Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T22:22:41.401Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A categorical approach to dynamical quantum groups

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2022

Artem Kalmykov
Affiliation:
Universität Zürich, Institut für Mathematik, Winterthurerstrasse 190, CH-8057 Zürich, Switzerland; E-mail: [email protected]
Pavel Safronov
Affiliation:
Universität Zürich, Institut für Mathematik, Winterthurerstrasse 190, CH-8057 Zürich, Switzerland; E-mail: [email protected] Current address: School of Mathematics, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK

Abstract

We present a categorical point of view on dynamical quantum groups in terms of categories of Harish-Chandra bimodules. We prove Tannaka duality theorems for forgetful functors into the monoidal category of Harish-Chandra bimodules in terms of a slight modification of the notion of a bialgebroid. Moreover, we show that the standard dynamical quantum groups $F(G)$ and $F_q(G)$ are related to parabolic restriction functors for classical and quantum Harish-Chandra bimodules. Finally, we exhibit a natural Weyl symmetry of the parabolic restriction functor using Zhelobenko operators and show that it gives rise to the action of the dynamical Weyl group.

Type
Algebra
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

1 Introduction

1.1 Categorical approach to quantum groups

Let G be an affine algebraic group over a field k. The Tannaka duality theorems [Reference Rivano71, Reference Deligne25] imply that one can uniquely reconstruct G from the data of a symmetric monoidal category $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ of G-representations and the forgetful symmetric monoidal functor

(1) $$ \begin{align} F\colon \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(G)\longrightarrow \mathrm{Vect}. \end{align} $$

Namely, F admits a right adjoint $F^{\mathrm {R}}\colon \mathrm {Vect}\rightarrow \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ , and the algebra $\mathcal {O}(G)$ of polynomial functions on G can be reconstructed as

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{O}(G)\cong FF^{\mathrm{R}}(k),\end{align*}$$

where the Hopf algebra structure on $\mathcal {O}(G)$ is reconstructed from the monoidal structure on F.

Suppose G is a reductive algebraic group, $q\in \mathbf {C}^\times $ , and consider the category $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ of representations of the quantum group with divided powers [Reference Lusztig62, Reference Chari and Pressley21]. Then $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ carries a natural braided monoidal structure, and the forgetful functor

(2) $$ \begin{align} F\colon \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}_q(G)\longrightarrow \mathrm{Vect} \end{align} $$

is merely monoidal. In the same way, the Hopf algebra $\mathcal {O}_q(G)$ of functions on the quantum group is reconstructed as $FF^{\mathrm {R}}(k)$ .

The failure of the forgetful functor to preserve the braiding is captured by the R-matrix (see Theorem 2.27): that is, a collection of maps

$$\begin{align*}R_{V, W}\colon V\otimes W\longrightarrow V\otimes W\end{align*}$$

for two representations $V,W\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ . Moreover, for three representations $U,V,W\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ , the R-matrix satisfies the Yang–Baxter equation

(3) $$ \begin{align} R_{UV} R_{UW} R_{VW} = R_{VW} R_{UW} R_{UV} \end{align} $$

in $\mathrm {End}(U\otimes V\otimes W)$ .

1.2 Dynamical quantum groups

In several areas of mathematical physics, a version of the above equation has appeared for a dynamical R-matrix $R_{V, W}(\lambda )\colon V\otimes W\rightarrow V\otimes W$ , which depends on a parameter $\lambda \in \mathfrak {h}^*$ (dual space of the Cartan subalgebra $\mathfrak {h}\subset \mathfrak {g}$ ); the corresponding dynamical Yang–Baxter equation is

(4) $$ \begin{align} R_{UV}(\lambda- h^{(3)}) R_{UW}(\lambda) R_{VW}(\lambda-h^{(1)}) = R_{VW}(\lambda) R_{UW}(\lambda-h^{(2)}) R_{UV}(\lambda), \end{align} $$

where the shifts refer to the $\mathfrak {h}$ -weights of the corresponding elements of $U\otimes V\otimes W$ . We refer to $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}\cong \mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)$ as the base of the dynamical quantum group. As explained by Felder [Reference Felder41], equation (4) is closely related to the star-triangle relation for face-type statistical mechanical models [Reference Baxter6]. Moreover, it naturally appears in the description of the exchange algebra in the Liouville and Toda conformal field theories [Reference Gervais and Neveu43]. The study of the dynamical R-matrix gave rise to the theory of dynamical quantum groups; see [Reference Etingof and Schiffmann35, Reference Etingof33] for reviews.

On the classical level, ordinary quantum groups correspond to Poisson-Lie structures on G [Reference Drinfeld30]. Similarly, dynamical quantum groups correspond to dynamical Poisson groupoid structures on the trivial groupoid $\mathfrak {h}^*\times G\times \mathfrak {h}^*\rightrightarrows \mathfrak {h}^*$ (see [Reference Laurent-Gengoux, Stiénon and Ping59] for Poisson groupoids and [Reference Etingof and Varchenko36] for the dynamical version). After quantisation, ordinary quantum groups become Hopf algebras, while dynamical quantum groups become bialgebroids or Hopf algebroids (see [Reference Takeuchi82] for the original definition of bialgebroids, [Reference Jiang-Hua61, Reference Ping92] for Hopf algebroids and [Reference Etingof and Varchenko37] for the dynamical version).

One is naturally led to wonder about the categorical interpretation of dynamical quantum groups similar to the categorical interpretation in equation (2) of ordinary quantum groups explained above. Our first goal is to develop such an approach (inspired by a previous work by Donin and Mudrov [Reference Donin and Mudrov28, Reference Donin and Mudrov29]) and prove Tannaka-type reconstruction statements.

1.3 Dynamical quantum groups via Harish-Chandra bimodules

An important object in representation theory is the category $\mathrm {HC}(G)$ of Harish-Chandra bimodules: the monoidal category of $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ -bimodules with an integrable diagonal action. As we will explain shortly, the theory of dynamical quantum groups turns out to be closely related to the category $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ of Harish-Chandra bimodules for a torus H. In the main body of the paper (see section 3.1), we present a general formalism that incorporates classical and quantum examples as well as nonabelian bases (following [Reference Safronov73]), but for simplicity here we stick to the case of $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ .

First, we introduce the notion of a Harish-Chandra bialgebroid, which is an $\mathfrak {h}$ -bialgebroid introduced in [Reference Etingof and Varchenko37, Section 4.1] with certain integrability assumptions; see Theorem 3.29 for the general definition and Theorem 3.30 for the case of $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ . Namely, it is a bigraded algebra $B=\oplus _{\alpha , \beta \in \Lambda } B_{\alpha \beta }$ , where $\Lambda $ is the character lattice of H, together with two quantum moment maps $s,t\colon \mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)\rightarrow B$ , a coproduct $\Delta \colon B\rightarrow B\times _{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}} B$ , where the Takeuchi product introduced in [Reference Takeuchi82] is

$$\begin{align*}(B\times_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}} B)_{\alpha\beta} = \bigoplus_{\delta\in\Lambda} B_{\alpha\delta}\otimes_{\mathcal{O}(\mathfrak{h}^*)} B_{\delta\beta},\end{align*}$$

and a counit $\epsilon \colon B\rightarrow \mathrm {D}(H)$ into the algebra of differential operators on H. We prove the following equivalent characterisation of Harish-Chandra bialgebroids (see Theorem 3.32).

Theorem. A colimit-preserving lax monoidal comonad $\bot \colon \mathrm {HC}(H)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)$ is the same as a Harish-Chandra bialgebroid B, so $\bot (M) = B\times _{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}} M$ .

We may similarly define comodules over a Harish-Chandra bialgebroid in terms of a $\Lambda $ -graded $\mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)$ -module $M=\oplus _{\alpha \in \Lambda } M_\alpha $ together with a coaction map $M\rightarrow B\times _{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}} M$ . We prove the following Tannaka reconstruction theorem (see Theorem 3.35).

Theorem. Suppose $\mathcal {D}$ is a monoidal category with a monoidal functor $F\colon \mathcal {D} \rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)$ that admits a colimit-preserving right adjoint $F^{\mathrm {R}}\colon \mathrm {HC}(H)\rightarrow \mathcal {D}$ . Then there is a Harish-Chandra bialgebroid B such that $(F\circ F^{\mathrm {R}})(-)\cong B\times _{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}}(-)$ and F factors through a monoidal functor

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{D}\longrightarrow \mathrm{CoMod}_B(\mathrm{HC}(H)).\end{align*}$$

If F is conservative and preserves equalisers, the above functor is an equivalence.

Let us now explain the origin of dynamical R-matrices. Assume that $\mathcal {D}$ , in addition, has a braided monoidal structure. Moreover, assume that the functor $F\colon \mathcal {D}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)$ lands in free Harish-Chandra bimodules: that is, there is a functor $F'\colon \mathcal {D}\rightarrow \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)$ and an equivalence $F(x)\cong \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}\otimes F'(x)$ for any object $x\in \mathcal {D}$ . The following is Theorem 4.11.

Proposition. Under the above assumptions, the image of the braiding under $F\colon \mathcal {D}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)$ gives rise to dynamical R-matrices $R\colon \mathfrak {h}^*\rightarrow \mathrm {End}(F'(x)\otimes F'(y))$ satisfying the dynamical Yang–Baxter equation (4).

The above proposition is a direct quantum analogue of an interpretation of classical dynamical r-matrices in terms of 1-shifted Poisson morphisms (see [Reference Calaque, Pantev, Toën, Vaquié and Vezzosi20] for what this means) $[\mathfrak {h}^*/H]\rightarrow \mathrm {B} G$ ; see [Reference Safronov74, Proposition 5.7].

Let us compare these results to Tannaka reconstruction results for bialgebroids proven in [Reference Szlachányi81, Reference Shimizu77]. Suppose R is a ring. It is shown in [Reference Szlachányi81, Theorem 5.4] that a colimit-preserving oplax monoidal monad on the category ${}_{R}\mathrm {BMod}_{R}$ of R-bimodules is the same as a bialgebroid over R. Comparing it to our Theorem 3.32, the difference is that we work with lax monoidal comonads instead, replace ${}_{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}}\mathrm {BMod}_{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}}$ by the full subcategory $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ of Harish-Chandra bimodules and replace Takeuchi’s bialgebroids by Harish-Chandra bialgebroids (i.e., adding an extra integrability assumption).

Szlachányi [Reference Szlachányi81, Theorem 3.6] has proven a Tannaka-type reconstruction result for monoidal functors $F\colon \mathcal {D}\rightarrow {}_{R}\mathrm {BMod}_{R}$ admitting left adjoints in terms of modules over the corresponding bialgebroid. Shimizu has also proven a version of such a Tannaka reconstruction result in terms of comodules over the bialgebroid (see [Reference Shimizu77, Theorem 4.3, Lemma 4.18]).

1.4 Parabolic restriction

Two standard dynamical quantum groups $F(G)$ and $F_q(G)$ are introduced in [Reference Etingof and Varchenko31, Section 5] in terms of the so-called exchange construction. Here $F(G)$ quantises the standard rational dynamical r-matrix and $F_q(G)$ quantises the standard trigonometric dynamical r-matrix (see [Reference Etingof and Schiffmann35, Section 4]). Our second goal of the paper is to relate these dynamical quantum groups to objects in geometric representation theory.

