R is the scattering matrix and if it satisfies the Yang–Baxter equation then the system is integrable. The Yang–Baxter equation also shows up when discussing knot theory and the braid groups where R corresponds to swapping two strands. Since one can swap three strands in two different ways, the Yang–Baxter equation enforces that both paths are the same.

History

According to Jimbo, the Yang–Baxter equation (YBE) manifested itself in the works of J. B. McGuire in 1964 and C. N. Yang in 1967. They considered a quantum mechanical many-body problem on a line having as the potential. Using Bethe's Ansatz techniques, they found that the scattering matrix factorized to that of the two-body problem, and determined it exactly. Here YBE arises as the consistency condition for the factorization. In statistical mechanics, the source of YBE probably goes back to Onsager's star-triangle relation, briefly mentioned in the introduction to his solution of the Ising model in 1944. The hunt for solvable lattice models has been actively pursued since then, culminating in Baxter's solution of the eight vertex model in 1972. Another line of development was the theory of factorized S-matrix in two dimensional quantum field theory. Zamolodchikov pointed out that the algebraic mechanics working here is the same as that in the Baxter's and others' works. The YBE has also manifested itself in a study of Young operators in the group algebra of the symmetric group in the work of A. A. Jucys in 1966.

General form of the parameter-dependent Yang–Baxter equation

Let A be a unital associative algebra. In its most general form, the parameter-dependent Yang–Baxter equation is an equation for R(u,u'), a parameter-dependent element of the tensor product A \otimes A (here, u and u' are the parameters, which usually range over the real numbers ℝ in the case of an additive parameter, or over positive real numbers ℝ+ in the case of a multiplicative parameter). Let for, with algebra homomorphisms determined by The general form of the Yang–Baxter equation is for all values of u_1, u_2 and u_3.

Parameter-independent form

Let A be a unital associative algebra. The parameter-independent Yang–Baxter equation is an equation for R, an invertible element of the tensor product A \otimes A. The Yang–Baxter equation is where, , and.

With respect to a basis

Often the unital associative algebra is the algebra of endomorphisms of a vector space V over a field k, that is,. With respect to a basis {e_i} of V, the components of the matrices are written R_{ij}^{kl}, which is the component associated to the map. Omitting parameter dependence, the component of the Yang–Baxter equation associated to the map reads

Alternate form and representations of the braid group

Let V be a module of A, and. Let be the linear map satisfying for all x, y \in V. The Yang–Baxter equation then has the following alternate form in terms of on V \otimes V. Alternatively, we can express it in the same notation as above, defining, in which case the alternate form is In the parameter-independent special case where \check{R} does not depend on parameters, the equation reduces to and (if R is invertible) a representation of the braid group, B_n, can be constructed on by for. This representation can be used to determine quasi-invariants of braids, knots and links.

Symmetry

Solutions to the Yang–Baxter equation are often constrained by requiring the R matrix to be invariant under the action of a Lie group G. For example, in the case G = GL(V) and, the only G-invariant maps in are the identity I and the permutation map P. The general form of the R-matrix is then for scalar functions A, B. The Yang–Baxter equation is homogeneous in parameter dependence in the sense that if one defines, where f is a scalar function, then R' also satisfies the Yang–Baxter equation. The argument space itself may have symmetry. For example translation invariance enforces that the dependence on the arguments (u, u') must be dependent only on the translation-invariant difference u-u', while scale invariance enforces that R is a function of the scale-invariant ratio u/u'.

Parametrizations and example solutions

A common ansatz for computing solutions is the difference property,, where R depends only on a single (additive) parameter. Equivalently, taking logarithms, we may choose the parametrization, in which case R is said to depend on a multiplicative parameter. In those cases, we may reduce the YBE to two free parameters in a form that facilitates computations: for all values of u and v. For a multiplicative parameter, the Yang–Baxter equation is for all values of u and v. The braided forms read as: In some cases, the determinant of R (u) can vanish at specific values of the spectral parameter u=u_{0}. Some R matrices turn into a one dimensional projector at u=u_{0}. In this case a quantum determinant can be defined.

Example solutions of the parameter-dependent YBE

Then the parametrized Yang-Baxter equation (in braided form) with the multiplicative parameter is satisfied:

Classification of solutions

There are broadly speaking three classes of solutions: rational, trigonometric and elliptic. These are related to quantum groups known as the Yangian, affine quantum groups and elliptic algebras respectively.

Set-theoretic Yang–Baxter equation

Set-theoretic solutions were studied by Drinfeld. In this case, there is an R-matrix invariant basis X for the vector space V in the sense that the R-matrix maps the induced basis on V\otimes V to itself. This then induces a map given by restriction of the R-matrix to the basis. The set-theoretic Yang–Baxter equation is then defined using the 'twisted' alternate form above, asserting as maps on. The equation can then be considered purely as an equation in the category of sets.

Examples

Classical Yang–Baxter equation

Solutions to the classical YBE were studied and to some extent classified by Belavin and Drinfeld. Given a 'classical r-matrix', which may also depend on a pair of arguments (u, v), the classical YBE is (suppressing parameters) This is quadratic in the r-matrix, unlike the usual quantum YBE which is cubic in R. This equation emerges from so called quasi-classical solutions to the quantum YBE, in which the R-matrix admits an asymptotic expansion in terms of an expansion parameter \hbar, The classical YBE then comes from reading off the \hbar^2 coefficient of the quantum YBE (and the equation trivially holds at orders ).

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