Schubert calculus
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In mathematics, Schubert calculus is a branch of algebraic geometry introduced in the nineteenth century by Hermann Schubert, in order to solve various counting problems of projective geometry (part of enumerative geometry). It was a precursor of several more modern theories, for example characteristic classes, and in particular in its algorithmic aspects is still of current interest.
The objects introduced by Schubert are the Schubert cells, which are locally closed sets in a Grassmannian defined by conditions of incidence of a linear subspace in projective space with a given flag. The intersection theory of these cells, which can be seen as the product structure in the cohomology ring of the Grassmannian of associated cohomology classes, in principle allows the prediction of the cases where intersections of cells results in a finite set of points; which are potentially concrete answers to enumerative questions. A supporting theoretical result is that the Schubert cells (their classes, rather) span the whole cohomology ring.
In detailed calculations the combinatorial aspects enter as soon as the cells have to be indexed. Lifted from the Grassmanian, which is a homogeneous space, to the general linear group that acts on it, similar questions are involved in the Bruhat decomposition and classification of parabolic subgroups (by block matrix).
[edit] References
- Phillip Griffiths and Joseph Harris (1978), Principles of Algebraic Geometry, Chapter 1.5
- Steven Kleiman and Dan Laksov, Schubert calculus, American Mathematical Monthly, 79 (1972), 1061--1082.