Let G be a split reductive algebraic group over a characteristic zero field k, $B\subset G$ a Borel subgroup and $H=B/[B, B]$ the abstract Cartan subgroup; we denote by $\mathfrak {g},\mathfrak {b},\mathfrak {h}$ their Lie algebras. Consider the correspondence of algebraic stacks

(5)

It appears in many areas of symplectic geometry and geometric representation theory:

  • Let $\tilde {\mathfrak {g}}$ be the variety parametrising Borel subgroups of G together with an element $x\in \mathfrak {g}$ contained in the Lie algebra of the corresponding Borel subgroup. The projection $\tilde {\mathfrak {g}}\rightarrow \mathfrak {g}$ is known as the Grothendieck–Springer resolution (see [Reference Chriss and Ginzburg22, Section 3.1.31]). We may identify $[\tilde {\mathfrak {g}}/G]\cong [\mathfrak {b}/B]$ so that the projection $[\mathfrak {b}/B]\rightarrow [\mathfrak {g}^*/G]$ is identified with the Grothendieck–Springer resolution $[\tilde {\mathfrak {g}}/G]\rightarrow [\mathfrak {g}/G]$ . The study of the categories of $\mathrm {D}$ -modules on this correspondence is closely related to Springer theory (see [Reference Gunningham46] and references there).

  • Let $N\subset B$ be the unipotent radical. Then we may identify

    $$\begin{align*}[\mathfrak{b}/B]\cong [G\backslash \mathrm{T}^*(G/N) / H],\end{align*}$$
    where $\mathrm {T}^*(G/N)/H\rightarrow G/B$ is the universal family of twisted cotangent bundles over the flag variety parametrised by $\lambda \in \mathfrak {h}^*$ . In particular, quantisation of this correspondence is closely related to the Beilinson–Bernstein localisation theorem [Reference Beilinson and Bernstein7] (see [Reference Ben-Zvi and Nadler9]).
  • The stacks $[\mathfrak {g}^*/G],[\mathfrak {h}^*/H]$ have 1-shifted symplectic structures in the sense of [Reference Pantev, Toën, Vaquié and Vezzosi69]; moreover, equation (5) is a 1-shifted Lagrangian correspondence. It is shown in [Reference Calaque19, Section 2.2.1] that a Lagrangian L in $[\mathfrak {g}^*/G]$ is the same as a Hamiltonian G-space: that is, an algebraic symplectic variety X equipped with a symplectic G-action and a moment map $X\rightarrow \mathfrak {g}^*$ . Composing the Lagrangian $L\rightarrow [\mathfrak {g}^*/G]$ with the correspondence equation (5), we obtain a Lagrangian in $[\mathfrak {h}^*/H]$ : that is, a Hamiltonian H-space. It is shown in [Reference Safronov72] that this procedure coincides with the procedure of symplectic implosion [Reference Guillemin, Jeffrey and Sjamaar45, Reference Dancer, Kirwan and Swann23].

  • One may replace Lie algebras by the corresponding groups: that is, one may consider the correspondence $[G/G]\leftarrow [B/B]\rightarrow [H/H]$ . It is shown in [Reference Boalch14, Theorem A] that this correspondence (and its analogue for a parabolic subgroup) appears in the description of logarithmic connections on a disk.

Consider the induced bimodule category

(6) $$ \begin{align} \mathrm{QCoh}([\mathfrak{g}^*/G])\curvearrowright \mathrm{QCoh}([\mathfrak{b}/B]) \curvearrowleft \mathrm{QCoh}([\mathfrak{h}^*/H]), \end{align} $$

where $\mathrm {QCoh}([\mathfrak {g}^*/G])$ is the symmetric monoidal category of quasi-coherent sheaves on the stack $[\mathfrak {g}^*/G]$ . Explicitly, it can be identified as

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{QCoh}([\mathfrak{g}^*/G])\cong \mathrm{LMod}_{\mathrm{Sym}(\mathfrak{g})}(\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}} G)\end{align*}$$

and similarly for H.

In section 3.3, we study a quantum version of the bimodule given by equation (6):

(7) $$ \begin{align} \mathrm{HC}(G)\curvearrowright \mathcal{O}^{\mathrm{univ}} \curvearrowleft \mathrm{HC}(H). \end{align} $$

Here, as before, $\mathrm {HC}(G)$ is the monoidal category of Harish-Chandra bimodules: that is, $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ -bimodules with an integrable diagonal action. $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ is a universal version of category $\mathcal {O}$ : it is the category of $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ -modules internal to the category $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)$ whose $\mathfrak {n}$ -action is locally nilpotent. Equivalently, it is the category of $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}, \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})$ -bimodules whose diagonal B-action is integrable. The module structure on either side is given by the tensor product of bimodules using the latter description of $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ . The universal Verma module $M^{\mathrm {univ}} = \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}\otimes _{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {b}}\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ is naturally an object of $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ .

Let us explain how it relates to the classical picture. The algebra $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ has a natural PBW filtration; consider the corresponding Rees algebra over $k[\hbar ]$ . The above constructions can be repeated to produce $k[\hbar ]$ -linear categories so that at $\hbar =0$ , the bimodule given by equation (7) reduces to the bimodule given by equation (6).

Passing to the right adjoint of the action functor $\mathrm {HC}(H)\rightarrow \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ on the universal Verma module $M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ , one obtains the parabolic restriction functor

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{res}\colon \mathrm{HC}(G)\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}(H)\end{align*}$$

given by $\mathrm {res}(X) = (X/X\mathfrak {n})^N$ , which is naturally lax monoidal. The following statement combines Theorem 3.10 and Theorem 5.7 and provides a quantisation of symplectic implosion.

Proposition. An algebra in $\mathrm {HC}(G)$ is a G-equivariant algebra A with a quantum moment map $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}\rightarrow A$ . We have an isomorphism of algebras $\mathrm {res}(A)\cong A/\!\!/ N$ , where $A/\!\!/ N$ is the quantum Hamiltonian reduction by N.

For a generic central character $\chi \colon \mathrm {Z}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g})\rightarrow \mathbf {C}$ , the BGG category $\mathcal {O}_\chi $ with that central character is semisimple with simple objects given by Verma modules. We prove an analogous statement in the universal case. The following statement combines Theorem 5.17 and Theorem 5.18.

Theorem. Consider the subcategories $\mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}\subset \mathrm {HC}(H)$ and $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}\subset \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ of modules with generic $\mathfrak {h}$ -weights. Then the functor $\mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}\rightarrow \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}$ is an equivalence. In particular,

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}\colon \mathrm{HC}(G)\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}(H)^{\mathrm{gen}}\end{align*}$$

is strongly monoidal and colimit-preserving.

The key step in the above statement is to prove that the Verma module for generic highest weights is projective; in the universal setting, this is captured by the existence of the extremal projector [Reference Asherova, Smirnov and Tolstoy4] (see Theorem 5.14), which splits the projection $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}\rightarrow M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ for generic $\mathfrak {h}$ -weights.

There is a natural monoidal functor $\mathrm {free}\colon \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(G)$ given by $V\mapsto \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}\otimes V$ , so we get a monoidal functor

$$\begin{align*}\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(G)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{free}} \mathrm{HC}(G)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}} \mathrm{HC}(H)^{\mathrm{gen}}.\end{align*}$$

Moreover, we show in Theorem 5.23 that the Harish-Chandra bialgebroid reconstructed from $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G) \rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ is isomorphic to $F(G)$ (as an $\mathfrak {h}$ -bialgebroid) so that $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ is equivalent to $F(G)$ -comodules. We also prove analogous statements in the setting of quantum groups in Section 5.2.

These results have the following interpretation. The same braided monoidal category $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ has different monoidal functors $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {Vect}$ corresponding to different choices of the classical r-matrix; by Tannaka duality, this corresponds to nonstandard quantum groups, such as the Cremmer–Gervais quantum group in the case $G=\mathrm {SL}_n$ . In this paper, we study the monoidal functors $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}_q(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ , which give rise to dynamical quantum groups. Note that these are different ways to study the same braided monoidal category.

We also expect that the approach to dynamical quantum groups $F(G)$ and $F_q(G)$ presented here in terms of the correspondence in equation (5) might be useful to have an interpretation of Felder’s dynamical quantum group [Reference Felder41] in terms of the 1-shifted Lagrangian correspondence $\mathrm {Bun}_G(E)\leftarrow \mathrm {Bun}_B(E)\rightarrow \mathrm {Bun}_H(E)$ of moduli stacks of bundles on an elliptic curve E. It is interesting to note that the same correspondence is closely related to Feigin–Odesskii algebras [Reference Feigin and Odesskii40] (in particular, Sklyanin algebras [Reference Sklyanin79]); see [Reference Safronov74, Example 4.11] and [Reference Hua and Polishchuk48].

It is shown in [Reference Ben-Zvi, Brochier and Jordan8, Theorem 3.11] that $\mathrm {HC}_q(G)$ -module categories are the same as $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ -braided module categories [Reference Brochier17, Section 5.1]. In particular, the monoidal functor $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}\colon \mathrm {HC}_q(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}_q(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ allows one to transfer $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(H)$ -braided module categories to $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ -braided module categories.

1.5 Dynamical Weyl group

Let $W=\mathrm {N}(H)/H$ be the Weyl group and $\hat {W}$ the braid group covering W. The group W naturally acts on the symmetric monoidal category $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)$ , so we may consider the category of W-invariants $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)^W$ . Moreover, there exists a map $\hat {W}\rightarrow \mathrm {N}(H)$ lifting $\hat {W}\rightarrow W$ [Reference Tits84], so the forgetful functor $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)\rightarrow \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)$ factors through a symmetric monoidal functor

(8) $$ \begin{align} \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(G)\longrightarrow \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(H)^{\hat{W}}. \end{align} $$

Our third goal of the paper is to exhibit Weyl symmetry of the parabolic restriction functor for Harish-Chandra bimodules. A similar setup works for quantum groups using the quantum Weyl group [Reference Lusztig62, Reference Soibelman80, Reference Kirillov and Reshetikhin57]. Note, however, that the resulting functor

(9) $$ \begin{align} \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}_q(G)\longrightarrow \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}_q(H)^{\hat{W}} \end{align} $$

is not monoidal: in fact, the failure of the quantum Weyl group to be monoidal is related to the failure of the functor $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)\rightarrow \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(H)$ to be braided; this can be encapsulated in the notion of a braided Coxeter category [Reference Appel and Laredo3].

Zhelobenko [Reference Zhelobenko93], in the study of Mickelsson algebras, has introduced a collection of Zhelobenko operators $q_w\colon \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}\rightarrow \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ for every element of the Weyl group $w\in W$ satisfying the braid relations (see Theorem 6.1). It was realised in [Reference Khoroshkin and Ogievetsky53] that these operators give an action of the braid group $\hat {W}$ on a localised Mickelsson algebra.

Consider the W-action on $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ , where W acts on $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ via the dot action (the usual W-action shifted by the half-sum of positive roots $\rho $ ) and on H via the usual action. The above results directly imply the following statement (see Theorem 6.5).

Theorem. The Zhelobenko operators define a monoidal functor

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}\colon \mathrm{HC}(G)\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}(H)^{\mathrm{gen}, \hat{W}}\end{align*}$$

lifting $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}\colon \mathrm {HC}(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ .

Suppose $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ . Then $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}\otimes V)\cong (\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}}\otimes V$ , where $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}}\supset \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ is a certain localisation (see Theorem 5.12). In particular, the $\hat {W}$ -symmetry is captured by certain rational maps $A_{w, V}\colon \mathfrak {h}^*\rightarrow \mathrm {End}(V)$ satisfying the braid relation. We prove in Theorem 6.8 that these coincide with the dynamical Weyl group operators introduced in [Reference Tarasov and Varchenko83, Reference Etingof and Varchenko32].

