Plücker embedding

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In mathematics, the Plücker map embeds the Grassmannian Gr(k,V), whose elements are k-dimensional subspaces of an n-dimensional vector space V, either real or complex, in a projective space, thereby realizing it as a projective algebraic variety. More precisely, the Plücker map embeds Gr(k,V) into the projectivization (kV) of the k-th exterior power of V. The image is algebraic, consisting of the intersection of a number of quadrics defined by the § Plücker relations (see below).

The Plücker embedding was first defined by Julius Plücker in the case k=2,n=4 as a way of describing the lines in three-dimensional space (which, as projective lines in real projective space, correspond to two-dimensional subspaces of a four-dimensional vector space). The image of that embedding is the Klein quadric in RP5.

Hermann Grassmann generalized Plücker's embedding to arbitrary k and n. The homogeneous coordinates of the image of the Grassmannian Gr(k,V) under the Plücker embedding, relative to the basis in the exterior space kV corresponding to the natural basis in V=Kn (where K is the base field) are called Plücker coordinates.

Definition

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Denoting by V=Kn the n-dimensional vector space over the field K, and by Gr(k,V) the Grassmannian of k-dimensional subspaces of V, the Plücker embedding is the map ι defined by

ι: Gr(k,V)(kV),W:=Span(w1,,wk)[w1wk],

where (w1,,wk) is a basis for the element WGr(k,V) and [w1wk] is the projective equivalence class of the element w1wkkV of the kth exterior power of V.

This is an embedding of the Grassmannian into the projectivization (kV). The image can be completely characterized as the intersection of a number of quadrics, the Plücker quadrics (see below), which are expressed by homogeneous quadratic relations on the Plücker coordinates (see below) that derive from linear algebra.

The bracket ring appears as the ring of polynomial functions on kV.[1]

Plücker relations

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The image under the Plücker embedding satisfies a simple set of homogeneous quadratic relations, usually called the Plücker relations, or Grassmann–Plücker relations, defining the intersection of a number of quadrics in (kV). This shows that the Grassmannian embeds as an algebraic subvariety of (kV) and gives another method of constructing the Grassmannian. To state the Grassmann–Plücker relations, let WGr(k,V) be the k-dimensional subspace spanned by the basis represented by column vectors w1,,wk. Let [W] be the n×k matrix whose columns are w1,,wk; the matrix of W with respect to a different basis is then [W]A for any invertible k×k matrix A. For any ordered sequence 1i1<<ikn of k integers, let Δi1,,ik be the determinant of the k×k submatrix of [W] on the rows (i1,ik); this determinant is called a minor. Then {Δi1,,ik} are the Plücker coordinates of the element WGr(k,V), the linear coordinates of the image ι(W)(kV) relative to the standard basis {ei1eik} of kV. Changing the basis of W just changes the Plücker coordinates by a nonzero factor det(A), the determinant of the change of basis matrix, giving the same point in (kV).

For any two ordered sequences:

i1<i2<<ik1,j1<j2<<jk+1

of positive integers

1il,jmn

, the following homogeneous equations are valid, and determine the image of

W

under the Plücker map:[2]

l=1k+1(1)lΔi1,,ik1,jlΔj1,,j^l,jk+1=0,

where

j1,,j^l,jk+1

denotes that the term

jl

is omitted. These are the Plücker relations.


When dim(V) = 4 and k = 2, we get Gr(2,V), the simplest Grassmannian which is not a projective space, and the above reduces to a single equation. Denoting the coordinates of 2V by

Δij=Δji,1i,j4,

the image of Gr(2,V) under the Plücker map is defined by the single equation

Δ12Δ34Δ13Δ24+Δ14Δ23=0.

In general, many more equations are needed to define the image of the Plücker embedding, as in (1), but these are not, in general, algebraically independent. The maximal number of algebraically independent relations (on Zariski open sets) is given by the difference of dimension between (kV) and Gr(k,V), which is (nk)k(nk)1.

References

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  1. ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
  2. ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).

Further reading

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  • Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).