In statistical mechanics, the Temperley–Lieb algebra is an algebra from which are built certain transfer matrices, invented by Neville Temperley and Elliott Lieb. It is also related to integrable models, knot theory and the braid group, quantum groups and subfactors of von Neumann algebras.
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Let be a commutative ring and fix . The Temperley-Lieb algebra is the -algebra generated by the elements , subject to the Jones relations:
may be represented diagrammatically as the vector space over noncrossing pairings on a rectangle with n points on two opposite sides. The five basis elements of are the following:
.
Multiplication on basis elements can be performed by placing two rectangles side by side, and replacing any closed loops by a factor of δ, for example:
× = = δ .
The identity element is the diagram in which each point is connected to the one directly across the rectangle from it, and the generator is the diagram in which the ith point is connected to the i+1th point, the 2n − i + 1th point is connected to the 2n − ith point, and all other points are connected to the point directly across the rectangle. The generators of are:
From left ot right, the unit 1 and the generators U1, U2, U3, U4.
The Jones relations can be seen graphically:
= δ
=
=
Consider an interaction-round-a-face model e.g. a square lattice model and let be the number of sites on the lattice. Following Temperley and Lieb[1] we define the Temperley-Lieb hamiltonian (the TL hamiltonian) as
where , for some spectral parameter .
We will firstly consider the case . The TL hamiltonian is , namely
= 2 - - .
We have two possible states,
and .
In acting by on these states, we find
= 2 - - = - ,
and
= 2 - - = - + .
Writing as a matrix in the basis of possible states we have,
The eigenvector of with the lowest eigenvalue is known as the ground state. In this case, the lowest eigenvalue for is . The corresponding eigenvector is . As we vary the number of sites we find the following table[2]
2 | (1) | 3 | (1, 1) |
4 | (2, 1) | 5 | |
6 | 7 | ||
8 | 9 | ||
where we have use the notation -times i.e. .
An interesting observation is that the largest components of the ground state of have a combinatorial enumeration as we vary the number of sites[3], as was first observed by Murray Batchelor, Jan Gier and B. Nienhuis[2]. Using the resources of an online database of integer sequences, Batchelor et. al. found, for an even numbers of sites
and for an odd numbers of sites
Surprisingly, these sequences corresponded to well known combinatorial objects. For even, this sequence corresponded to cyclically symmetric transpose complement plane partitions and for odd these corresponded to alternating sign matrices symmetric about the vertical axis.