Let us mention a relationship between these results and the generalised Harish–Chandra isomorphism [Reference Khoroshkin, Nazarov and Vinberg56]. Consider the functor $\widetilde {\mathrm {res}}\colon \mathrm {HC}(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)$ given by $\tilde {\mathrm {res}}(X) = \mathfrak {n}_- X \backslash X / X\mathfrak {n}_+$ . There is a natural transformation $\mathrm {res}(X)\rightarrow \widetilde {\mathrm {res}}(X)$ , which becomes an isomorphism in $\mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ (see Theorem 5.16). We obtain a restriction map

(10)

The object $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}}\in \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ has a canonical $\hat {W}$ -equivariance structure given by the dot action of W on $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ . In particular, Zhelobenko operators define maps $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}\otimes V^H\rightarrow (\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}}\otimes V^H$ and, in fact, the action factors through the action of the Weyl group. The resulting homomorphism

$$\begin{align*}\widetilde{\mathrm{res}}\colon (\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}\otimes V)^G\longrightarrow (\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}\otimes V^H)^W\end{align*}$$

is shown in [Reference Khoroshkin, Nazarov and Vinberg56] to be an isomorphism. It generalises the usual Harish-Chandra isomorphism (see, e.g., [Reference Humphreys49, Theorem 1.10]), which is obtained for $V=k$ the trivial one-dimensional representation.

The papers [Reference Braverman and Finkelberg16, Reference Ginzburg and Riche44] gave an interpretation of the dynamical Weyl group in terms of equivariant cohomology of the affine Grassmannian of the Langlands dual group, using the geometric Satake equivalence. It would be interesting to see the appearance of the Zhelobenko operators using the Langlands dual interpretation of Harish-Chandra bimodules from [Reference Bezrukavnikov and Finkelberg12].

Let us mention a categorical point of view on the Weyl symmetry of the parabolic restriction functor $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}\colon \mathrm {HC}(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)$ . By abstract reasons, the action functor $\mathrm {HC}(G)\rightarrow \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ factors through the category of coalgebras over a comonad $\mathrm {St}\colon \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}\rightarrow \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ obtained from the right adjoint of the action functor. In particular, for generic weights, parabolic restriction factors through the category of $\mathrm {St}$ -coalgebras in $\mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ . We expect that there is an equivalence between $\mathrm {St}$ and the comonad corresponding to the W-action on $\mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ . We refer to [Reference Ben-Zvi and Nadler9], where it is called the Weyl comonad, and [Reference Gunningham46, Theorem 4.6] for an analogous theorem in the setting of $\mathrm {D}$ -modules.

2 Background

In this section, we recall some facts about locally presentable categories, cp-rigid monoidal categories and Tannaka reconstruction for bialgebras.

2.1 Locally presentable categories

Let k be a field. All categories and functors we will consider are k-linear. Throughout this paper, we work with locally presentable categories (refer to [Reference Adámek and Rosický1] and [Reference Brandenburg, Chirvasitu and Johnson-Freyd15, Section 2] for more details). Here are the main examples:

  • If $\mathcal {C}$ is a small category, the category of presheaves $\mathrm {Fun}(\mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {op}}, \mathrm {Vect})$ is locally presentable. For instance, this applies to the category $\mathrm {LMod}_A$ of (left) modules over a k-algebra A.

  • If $\mathcal {C}$ is a small category that admits finite colimits, the ind-completion $\mathrm {Ind}(\mathcal {C})$ (see [Reference Kashiwara and Schapira51, Chapter 6] for what it means) is locally presentable.

  • If C is a k-coalgebra, the category of C-comodules $\mathrm {CoMod}_C$ is locally presentable (see [Reference Wischnewsky91, Corollary 9], noting that a Grothendieck category is locally presentable). In fact, $\mathrm {CoMod}_C$ is the ind-completion of the category of finite-dimensional C-comodules (see [Reference Rivano71, Corollaire 2.2.2.3]).

  • If $\mathcal {C}, \mathcal {D}$ are locally presentable categories, the category $\mathrm {Fun}^{\mathrm {L}}(\mathcal {C}, \mathcal {D})$ of colimit-preserving functors from $\mathcal {C}$ to $\mathcal {D}$ is locally presentable.

It turns out that many examples of locally presentable categories are, in fact, presheaf categories.

Definition 2.1. Let $\mathcal {C}$ be a locally presentable category. An object $x\in \mathcal {C}$ is compact projective if $\mathrm {Hom}_{\mathcal {C}}(x, -)\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathrm {Vect}$ preserves colimits. $\mathcal {C}$ has enough compact projectives if every object receives a nonzero morphism from a compact projective.

We denote by $\mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}\subset \mathcal {C}$ the full subcategory of compact projective objects.

Proposition 2.2. Suppose $\mathcal {C}$ has enough compact projectives. Then the functor

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{C}\longrightarrow \mathrm{Fun}((\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}})^{\mathrm{op}}, \mathrm{Vect})\end{align*}$$

given by $x\mapsto (y\mapsto \mathrm {Hom}_{\mathcal {C}}(y, x))$ is an equivalence.

Locally presentable categories naturally form a symmetric monoidal 2-category $\mathrm {Pr}^{\mathrm {L}}$ [Reference Bird13]:

  • Its objects are locally presentable categories.

  • Its 1-morphisms are colimit-preserving functors.

  • Its 2-morphisms are natural transformations.

  • The tensor product is uniquely determined by the following property: for $\mathcal {C},\mathcal {D},\mathcal {E}\in \mathrm {Pr}^{\mathrm {L}}$ a colimit-preserving functor $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {D}\rightarrow \mathcal {E}$ is the same as a bifunctor $\mathcal {C}\times \mathcal {D}\rightarrow \mathcal {E}$ preserving colimits in each variables.

  • The unit is $\mathrm {Vect}\in \mathrm {Pr}^{\mathrm {L}}$ .

An important fact about locally presentable categories is that a colimit-preserving functor between locally presentable categories admits a right adjoint. We will now write a formula for the adjoint, assuming the source category has enough compact projectives. Let us first recall the notion of a coend (see [Reference Loregian60] for more details on coends).

Definition 2.3. Suppose $\mathcal {C}$ and $\mathcal {D}$ are locally presentable categories. The coend of a bifunctor $F\colon \mathcal {C}\times \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {op}}\rightarrow \mathcal {D}$ is the coequaliser

We will use the following Yoneda-like property of coends (see [Reference Loregian60, Proposition 2.2.1]).

Proposition 2.4. For any functors $F\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathcal {D}, G\colon \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {op}}\rightarrow \mathcal {D}$ , we have natural isomorphisms

$$\begin{align*}\int^{x\in\mathcal{C}} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(x, y)\otimes F(x)\cong F(y),\qquad \int^{x\in\mathcal{C}} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(y, x)\otimes G(x)\cong G(y).\end{align*}$$

The following is an immediate corollary.

Proposition 2.5. Suppose $F\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathcal {D}$ is a colimit-preserving functor of locally presentable categories, where $\mathcal {C}$ has enough compact projectives. Then the right adjoint is given by the coend

$$\begin{align*}F^{\mathrm{R}}(x) = \int^{y\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{D}}(F(y), x)\otimes y.\end{align*}$$

The counit of the adjunction $FF^{\mathrm {R}}(x)\rightarrow x$ is given by the evaluation map $\mathrm {Hom}_{\mathcal {D}}(F(y), x)\otimes F(y)\rightarrow x$ ; the unit of the adjunction $z\rightarrow F^{\mathrm {R}} F(z)$ is given by including the identity map $\mathrm {id}\colon F(z)\rightarrow F(z)$ in the coend.

2.2 Cp-rigidity

By convention, all monoidal categories $\mathcal {C}$ that we consider in this paper are locally presentable such that the tensor product bifunctor $\mathcal {C}\times \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}$ preserves colimits in each variable. So, by the universal property of the tensor product in $\mathrm {Pr}^{\mathrm {L}}$ , it descends to a colimit-preserving functor

$$\begin{align*}T\colon \mathcal{C}\otimes\mathcal{C}\longrightarrow \mathcal{C}.\end{align*}$$

We denote by $\mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ the same category with the opposite monoidal structure.

We will consider rigid monoidal categories in the text. Since we work with large categories, we cannot expect all objects to be dualisable (as in the category of all vector spaces); instead, we will restrict our attention to compact projective objects.

Definition 2.6. Let $\mathcal {C}$ be a monoidal category with enough compact projectives. It is cp-rigid if every compact projective object admits left and right duals.

Lemma 2.7. Suppose $\mathcal {C}$ is a cp-rigid monoidal category and $x,y\in \mathcal {C}$ are compact projective objects. Then $x\otimes y$ is also compact projective.

Proof. We have

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(x\otimes y, -) \cong \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(x, (-)\otimes y^\vee). \end{align*}$$

By assumption, the tensor product preserves colimits in each variable, so $(-)\otimes y^\vee $ is colimit-preserving. Since x is compact projective, $\mathrm {Hom}_{\mathcal {C}}(x, -)$ is colimit-preserving. Therefore, $\mathrm {Hom}_{\mathcal {C}}(x\otimes y, -)$ is also colimit-preserving.

If $\mathcal {C}$ is cp-rigid, the tensor product functor $T\colon \mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}$ admits a colimit-preserving right adjoint $T^{\mathrm {R}}\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}$ (see, e.g., [Reference Brochier, Jordan and Snyder18, Section 5.3]). It has the following explicit formula.

Proposition 2.8. Suppose $\mathcal {C}$ is a cp-rigid monoidal category. Then

$$\begin{align*}T^{\mathrm{R}}(y) \cong \int^{x\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} (y\otimes x^\vee)\boxtimes x.\end{align*}$$

Proof. By Theorem 2.5, the right adjoint is

$$\begin{align*}T^{\mathrm{R}}(y) \cong \int^{x_1,x_2\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(x_1\otimes x_2, y)\otimes (x_1\boxtimes x_2).\end{align*}$$

Since compact projective objects in $\mathcal {C}$ are dualisable, we can rewrite it as

$$ \begin{align*} T^{\mathrm{R}}(y)&\cong \int^{x_1,x_2\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(x_1, y\otimes x_2^\vee)\otimes (x_1\boxtimes x_2) \\ &\cong \int^{x_2\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} (y\otimes x_2^\vee)\boxtimes x_2, \end{align*} $$

where in the last isomorphism, we have used Theorem 2.4.

Consider $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}$ as a $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ -module category via the left action on the first factor and the right action on the second factor. By [Reference Brochier, Jordan and Snyder18, Proposition 4.1], $T^{\mathrm {R}}$ is a functor of $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ -module categories. This can be expressed in the following isomorphism.

Proposition 2.9. Suppose $\mathcal {C}$ is as before. Then $T^{\mathrm {R}}\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}$ is a functor of $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ -module categories. Concretely, for any object $y\in \mathcal {C}$ , there is a natural isomorphism

$$\begin{align*}\int^{x\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} (y\otimes x^\vee)\boxtimes x\cong \int^{x\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} x^\vee\boxtimes (x\otimes y)\end{align*}$$

that is given for a compact projective $y\in \mathcal {C}$ by

$$\begin{align*}x^\vee\boxtimes(x\otimes y)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{coev}_y\otimes \mathrm{id}} (y\otimes y^\vee\otimes x^\vee)\boxtimes (x\otimes y)\xrightarrow{\pi_{x\otimes y}} \int^{x\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} (y\otimes x^\vee)\boxtimes x.\end{align*}$$

Corollary 2.10. The object $T^{\mathrm {R}}(\mathbf {1})\in \mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ has a natural algebra structure.

Proof. $T^{\mathrm {R}} T$ is naturally a monad on $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ . By definition, $T\colon \mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}$ is a functor of $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ -module categories. By Theorem 2.9 $T^{\mathrm {R}}\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}$ is also a functor of $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ -module categories. Therefore, $(T^{\mathrm {R}} T)(\mathbf {1}_{\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}})$ has a natural algebra structure.

The key property of cp-rigid monoidal categories is that they are canonically self-dual objects of $\mathrm {Pr}^{\mathrm {L}}$ .

Theorem 2.11. Let $\mathcal {C}$ be a cp-rigid monoidal category with a compact projective unit. The evaluation and coevaluation pairings

(11) $$ \begin{align} \mathrm{ev}&\colon \mathcal{C}\otimes\mathcal{C}\xrightarrow{T}\mathcal{C}\xrightarrow{\mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(\mathbf{1}, -)}\mathrm{Vect} \end{align} $$
(12) $$ \begin{align} \mathrm{coev}&\colon \mathrm{Vect}\xrightarrow{(-)\otimes\mathbf{1}}\mathcal{C}\xrightarrow{T^{\mathrm{R}}}\mathcal{C}\otimes \mathcal{C}. \end{align} $$

establish the self-duality of $\mathcal {C}$ as an object of the symmetric monoidal bicategory $\mathrm {Pr}^{\mathrm {L}}$ .

Proof. See [Reference Hoyois, Safronov, Scherotzke and Sibilla47, Proposition 2.16] for an analogous statement on the level of $\infty $ -categories.

Remark 2.12. The conclusion of the theorem remains true if we drop the assumption that the unit of $\mathcal {C}$ is compact and projective and replace $\mathrm {Hom}_{\mathcal {C}}(\mathbf {1}, -)\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathrm {Vect}$ by the colimit-preserving functor that coincides with $\mathrm {Hom}_{\mathcal {C}}(\mathbf {1}, -)$ on compact projective objects.

Corollary 2.13. Let $\mathcal {C}$ be a cp-rigid monoidal category with a compact projective unit and $\mathcal {D}$ any monoidal category. Then the functor

(13) $$ \begin{align} \mathcal{D}\otimes \mathcal{C}\longrightarrow \mathrm{Fun}^{\mathrm{L}}(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{D}) \end{align} $$

given by

$$\begin{align*}d\boxtimes c\mapsto (c'\mapsto \mathrm{ev}(c, c')\otimes d)\end{align*}$$

is an equivalence.

2.3 Duoidal categories

Let us now study the monoidal properties of the equivalence given by equation (13). The functor category $\mathrm {Fun}^{\mathrm {L}}(\mathcal {C}, \mathcal {D})$ has a natural monoidal structure given by the Day convolution [Reference Day24] defined by

(14) $$ \begin{align} (F\otimes_{\mathrm{Day}} G)(x) = \int^{x_1,x_2\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(x_1\otimes x_2, x)\otimes F(x_1)\otimes G(x_2) \end{align} $$

with the unit functor

$$\begin{align*}x\mapsto \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(\mathbf{1}_{\mathcal{C}}, x)\otimes \mathbf{1}_{\mathcal{D}}.\end{align*}$$

Proposition 2.14. The equivalence given by equation (13) upgrades to a monoidal equivalence

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{D}\otimes\mathcal{C}^{\otimes\mathrm{op}}\xrightarrow{\sim} \mathrm{Fun}^{\mathrm{L}}(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{D}),\end{align*}$$

where we equip $\mathrm {Fun}^{\mathrm {L}}(\mathcal {C}, \mathcal {D})$ with the Day convolution monoidal structure.

Proof. Clearly, the units are compatible since $\mathbf {1}_{\mathcal {D}}\boxtimes \mathbf {1}_{\mathcal {C}}$ is sent to the functor $(x\mapsto \mathrm {ev}(\mathbf {1}_{\mathcal {C}}, x)\otimes \mathbf {1}_{\mathcal {D}})$ .

Now consider two objects $d_1\boxtimes c_1, d_2\boxtimes c_2\in \mathcal {D}\otimes \mathcal {C}$ . Their Day convolution is computed by

$$ \begin{align*} &((d_1\boxtimes c_1)\otimes_{\mathrm{Day}} (d_2\boxtimes c_2))(x) \\ = &\int^{x_1,x_2\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(x_1\otimes x_2, x)\otimes (d_1\otimes d_2)\otimes \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(\mathbf{1}, c_1\otimes x_1)\otimes \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(\mathbf{1}, c_2\otimes x_2). \end{align*} $$

So, we have to exhibit a natural isomorphism

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(\mathbf{1}, c_2\otimes c_1\otimes x)\cong \int^{x_1,x_2\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(x_1\otimes x_2, x)\otimes \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(\mathbf{1}, c_1\otimes x_1)\otimes \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(\mathbf{1}, c_2\otimes x_2).\end{align*}$$

By assumption, $\mathcal {C}$ is generated by compact projectives, so it is enough to define this isomorphism on those.

The right-hand side is

$$ \begin{align*} &\quad \int^{x_1,x_2} \mathrm{Hom}(x_1\otimes x_2, x)\otimes \mathrm{Hom}(\mathbf{1}, c_1\otimes x_1)\otimes \mathrm{Hom}(\mathbf{1}, c_2\otimes x_2) \\ &\cong \int^{x_1,x_2} \mathrm{Hom}(x_1\otimes x_2, x)\otimes \mathrm{Hom}(c_1^\vee, x_1)\otimes \mathrm{Hom}(c_2^\vee, x_2) \\ &\cong \mathrm{Hom}(c_1^\vee\otimes c_2^\vee, x) \\ &\cong \mathrm{Hom}(\mathbf{1}, c_2\otimes c_1\otimes x), \end{align*} $$

where we have used Theorem 2.4 in the third line.

We will now examine the monoidal properties of the self-duality pairings given by equations (11) and (12).

Proposition 2.15. The functors

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{ev}\colon \mathcal{C}^{\otimes\mathrm{op}}\otimes \mathcal{C}\longrightarrow \mathrm{Vect},\qquad \mathrm{coev}\colon \mathrm{Vect}\rightarrow \mathcal{C}\otimes \mathcal{C}^{\otimes\mathrm{op}}\end{align*}$$

have a natural lax monoidal structure.

Proof. We begin with the evaluation functor. The unit map $k\rightarrow \mathrm {ev}(\mathbf {1}, \mathbf {1})=\mathrm {Hom}_{\mathcal {C}}(\mathbf {1}, \mathbf {1})$ is given by the inclusion of the identity. Suppose $c_1\boxtimes c_2,d_1\boxtimes d_2\in \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}\otimes \mathcal {C}$ are two compact projective objects. Then we define $\mathrm {ev}(c_1, c_2)\otimes \mathrm {ev}(d_1, d_2)\rightarrow \mathrm {ev}(d_1\otimes c_1, c_2\otimes d_2)$ via the commutative diagram

Next we consider the coevaluation functor. A lax monoidal structure on $\mathrm {coev}$ is the same as an algebra structure on $\mathrm {coev}(k)=T^{\mathrm {R}}(\mathbf {1})$ , which, in turn, is provided by Theorem 2.10.

Now suppose $\mathcal {C},\mathcal {D}$ are cp-rigid monoidal categories with compact projective units and $\mathcal {E}$ any monoidal category. Then the composition functor

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{Fun}^{\mathrm{L}}(\mathcal{D}, \mathcal{E})\otimes \mathrm{Fun}^{\mathrm{L}}(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{D})\longrightarrow \mathrm{Fun}^{\mathrm{L}}(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{E})\end{align*}$$

has a natural lax monoidal structure with respect to the Day convolution.

Proposition 2.16. Suppose $\mathcal {C},\mathcal {D},\mathcal {E}$ are as above. The diagrams

and

of lax monoidal functors with respect to the Day convolution commute up to a monoidal natural isomorphism.

Recall the following notion (see [Reference Aguiar and Mahajan2, Definition 6.1], where it is called a 2-monoidal category).

Definition 2.17. A duoidal category is a category $\mathcal {C}$ equipped with two monoidal structures $(\mathcal {C}, \circ , I)$ and $(\mathcal {C}, \otimes , J)$ such that the functors $\circ \colon \mathcal {C}\times \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}$ and $I\colon \mathrm {Vect}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}$ are lax monoidal with respect to $(\otimes , J)$ .

Example 2.18. Consider the category $\mathrm {Fun}^{\mathrm {L}}(\mathcal {C}, \mathcal {C})$ . It carries a monoidal structure $\circ $ given by the composition of functors whose unit I is the identity functor. It also carries the Day convolution monoidal structure $\otimes _{Day}$ . It is shown in [Reference Garner and Franco42, Proposition 50] that the two are compatible so that $\mathrm {Fun}^{\mathrm {L}}(\mathcal {C}, \mathcal {C})$ is a duoidal category.

Example 2.19. Consider the category $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}$ . It carries a convolution monoidal structure $\circ $ defined by

$$\begin{align*}(M_1\boxtimes M_2)\circ (N_1\boxtimes N_2) = \mathrm{ev}(M_2, N_1)\otimes M_1\boxtimes N_2\end{align*}$$

whose unit is $I = \mathrm {coev}(k)\in \mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}$ . It also carries a pointwise monoidal structure $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ whose unit is $J = \mathbf {1}_{\mathcal {C}}\boxtimes \mathbf {1}_{\mathcal {C}}$ . It follows from Theorem 2.15 that the two monoidal structures are compatible, so $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}$ becomes a duoidal category. Moreover, $\mathcal {C}$ is naturally a module category over $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}$ with respect to convolution

$$\begin{align*}(\mathcal{C}\otimes \mathcal{C})\otimes \mathcal{C}\longrightarrow \mathcal{C}\end{align*}$$

and is given by

$$\begin{align*}(c_1\boxtimes c_2)\boxtimes d\mapsto \mathrm{ev}(c_2, d)\otimes c_1.\end{align*}$$

We are now ready to relate the two duoidal structures. The following statement combines Theorems 2.14 and 2.16.

Theorem 2.20. Suppose $\mathcal {C}$ is a cp-rigid monoidal category with a compact projective unit. The equivalence given by equation (13)

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{C}\otimes \mathcal{C}\longrightarrow \mathrm{Fun}^{\mathrm{L}}(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{C})\end{align*}$$

given by $c_1\boxtimes c_2\mapsto (d\mapsto \mathrm {ev}(c_2, d)\otimes c_1)$ upgrades to an equivalence of duoidal categories, where the two monoidal structures are the convolution product and the pointwise monoidal structure on $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ while the two monoidal structures on $\mathrm {Fun}^{\mathrm {L}}(\mathcal {C}, \mathcal {C})$ are the composition of functors and Day convolution. This equivalence intertwines $\mathcal {C}$ as a $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}$ -module category with respect to convolution and $\mathcal {C}$ as a $\mathrm {Fun}^{\mathrm {L}}(\mathcal {C}, \mathcal {C})$ -module category with respect to composition of functors.

2.4 Bimodules and lax monoidal functors

Suppose $f\colon A\rightarrow B$ is a homomorphism of algebras. Then B becomes an $(A, B)$ -bimodule with a distinguished element given by $1\in B$ . Conversely, the data of an $(A, B)$ -bimodule M with a distinguished element $1_M\in M$ such that the action map $B\rightarrow M$ is an isomorphism, is the same as the data of a homomorphism $A\rightarrow B$ . In this section, we will describe a similar construction on the categorical level. Recall from [Reference Etingof, Gelaki, Nikshych and Ostrik34, Chapters 7.1,7.2] the notion of a module category over a monoidal category.

Suppose $\mathcal {C}$ and $\mathcal {D}$ are monoidal categories and $\mathcal {M}$ a $(\mathcal {C}, \mathcal {D})$ bimodule category together with a distinguished object $\mathrm {Dist}\in \mathcal {M}$ . The action functors of $\mathcal {C}$ and $\mathcal {D}$ on $\mathrm {Dist}\in \mathcal {M}$ define colimit-preserving functors

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{act}_{\mathcal{C}}\colon \mathcal{C}\longrightarrow \mathcal{M},\qquad \mathrm{act}_{\mathcal{D}}\colon \mathcal{D}\longrightarrow \mathcal{M},\end{align*}$$

which we write as $x\mapsto x\otimes \mathrm {Dist}$ and $y\mapsto \mathrm {Dist}\otimes y$ , respectively. By the adjoint functor theorem, these admit right adjoints that we denote by $\mathrm {act}^{\mathrm {R}}_{\mathcal {C}}$ and $\mathrm {act}^{\mathrm {R}}_{\mathcal {D}}$ . The counit of the adjunction defines a natural morphism

$$\begin{align*}\epsilon\colon \mathrm{Dist}\otimes\mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_{\mathcal{D}}(m)\rightarrow m\end{align*}$$

for $m\in \mathcal {M}$ . Moreover, $\mathrm {act}_{\mathcal {D}}\colon \mathcal {D}\rightarrow \mathcal {M}$ is a functor of right $\mathcal {D}$ -module categories, so $\mathrm {act}^{\mathrm {R}}_{\mathcal {D}}\colon \mathcal {M}\rightarrow \mathcal {D}$ is a lax $\mathcal {D}$ -module functor: that is, we have a natural morphism

$$\begin{align*}\phi\colon\mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_{\mathcal{D}}(m)\otimes y\longrightarrow \mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_{\mathcal{D}}(m\otimes y)\end{align*}$$

satisfying an associativity axiom.

Consider the functor

$$\begin{align*}F_{\mathcal{C}\mathcal{D}}=\mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_{\mathcal{D}}\circ\mathrm{act}_{\mathcal{C}}\colon \mathcal{C}\longrightarrow \mathcal{D}.\end{align*}$$

Proposition 2.21. The morphisms

$$\begin{align*}\mathbf{1}_{\mathcal{D}}\rightarrow \mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_{\mathcal{D}}\circ \mathrm{act}_{\mathcal{D}}(\mathbf{1}_{\mathcal{D}})\cong \mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_{\mathcal{D}}\circ \mathrm{act}_{\mathcal{C}}(\mathbf{1}_{\mathcal{C}})\end{align*}$$

and

$$ \begin{align*} \mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_{\mathcal{D}}(x\otimes\mathrm{Dist})\otimes\mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_{\mathcal{D}}(y\otimes\mathrm{Dist})&\rightarrow \mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_{\mathcal{D}}(x\otimes \mathrm{Dist}\otimes \mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_{\mathcal{D}}(y\otimes \mathrm{Dist})) \\ &\rightarrow \mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_{\mathcal{D}}(x\otimes y\otimes \mathrm{Dist}) \end{align*} $$

define the structure of a lax monoidal functor on $F_{\mathcal {C}\mathcal {D}}$ .

Proof. Let us prove the associativity condition. For brevity, denote $a^{\mathrm {R}}=\mathrm {act}^{\mathrm {R}}_{\mathcal {D}}$ , $D=\mathrm {Dist}$ . We have to show that the diagram

is commutative. Using naturality and the associativity condition for the lax module structure on $\mathrm {act}^{\mathrm {R}}$ , the above diagram is reduced to

The top segment commutes by naturality of $\phi $ . The middle segment commutes since $\epsilon $ is a natural transformation of $\mathcal {D}$ -module functors. The bottom segment commutes by naturality of $\epsilon $ .

Unitality is proven analogously.

Note that in the above construction, we may freely replace $\mathcal {C}$ and $\mathcal {D}$ , so we similarly obtain a lax monoidal functor

$$\begin{align*}F_{\mathcal{D}\mathcal{C}}\colon \mathcal{D}\longrightarrow \mathcal{C}.\end{align*}$$

Definition 2.22. Suppose $\mathcal {D}$ is a monoidal category and $\mathcal {M}$ a $\mathcal {D}$ -module category with a distinguished object. $\mathcal {M}$ is free of rank 1 if the action functor $\mathrm {act}_{\mathcal {D}}\colon \mathcal {D}\rightarrow \mathcal {M}$ is an equivalence.

Proposition 2.23. Suppose $\mathcal {M}$ is free of rank 1 over $\mathcal {D}$ . Then the lax monoidal functor $F_{\mathcal {C}\mathcal {D}}\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathcal {D}$ is strongly monoidal and preserves colimits.

Proof. Since $\mathrm {act}_{\mathcal {D}}$ is an equivalence, both the counit $\epsilon \colon \mathrm {Dist}\otimes \mathrm {act}^{\mathrm {R}}_{\mathcal {D}}(m)\rightarrow m$ and the structure of a lax module functor $\phi \colon \mathrm {act}^{\mathrm {R}}_{\mathcal {D}}(m)\otimes y\rightarrow \mathrm {act}^{\mathrm {R}}_{\mathcal {D}}(m\otimes y)$ are isomorphisms. In particular, $F_{\mathcal {C}\mathcal {D}}$ is strongly monoidal.

Moreover, $\mathrm {act}_{\mathcal {D}}^{\mathrm {R}}$ is the inverse to $\mathrm {act}_{\mathcal {D}}$ , so it preserves colimits.

2.5 Tannaka reconstruction for bialgebras

Recall the Tannaka reconstruction results for bialgebras; refer to [Reference Deligne25, Reference Rivano71] for the commutative case and [Reference Ulbrich85, Reference Ulbrich86, Reference Schauenburg75] for the general case.

Let $B\in \mathrm {Vect}$ be a bialgebra. Then $\mathcal {C}=\mathrm {CoMod}_B$ , the category of (left) B-comodules, is locally presentable. Moreover, it is equipped with a conservative and colimit-preserving monoidal forgetful functor $F\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathrm {Vect}$ , which admits a colimit-preserving right adjoint $F^{\mathrm {R}}\colon \mathrm {Vect}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}$ sending V to the cofree B-comodule $B\otimes V$ cogenerated by V. There is a converse to this statement.

Proposition 2.24. Suppose $\mathcal {C}$ is a monoidal category with a colimit-preserving monoidal forgetful functor $F\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathrm {Vect}$ , which admits a colimit-preserving right adjoint $F^{\mathrm {R}}\colon \mathrm {Vect}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}$ . Then $B=FF^{\mathrm {R}}(k)$ is a bialgebra and F factors as

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{C}\longrightarrow \mathrm{CoMod}_B.\end{align*}$$

Moreover, the latter functor is an equivalence if and only if F is conservative and preserves equalisers.

Remark 2.25. A more familiar statement of Tannaka reconstruction is obtained by passing to compact objects in the above statement. Namely, for a small abelian monoidal category $\mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {c}}$ with a biexact tensor product and a monoidal functor

$$\begin{align*}F\colon \mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{c}}\longrightarrow \mathrm{Vec}\end{align*}$$

to the category of finite-dimensional vector spaces, there is a canonical bialgebra B (the bialgebra of coendomorphisms of F; see [Reference Etingof, Gelaki, Nikshych and Ostrik34, Section 1.10]) such that F factors through

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{c}}\longrightarrow \mathrm{CoMod}^{\mathrm{fd}}_B\end{align*}$$

through the category of finite-dimensional B-comodules. Moreover, the latter functor is an equivalence if and only if F is exact and faithful. Refer to [Reference Etingof, Gelaki, Nikshych and Ostrik34, Section 5.4] for more details.

Let us now be more explicit. Consider the setup of Theorem 2.24, where $\mathcal {C}$ is a monoidal category with enough compact projectives and a compact projective unit. Since $F^{\mathrm {R}}$ preserves colimits, F preserves compact projective objects. In particular, for $y\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ , the vector space $F(y)$ is finite-dimensional. So, by Theorem 2.5, the bialgebra B is

(15) $$ \begin{align} B = \int^{y\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} F(y)^\vee\otimes F(y). \end{align} $$

For $y\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ let us denote by

$$\begin{align*}\pi_y\colon F(y)^\vee \otimes F(y)\rightarrow B\end{align*}$$

the natural projection. For $y,z\in \mathcal {C}$ , denote by

$$\begin{align*}J_{y, z}\colon F(y)\otimes F(z)\xrightarrow{\sim} F(y\otimes z)\end{align*}$$

the monoidal structure on F (the unit isomorphism will be implicit). The bialgebra structure on B is given on generators as follows:

  • The coproduct is

    $$\begin{align*}F(y)^\vee\otimes F(y)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{id}\otimes\mathrm{coev}_{F(y)}\otimes \mathrm{id}}F(y)^\vee\otimes F(y)\otimes F(y)^\vee\otimes F(y)\xrightarrow{\pi_y\otimes \pi_y} B\otimes B.\end{align*}$$
  • The counit is

    $$\begin{align*}F(y)^\vee\otimes F(y)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{ev}_{F(y)}} k.\end{align*}$$
  • The product is

    $$ \begin{align*} (F(y)^\vee\otimes F(y))\otimes (F(z)^\vee\otimes F(z))&\cong (F(y)\otimes F(z))^\vee\otimes F(y)\otimes F(z)\\ &\xrightarrow{(J_{y,z}^{-1})^\vee\otimes J_{y,z}} F(y\otimes z)^\vee\otimes F(y\otimes z)\\ &\xrightarrow{\pi_{y\otimes z}} B. \end{align*} $$
  • The unit is

    $$\begin{align*}k\cong F(\mathbf{1})^\vee\otimes F(\mathbf{1})\xrightarrow{\pi_{\mathbf{1}}} B.\end{align*}$$

It will also be useful to think about $\pi _y$ as elements

$$\begin{align*}T_y\in B\otimes \mathrm{End}(F(y)).\end{align*}$$

The following statement is immediate from the above formulas.

Theorem 2.26. The bialgebra B is spanned, as a k-vector space, by the matrix coefficients of $T_y$ for $y\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ , subject to the relation

(16) $$ \begin{align} F(f) \circ T_x = T_y \circ F(f) \end{align} $$

for every $f\colon x\rightarrow y$ . Moreover:

  • For $y\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ , we have

    (17) $$ \begin{align} \Delta(T_y) = T_y\otimes T_y. \end{align} $$
  • For $y\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ , we have

    (18) $$ \begin{align} \epsilon(T_y) = \mathrm{id}_{F(y)}\in\mathrm{End}(F(y)). \end{align} $$
  • Suppose $x,y\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ are two objects. Then

    (19) $$ \begin{align} J^{-1}_{x,y}T_{x\otimes y}J_{x,y}=(T_x\otimes \mathrm{id}_{F(y)})(\mathrm{id}_{F(x)}\otimes T_y) \end{align} $$
    as elements of $B\otimes \mathrm {End}(F(x\otimes y))\cong B\otimes \mathrm {End}(F(x)\otimes F(y))$ .
  • $T_{\mathbf {1}}\in B\otimes \mathrm {End}(F(\mathbf {1}))\cong B$ is the unit.

Let us now study what happens when $\mathcal {C}$ is in addition equipped with a braiding.

Definition 2.27. Suppose $\mathcal {C}$ is a braided monoidal category and $F\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathrm {Vect}$ a monoidal functor. For $x,y\in \mathcal {C}$ , the $\boldsymbol {R}$ -matrix is

$$\begin{align*}R_{x,y}\colon F(x)\otimes F(y)\xrightarrow{J_{x,y}} F(x\otimes y)\xrightarrow{F(\sigma_{x, y})} F(y\otimes x)\xrightarrow{J_{y,x}^{-1}} F(y)\otimes F(x) \xrightarrow{\sigma_{F(x), F(y)}^{-1}} F(x)\otimes F(y).\end{align*}$$

It will be convenient to use the standard matrix notation for R-matrices acting on several variables: given $x,y,z\in \mathcal {C}$ , we denote

$$\begin{align*}R_{12} = R_{x,y}\otimes \mathrm{id}\end{align*}$$

as an element of $\mathrm {End}(F(x)\otimes F(y)\otimes F(z))$ and similarly for $R_{13}$ and $R_{23}$ . We let the transposed R-matrix $R_{21}$ be

$$\begin{align*}F(x)\otimes F(y)\xrightarrow{\sigma^{-1}} F(y)\otimes F(x)\xrightarrow{R_{y, x}} F(y)\otimes F(x)\xrightarrow{\sigma} F(x)\otimes F(y).\end{align*}$$

We also denote

$$\begin{align*}T_1 = T_x\otimes \mathrm{id},\qquad T_2 = \mathrm{id}\otimes T_y\end{align*}$$

as elements of $B\otimes \mathrm {End}(F(x)\otimes F(y))$ .

Proposition 2.28. Suppose $x,y,z\in \mathcal {C}$ . Then the R-matrix satisfies the Yang–Baxter equation

(20) $$ \begin{align} R_{12}R_{13}R_{23} = R_{23}R_{13}R_{12} \end{align} $$

in $\mathrm {End}(F(x)\otimes F(y)\otimes F(z))$ . Moreover, T satisfies the FRT relation

(21) $$ \begin{align} R_{12}T_1T_2 = T_2T_1 R_{12} \end{align} $$

in $B\otimes \mathrm {End}(F(x)\otimes F(y))$ .

Proof. Denote

$$\begin{align*}\check{R}_{x,y}\colon F(x)\otimes F(y)\xrightarrow{J_{x,y}} F(x\otimes y)\xrightarrow{F(\sigma_{x, y})} F(y\otimes x)\xrightarrow{J_{y,x}^{-1}} F(y)\otimes F(x).\end{align*}$$

Then the Yang–Baxter equation (20) is equivalent to the braid equation

$$\begin{align*}\check{R}_{12}\check{R}_{23}\check{R}_{12} = \check{R}_{23}\check{R}_{12}\check{R}_{23},\end{align*}$$

which holds in any braided monoidal category.

By equation (16), we have $F(\sigma _{x,y})T_{x\otimes y} = T_{y\otimes x} F(\sigma _{x,y})$ . The relation given by (19) and the equality

$$\begin{align*}F(\sigma_{x,y}) = J_{y,x} \hat{R}_{x,y} J^{-1}_{x,y} \end{align*}$$

imply equation (21).

Remark 2.29. Quantum groups were originally introduced in [Reference Faddeev, Skljanin and Tahtadžjan39, Reference Faddeev, Reshetikhin and Takhtadzhyan38] as bialgebras as in Theorem 2.26 satisfying the FRT relation in equation (21). The above statements show, conversely, that this relation naturally follows from the categorical framework.

2.6 Coend algebras and reflection equation

Let $\mathcal {C}$ be a cp-rigid monoidal category. Recall the formula for the right adjoint $T^{\mathrm {R}}\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}$ for the tensor product functor $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}$ from Theorem 2.8.

Definition 2.30. The canonical coend is the object $\mathcal {F}\in \mathcal {C}$ defined by

(22) $$ \begin{align} \mathcal{F} = T T^{\mathrm{R}}(\mathbf{1}) = \int^{x\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} x^\vee\otimes x. \end{align} $$

For $x\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ , let us denote by

$$\begin{align*}\pi_x\colon x^\vee\otimes x\rightarrow \mathcal{F}\end{align*}$$

the natural projection.

Now, suppose in addition that $\mathcal {C}$ is braided monoidal. Then $\mathcal {F}$ admits a structure of a braided Hopf algebra (see, e.g., [Reference Lyubashenko and Majid64, Reference Lyubashenko63, Reference Shimizu78]). Explicitly, the algebra structure is given on generators as follows:

  • The product is

    $$ \begin{align*} (x^\vee\otimes x)\otimes (y^\vee\otimes y)&\xrightarrow{\sigma_{x^\vee\otimes x, y^\vee}} y^\vee\otimes x^\vee\otimes x\otimes y\\ &\cong (x\otimes y)^\vee\otimes x\otimes y\\ &\xrightarrow{\pi_{x\otimes y}}\mathcal{F}. \end{align*} $$
  • The unit is

    $$\begin{align*}\mathbf{1}\xrightarrow{\pi_{\mathbf{1}}} \mathcal{F}.\end{align*}$$

Consider a monoidal functor $F\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathrm {Vect}$ . The projections $\pi _x$ give rise to elements

$$\begin{align*}K_x\in F(\mathcal{F})\otimes \mathrm{End}(F(x)).\end{align*}$$

Comparing the formulas in equations (15) and (22), we see that there is an isomorphism of vector spaces

$$\begin{align*}F(\mathcal{F})\cong B.\end{align*}$$

In particular, as before, $F(\mathcal {F})$ is spanned, as a k-vector space, by the matrix coefficients of $K_x$ for $x\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ subject to the relation in equation (16) for every $f\colon x\rightarrow y$ . As before, $K_{\mathbf {1}}\in F(\mathcal {F})$ is the unit. However, the multiplication is different. The following was proved in [Reference Majid66, Reference Donin, Kulish and Mudrov26].

Proposition 2.31. Suppose $x,y\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ are two objects. Then the reflection equation

(23) $$ \begin{align} R_{21}K_1R_{12}K_2 = K_2R_{21}K_1R_{12} \end{align} $$

holds in $F(\mathcal {F})\otimes \mathrm {End}(F(x)\otimes F(y))$ .

Remark 2.32. The reflection equation algebra in the theory of quantum groups was introduced in [Reference Kulish and Sklyanin58] as the algebra generated by the matrix elements of K satisfying the reflection equation (23). We see that it coincides with $F(\mathcal {F})$ . So, $\mathcal {F}$ is also sometimes known as the reflection equation algebra.

Example 2.33. Suppose H is a Hopf algebra and consider $\mathcal {C}=\mathrm {LMod}_H$ . Then the coend algebra $\mathcal {F}$ is a Drinfeld twist of the restricted dual Hopf algebra

$$\begin{align*}H^\circ=\int^{V\in\mathrm{LMod}_H^{\mathrm{cp}}} V^\vee\otimes V;\end{align*}$$

see [Reference Donin and Mudrov27, Definition 4.12].

3 Harish-Chandra bimodules

In this section, we study categories of classical and quantum Harish-Chandra bimodules as well as introduce Harish-Chandra bialgebroids.

3.1 General definition

We will now present a general categorical definition that encompasses categories of both classical and quantum Harish-Chandra bimodules. We refer to section 3.3 for a relationship to the usual Harish-Chandra bimodules. This formalism is closely related to the theory of dynamical extensions of monoidal categories introduced in [Reference Donin and Mudrov28]; see Theorem 3.2.

Throughout this section, we fix a cp-rigid monoidal category $\mathcal {C}$ . Recall from [Reference Etingof, Gelaki, Nikshych and Ostrik34, Definition 7.13.1] that the Drinfeld centre $\mathrm {Z}_{\mathrm {Dr}}(\mathcal {C})$ is the braided monoidal category consisting of pairs $(z, \tau )$ , where $z\in \mathcal {C}$ and

$$\begin{align*}\tau_x\colon x\otimes z\xrightarrow{\sim} z\otimes x\end{align*}$$

is a natural isomorphism satisfying standard compatibilities. The monoidal structure is given by

$$\begin{align*}(z, \tau)\otimes (z', \tau') = (z\otimes z', \tilde{\tau}),\end{align*}$$

where $\tilde {\tau }$ is the composite

$$\begin{align*}x\otimes z\otimes z'\xrightarrow{\tau_x\otimes \mathrm{id}_{z'}} z\otimes x\otimes z'\xrightarrow{\mathrm{id}\otimes \tau^{\prime}_x} z\otimes z'\otimes x,\end{align*}$$

where we omit associators. We refer to [Reference Etingof, Gelaki, Nikshych and Ostrik34, Proposition 8.5.1] for the braided monoidal structure on $\mathrm {Z}_{\mathrm {Dr}}(\mathcal {C})$ .

Definition 3.1. Let $(\mathcal {L}, \tau )$ be a commutative algebra in $\mathrm {Z}_{\mathrm {Dr}}(\mathcal {C})$ . The category of Harish-Chandra bimodules is

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{HC}(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{L}) = \mathrm{LMod}_{\mathcal{L}}(\mathcal{C}).\end{align*}$$

When there is no confusion, we simply denote $\mathrm {HC}=\mathrm {HC}(\mathcal {C}, \mathcal {L})$ .

Remark 3.2. A commutative algebra in the Drinfeld centre is called a base algebra in [Reference Donin and Mudrov28, Definition 4.1]. The full subcategory of $\mathrm {HC}(\mathcal {C}, \mathcal {L})$ consisting of free left $\mathcal {L}$ -modules is called a dynamical extension of $\mathcal {C}$ over $\mathcal {L}$ in [Reference Donin and Mudrov28, Section 4.2].

If H is a Hopf algebra, recall that the Drinfeld centre $\mathrm {Z}_{\mathrm {Dr}}(\mathrm {LMod}_H)$ is equivalent to the category of Yetter–Drinfeld modules over H (see [Reference Kassel52, Section XIII.5]). This gives rise to the following important example.

Proposition 3.3. Suppose H is a Hopf algebra, and consider $\mathcal {C}=\mathrm {LMod}_H$ . A commutative algebra $\mathcal {L}$ in $\mathrm {Z}_{\mathrm {Dr}}(\mathrm {LMod}_H)$ is the same as an H-algebra $\mathcal {L}$ equipped with a left H-coaction $\delta \colon \mathcal {L}\rightarrow H\otimes \mathcal {L}$ , a map of H-algebras, denoted by $x\mapsto x_{(-1)}\otimes x_{(0)}$ satisfying

$$\begin{align*}xy = y_{(0)} (S^{-1}(y_{(-1)}))\triangleright x,\qquad x,y\in \mathcal{L}.\end{align*}$$

The corresponding isomorphism $\tau _M\colon M\otimes \mathcal {L}\rightarrow \mathcal {L}\otimes M$ is given by

$$\begin{align*}m\otimes x\mapsto x_{(0)}\otimes (S^{-1}(x_{(-1)})\triangleright m).\end{align*}$$

Proof. The compatibility of $\tau _M$ with the monoidal structure on $\mathrm {LMod}_H$ follows from the coassociativity and counitality of the H-coaction. The compatibility of $\tau _M$ with the algebra structure on $\mathcal {L}$ is equivalent to the equation

$$\begin{align*}x_{(0)}y_{(0)}\otimes S^{-1}(y_{(-1)}) S^{-1}(x_{(-1)}) \triangleright m = (xy)_{(0)}\otimes S^{-1}((xy)_{(-1)})\triangleright m, \end{align*}$$

which follows from the condition that $\mathcal {L}\rightarrow H\otimes \mathcal {L}$ is an algebra map. The commutativity of the multiplication on $\mathcal {L}\in \mathrm {Z}_{\mathrm {Dr}}(\mathrm {LMod}_H)$ is

$$\begin{align*}xy = y_{(0)} (S^{-1}(y_{(-1)}))\triangleright x.\end{align*}$$

Remark 3.4. The inverse morphism $\mathcal {L}\otimes M\rightarrow M\otimes \mathcal {L}$ is given by

$$\begin{align*}x\otimes m\mapsto x_{(-1)}\triangleright m\otimes x_{(0)}.\end{align*}$$

Example 3.5. Consider a Hopf algebra H, and let $\mathcal {L}=H$ . Consider the adjoint action of H on $\mathcal {L}$

$$\begin{align*}h\otimes x\mapsto h_{(1)} x S(h_{(2)})\end{align*}$$

for $h\in H$ and $x\in \mathcal {L}$ . Consider the H-coaction $\mathcal {L}\rightarrow H\otimes \mathcal {L}$ given by the coproduct on H. Then

$$\begin{align*}S^{-1}(y)\triangleright x = S^{-1}(y_{(2)})xy_{(1)}.\end{align*}$$

In particular,

$$ \begin{align*} y_{(2)} (S^{-1}(y_{(1)}))\triangleright x &= y_{(3)} S^{-1}(y_{(2)})x y_{(1)} \\ &= \epsilon(y_{(2)}) x y_{(1)} \\ &= xy, \end{align*} $$

which shows that $(\mathcal {L}, \tau )$ is a commutative algebra in $\mathrm {Z}_{\mathrm {Dr}}(\mathrm {LMod}_H)$ .

Since $\mathcal {L}$ is a commutative algebra in $\mathrm {Z}_{\mathrm {Dr}}(\mathcal {C})$ , the category $\mathrm {HC}$ has a natural monoidal structure given by the relative tensor product: given left $\mathcal {L}$ -modules $M,N\in \mathcal {C}$ , we may turn M into a right $\mathcal {L}$ -module using $\tau _M$ , and then the tensor product is given by $M\otimes _{\mathcal {L}} N$ . We also have an adjunction

where $\mathrm {free}\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}$ is the monoidal functor $x\mapsto \mathcal {L}\otimes x$ given by the free left $\mathcal {L}$ -module and $\mathrm {forget}\colon \mathrm {HC}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}$ is given by forgetting the $\mathcal {L}$ -module structure.

Observe that $\mathcal {L}^{\mathrm {op}}$ is an algebra in $\mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ . Moreover, it lifts to a commutative algebra in $\mathrm {Z}_{\mathrm {Dr}}(\mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}})$ if we consider the inverse isomorphism $\tau _x$ .

Lemma 3.6. There is a natural monoidal equivalence $\mathrm {HC}(\mathcal {C}, \mathcal {L})^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}\cong \mathrm {HC}(\mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}, \mathcal {L}^{\mathrm {op}})$ .

The following construction explains why $\mathrm {HC}$ deserves to be called the category of bimodules. There is a natural monoidal functor

(24) $$ \begin{align} \mathrm{bimod}\colon \mathrm{HC}\longrightarrow {}_{\mathcal{L}}\mathrm{BMod}_{\mathcal{L}}(\mathcal{C}) \end{align} $$

given by sending a left $\mathcal {L}$ -module M to the $\mathcal {L}$ -bimodule, where the right $\mathcal {L}$ -action is obtained via $\tau _M$ . It realises $\mathrm {HC}$ as a full subcategory of ${}_{\mathcal {L}}\mathrm {BMod}_{\mathcal {L}}(\mathcal {C})$ consisting of objects $M\in {}_{\mathcal {L}}\mathrm {BMod}_{\mathcal {L}}(\mathcal {C})$ such that the right and left actions are related by $\tau _M$ .

Let us now analyse the categorical properties of $\mathrm {HC}$ .

Proposition 3.7. The category $\mathrm {HC}$ is cp-rigid. Moreover, we may take $\mathrm {free}(V)\in \mathrm {HC}$ for all $V\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ as the generating set of compact projective objects. If the unit of $\mathcal {C}$ is compact projective, so is the unit in $\mathrm {HC}$ .

Proof. The functor $\mathrm {free}\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}$ has a colimit-preserving right adjoint $\mathrm {forget}\colon \mathrm {HC}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}$ . So, $\mathrm {free}(V)\in \mathrm {HC}$ is compact projective if $V\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ .

The category $\mathrm {HC}$ is generated by $\mathrm {free}(V)$ for $V\in \mathcal {C}$ since $\mathrm {forget}$ is conservative. But since $\mathcal {C}$ has enough compact projectives, we may restrict to $V\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ .

Since $\mathcal {C}$ is cp-rigid, the objects $V\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ are dualisable. Since $\mathrm {free}\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}$ is monoidal, the objects $\mathrm {free}(V)\in \mathrm {HC}$ are also dualisable. But we have just shown that such objects are the generating compact projective objects, while by [Reference Brochier, Jordan and Snyder18, Proposition 4.1], it is enough to check cp-rigidity on the generating compact projective objects.

The unit of $\mathrm {HC}$ is $\mathcal {L}$ viewed as a free left $\mathcal {L}$ -module of rank 1, so

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{Hom}_{\mathrm{HC}}(\mathcal{L}, -)\cong \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(\mathbf{1}_{\mathcal{C}}, \mathrm{forget}(-)),\end{align*}$$

which shows that $\mathcal {L}$ is compact projective if and only if $\mathbf {1}_{\mathcal {C}}\in \mathcal {C}$ is.

3.2 Quantum moment maps

Recall that for an algebra $A\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ , a quantum moment map is a map $\mu \colon \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}\rightarrow A$ such that the infinitesimal $\mathfrak {g}$ -action on A is given by $[\mu (x), -]$ for $x\in \mathfrak {g}$ . The following version of this definition in our setting was introduced in [Reference Safronov73, Definition 3.1].

Definition 3.8. Let $A\in \mathcal {C}$ be an algebra. A quantum moment map is an algebra map $\mu \colon \mathcal {L}\rightarrow A$ such that the diagram

(25)

commutes.

Remark 3.9. Recall that $\mathcal {L}\in \mathrm {Z}_{\mathrm {Dr}}(\mathcal {C})$ is a commutative algebra. The quantum moment map condition expressed by equation (25) says that $\mu \colon \mathcal {L}\rightarrow A$ is a central map.

Proposition 3.10. An algebra in $\mathrm {HC}$ is an algebra in $\mathcal {C}$ equipped with a quantum moment map.

Proof. Via the embedding $\mathrm {bimod}\colon \mathrm {HC}\rightarrow {}_{\mathcal {L}}\mathrm {BMod}_{\mathcal {L}}(\mathcal {C})$ of equation (24), an algebra $A\in \mathrm {HC}$ gives rise to an algebra in ${}_{\mathcal {L}}\mathrm {BMod}_{\mathcal {L}}(\mathcal {C})$ . An algebra in the category of bimodules is the same as an algebra $A\in \mathcal {C}$ equipped with an algebra map $\mu \colon \mathcal {L}\rightarrow A$ . The condition that it lands in $\mathrm {HC}\subset {}_{\mathcal {L}}\mathrm {BMod}_{\mathcal {L}}(\mathcal {C})$ is precisely the quantum moment map equation (25).

The following is [Reference Safronov73, Definition 3.10].

Definition 3.11. Suppose $\epsilon \colon \mathcal {L}\rightarrow \mathbf {1}_{\mathcal {C}}$ is a morphism of algebras in $\mathcal {C}$ and A is an algebra equipped with a quantum moment map. The Hamiltonian reduction of $\boldsymbol {A}$ is

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{C}}(\mathbf{1}_{\mathcal{C}}, A\otimes_{\mathcal{L}} \mathbf{1})\cong \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathrm{LMod}_A(\mathcal{C})}(A\otimes_{\mathcal{L}} \mathbf{1}_{\mathcal{C}}, A\otimes_{\mathcal{L}} \mathbf{1}_{\mathcal{C}}).\end{align*}$$

A canonical example of an algebra with a quantum moment map we will use is the following. Let $T_{\mathrm {HC}}\colon \mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}$ be the tensor product functor. By Theorem 2.15, the object $T^{\mathrm {R}}(\mathbf {1}_{\mathrm {HC}})\in \mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ is an algebra. Identifying $\mathrm {HC}(\mathcal {C}, \mathcal {L})^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}\cong \mathrm {HC}(\mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}, \mathcal {L}^{\mathrm {op}})$ using Theorem 3.6, we see that

$$\begin{align*}(\mathrm{forget}\otimes \mathrm{forget})(T_{\mathrm{HC}}^{\mathrm{R}}(\mathbf{1}_{\mathrm{HC}}))\in\mathcal{C}\otimes \mathcal{C}^{\otimes\mathrm{op}}\end{align*}$$

is an algebra equipped with a quantum moment map from $\mathcal {L}\boxtimes \mathcal {L}^{\mathrm {op}}$ .

Definition 3.12. Let $\mathcal {C}, \mathrm {HC}$ be as before. The algebra $\mathcal {D}\in \mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ is

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{D} = (\mathrm{forget}\otimes \mathrm{forget})(T_{\mathrm{HC}}^{\mathrm{R}}(\mathbf{1}_{\mathrm{HC}})).\end{align*}$$

We denote the canonical quantum moment map by

(26) $$ \begin{align} \mu\colon \mathcal{L}\boxtimes \mathcal{L}^{\mathrm{op}}\longrightarrow T_{\mathcal{C}}^{\mathrm{R}}(\mathcal{L}). \end{align} $$

Proposition 3.13. We have an equivalence

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{D}\cong \int^{x\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} (\mathcal{L}\otimes x^\vee)\boxtimes x\cong \int^{x\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} x^\vee\boxtimes (x\otimes \mathcal{L}),\end{align*}$$

where the latter isomorphism is provided by Theorem 2.9. The algebra structure is given by

$$ \begin{align*} ((\mathcal{L}\otimes x^\vee)\boxtimes x)\otimes((\mathcal{L}\otimes y^\vee)\boxtimes y)&\cong (\mathcal{L}\otimes x^\vee\otimes \mathcal{L}\otimes y^\vee)\boxtimes (y\otimes x) \\ &\xrightarrow{\mathrm{id}\otimes \tau_{x^\vee}\otimes \mathrm{id}} (\mathcal{L}\otimes \mathcal{L}\otimes x^\vee\otimes y^\vee)\boxtimes (y\otimes x) \\ &\xrightarrow{m\otimes \mathrm{id}} (\mathcal{L}\otimes (y\otimes x)^\vee)\boxtimes (y\otimes x) \\ &\xrightarrow{\pi_{y\otimes x}} \int^{x\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} (\mathcal{L}\otimes x^\vee)\boxtimes x. \end{align*} $$

The two quantum moment maps $\mathcal {L},\mathcal {L}^{\mathrm {op}}\rightarrow \mathcal {D}$ are given by

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{L}\cong (\mathcal{L}\otimes \mathbf{1})\boxtimes \mathbf{1}\xrightarrow{\pi_{\mathbf{1}}} \mathcal{D}\end{align*}$$

and

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{L}^{\mathrm{op}}\cong \mathbf{1}\boxtimes (\mathbf{1}\otimes \mathcal{L})\xrightarrow{\pi_{\mathbf{1}}} \mathcal{D}.\end{align*}$$

Proof. Since $\mathrm {free}\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}$ is a monoidal functor, by adjunction, we get a natural isomorphism

(27) $$ \begin{align} (\mathrm{forget}\otimes \mathrm{forget}) \circ T_{\mathrm{HC}}^{\mathrm{R}}\cong T_{\mathcal{C}}^{\mathrm{R}}\circ \mathrm{forget}, \end{align} $$

where $T_{\mathcal {C}}\colon \mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}$ is the tensor product functor. In particular, applying equation (27) to $\mathbf {1}_{\mathrm {HC}}$ , we get isomorphisms

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{D}\cong \int^{x\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} (\mathcal{L}\otimes x^\vee)\boxtimes x\cong \int^{x\in\mathcal{C}^{\mathrm{cp}}} x^\vee\boxtimes (x\otimes \mathcal{L})\end{align*}$$

using Theorem 2.8.

We have a natural isomorphism

$$\begin{align*}(\mathrm{forget}\circ\mathrm{free}\otimes \mathrm{id})\circ T_{\mathcal{C}}^{\mathrm{R}}(-)\cong T_{\mathcal{C}}^{\mathrm{R}}(\mathrm{forget}\circ\mathrm{free}(-))\end{align*}$$

given by Theorem 2.9 that gives rise to an algebra isomorphism

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{D}\cong(\mathrm{forget}\circ\mathrm{free}\otimes\mathrm{id})\circ T_{\mathcal{C}}^{\mathrm{R}}(\mathbf{1}),\end{align*}$$

which gives the required formula.

Example 3.14. Suppose H is a Hopf algebra, $\mathcal {L}$ is a commutative algebra in $\mathrm {Z}_{\mathrm {Dr}}(\mathrm {LMod}_H)$ (see Theorem 3.3) and $\mathcal {C}=\mathrm {LMod}_H$ . Let

$$\begin{align*}H^\circ = \int^{V\in\mathrm{LMod}_H^{\mathrm{cp}}} V^\vee\otimes V\end{align*}$$

be the restricted dual Hopf algebra. By construction, $\mathcal {L}$ is an H-comodule algebra, and $H^\circ $ is an H-module algebra (via the left H-action). Then $\mathcal {D}$ is the smash product algebra generated by $\mathcal {L}$ and $H^\circ $ with the additional relation

$$\begin{align*}hl = l_{(0)} (S^{-1}(l_{(-1)})\triangleright h)\end{align*}$$

for $h\in H^\circ $ and $l\in \mathcal {L}$ .

3.3 Classical Harish-Chandra bimodules

Let G be a reductive group over a characteristic zero field k, and denote by $\mathfrak {g}$ its Lie algebra. Let $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ be the ind-completion of the category of finite-dimensional representations. The category $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ is semisimple, so it has enough compact projectives and its unit is compact projective.

Suppose $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ is a G-representation. For $x\in \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ and $v\in V$ , we denote by $x\triangleright v$ the induced $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ -action on V. Consider the natural isomorphism

(28) $$ \begin{align} \tau_V\colon V\otimes \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}\longrightarrow \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}\otimes V \end{align} $$

given by

$$\begin{align*}v\otimes x\mapsto x\otimes v - 1\otimes xv \end{align*}$$

for $x\in \mathfrak {g}$ . It follows from Theorem 3.3 that $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}, \tau )$ defines a commutative algebra in $\mathrm {Z}_{\mathrm {Dr}}(\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G))$ .

Definition 3.15. The category of classical Harish-Chandra bimodules is

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{HC}(G) = \mathrm{HC}(\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(G), \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}).\end{align*}$$

Remark 3.16. The embedding in equation (24) realises $\mathrm {HC}(G)$ as the category of $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ -bimodules whose diagonal $\mathfrak {g}$ -action is integrable (see [Reference Bernstein and Gelfand11, Definition 5.2] for the original definition of Harish-Chandra bimodules).

The following easy lemma (see [Reference Safronov73, Example 3.4]) shows that the definition of a quantum moment map we gave in Theorem 3.8 coincides with the classical notion of a quantum moment map.

Lemma 3.17. Let $A\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ be an algebra. A quantum moment map $\mu \colon \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}\rightarrow A$ is the same as an algebra map such that for every $x\in \mathfrak {g}$ the commutator $[\mu (x), -]$ coincides with the differential of the G-action.

In the same way, the quantum Hamiltonian reduction from Theorem 3.11 coincides with the usual definition

$$\begin{align*}A/\!\!/ G = (A/A\mu(\mathfrak{g}))^G\end{align*}$$

of the reduced algebra.

Given a variety X equipped with a G-action, the algebra of differential operators $\mathrm {D}(X)$ carries a quantum moment map $\mu \colon \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}\rightarrow \mathrm {D}(X)$ , which sends $\mathfrak {g}\subset \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ to vector fields on X generating the infinitesimal action. For instance, $\mathrm {D}(G)$ carries a moment map

(29) $$ \begin{align} \mu\colon \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}\otimes \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}^{\mathrm{op}}\rightarrow \mathrm{D}(G) \end{align} $$

coming from the left and right G-action on itself. Let us explain how it arises in our context.

By the Peter–Weyl theorem, we have an isomorphism of algebras

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{O}(G)\cong \int^{V\in\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}^{\mathrm{fd}}(G)} V^\vee\boxtimes V\in\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(G)\otimes \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(G),\end{align*}$$

where $\mathcal {O}(G)$ carries a $G\times G$ -action coming from the left and right G-action on itself. Using this, we can also describe the algebra $\mathcal {D}$ from Theorem 3.12.

Proposition 3.18. The algebra $\mathcal {D}\in \mathrm {HC}(G)\otimes \mathrm {HC}(G)^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ is isomorphic to $\mathrm {D}(G)\cong \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}\otimes \mathcal {O}(G)$ equipped with the $G\times G$ -action and the quantum moment map given by equation (29).

In the abelian case, the category of Harish-Chandra bimodules has a straightforward description. Suppose H is a split torus; let $\mathfrak {h}$ be its Lie algebra and $\Lambda =\mathrm {Hom}(H, \mathbb {G}_{\mathrm {m}})$ the character lattice. Then $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)$ is equivalent to the category of $\Lambda $ -graded vector spaces, and $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ is equivalent to the category of $\Lambda $ -graded $\mathrm {Sym}(\mathfrak {h})$ -modules $\oplus _{\lambda \in \Lambda } M(\lambda )$ .

Given $\lambda \in \Lambda $ , we consider the translation functor $\lambda ^*\colon \mathrm {LMod}_{\mathrm {Sym}(\mathfrak {h})}\rightarrow \mathrm {LMod}_{\mathrm {Sym}(\mathfrak {h})}$ . Then the monoidal structure $\otimes ^{\mathrm {HC}}$ on $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ is given by

$$\begin{align*}M\otimes^{\mathrm{HC}} N = \bigoplus_{\lambda\in\Lambda} \lambda^*(M)\otimes N(\lambda).\end{align*}$$

Suppose $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)$ . Given a vector $v\in V$ of weight $\mu \in \Lambda $ and $f\in \mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)\cong \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ , the map given by equation (28) is given by

$$\begin{align*}v\otimes f(\lambda)\mapsto f(\lambda - \mu)\otimes v\end{align*}$$

for $\lambda \in \mathfrak {h}^*$ . It is convenient to write it as

$$\begin{align*}v\otimes f(\lambda)\mapsto f(\lambda - h)\otimes v,\end{align*}$$

where h is understood as acting on $v\in V$ . Similarly, given a collection of representations $V_1, \dots , V_n\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)$ and vectors $v_i\in V_i$ , we denote

$$\begin{align*}f(\lambda - h^{(i)}) v_1\otimes \dots v_n = f(\lambda - \mu_i) v_1\otimes \dots v_n\end{align*}$$

if $v_i$ has weight $\mu _i\in \Lambda $ .

3.4 Quantum groups

In this section, we fix our conventions for quantum groups. Fix $k=\mathbf {C}$ . Let G be a connected reductive group, $B, B_-\subset G$ a pair of opposite Borel subgroups and $H=B\cap B_-$ a Cartan subgroup. Denote by $\Lambda =\mathrm {Hom}(H, \mathbb {G}_{\mathrm {m}})$ its weight lattice and $\Lambda ^\vee =\mathrm {Hom}(\mathbb {G}_{\mathrm {m}}, H)$ the coweight lattice; we denote by $\langle -, -\rangle \colon \Lambda ^\vee \times \Lambda \rightarrow \mathbf {Z}$ the canonical pairing. For two simple roots $\alpha _i,\alpha _j\in \Lambda $ , denote by $\alpha _i\cdot \alpha _j\in \mathbf {Z}$ the corresponding entry of the symmetrised Cartan matrix. Choose an integer $d\in \mathbf {Z}$ and a symmetric bilinear form $(-, -)\colon \Lambda \times \Lambda \rightarrow \frac {1}{d}\mathbf {Z}$ such that $(\alpha _i, \alpha _j) = \alpha _i\cdot \alpha _j$ . Given a complex number $q^{1/d}\in \mathbf {C}^\times $ , we have the exponentiated pairing

$$\begin{align*}\Pi\colon \Lambda\times \Lambda\longrightarrow \mathbf{C}^\times\end{align*}$$

given by $\lambda ,\mu \mapsto q^{-(\lambda , \mu )}$ . Our assumption is that $q^{1/d}$ is not a root of unity.

We denote by $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ the quantum group defined as in [Reference Lusztig62] with a slight modification that its Cartan part is $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})=k[\Lambda ]$ with Cartan generators $K_\mu $ for $\mu \in \Lambda $ (note that the Cartan part in [Reference Lusztig62] is $k[\Lambda ^\vee ]$ ). We denote by $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {b})\subset \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ the quantum Borel subalgebra, $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {n}), \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {n}_-)\subset \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ the quantum nilpotent subalgebras and $\mathrm {U}_q^{>0}(\mathfrak {n}),\mathrm {U}_q^{<0}(\mathfrak {n}_-)$ their augmentation ideals. For each simple root $\alpha $ , we denote by $\{E_\alpha , K_\alpha , F_\alpha \}$ the corresponding generators of the $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {sl}_2)$ -subalgebra (they are denoted by $E_i, \tilde {K}_i, F_i$ in [Reference Lusztig62, Section 3.1.1]).

We have the corresponding categories obtained from this data:

  • $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(H)$ is the braided monoidal category of $\Lambda $ -graded vector spaces with the braiding given by $\Pi \tau $ , where $\tau $ is the map exchanging the tensor factors.

  • $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ is the ind-completion of the braided monoidal category of finite-dimensional $\Lambda $ -graded vector spaces with a $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -module structure such that for every vector $x_\lambda $ of weight $\lambda \in \Lambda $ , we have $K_\mu x_\lambda = q^{(\mu , \lambda )} x_\lambda $ . The braiding is given by $\Theta \circ \Pi \circ \tau $ , where $\Theta \in \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {n}_-)\widehat {\otimes }\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {n})$ is the so-called quasi R-matrix. Refer to [Reference Lusztig62, Section 32] for more details.

  • $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(B)$ is the ind-completion of the monoidal category of finite-dimensional $\Lambda $ -graded vector spaces with a compatible $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {b})$ -module structure.

Definition 3.19. A $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -module M is integrable if it lies in the image of the forgetful functor

$$\begin{align*}\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}_q(G)\longrightarrow \mathrm{LMod}_{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})}.\end{align*}$$

Equivalently, an integrable $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -module is a locally finite type 1 $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -module. We introduce an analogous definition for $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {b})$ -modules.

Denote by $\mathcal {O}_q(G)\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ the coend algebra from Theorem 2.30.

Definition 3.20. A $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -module M is locally finite if for every $m\in M$ , the vector space $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})m$ is finite-dimensional.

The algebra $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ with respect to the adjoint $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -action on itself $x, y\mapsto x_{(1)}yS(x_{(2)})$ is not locally finite, and we denote by

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})^{\mathrm{lf}}\subset\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})\end{align*}$$

the largest locally finite submodule.

Example 3.21. Consider $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {sl}_2)$ with the generators $E,K,F$ and relations

$$\begin{align*}KE = q^2 EK,\qquad KF = q^{-2} FK,\qquad EF-FE=\frac{K-K^{-1}}{q-q^{-1}}.\end{align*}$$

Then $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {sl}_2)^{\mathrm {lf}}$ is the subalgebra generated by $EK^{-1}$ , F and $K^{-1}$ .

It is easy to see that $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}\subset \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ is a subalgebra, but note that it is not a subcoalgebra. Nevertheless, the following is shown in [Reference Joseph50, Theorem 7.1.6].

Proposition 3.22. $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}\subset \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ is a left coideal: that is, the coproduct restricts to a map

$$\begin{align*}\Delta\colon \mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})^{\mathrm{lf}}\longrightarrow\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})\otimes \mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})^{\mathrm{lf}}. \end{align*}$$

Remark 3.23. There is a close relationship between the algebras $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}$ and $\mathcal {O}_q(G)$ , which can be established using the quantum Killing form [Reference Rosso70]. If G is semisimple simply-connected, $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}\cong \mathcal {O}_q(G)$ ; see [Reference Joseph50, Proposition 7.1.23] and [Reference Voigt and Yuncken89, Theorem 2.113].

3.5 Quantum Harish-Chandra bimodules

For $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ , $v\in V$ an $x\in \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ , we denote by $x\triangleright v$ the $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -action. For $x\in \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}$ , we denote by $\Delta (x) = x_{(1)}\otimes x_{(2)}$ the coproduct on $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ , where we note that $x_{(2)}\in \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}$ by Theorem 3.22. We define the natural isomorphism

(30) $$ \begin{align} \tau_V\colon V\otimes \mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})^{\mathrm{lf}}\longrightarrow \mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})^{\mathrm{lf}}\otimes V \end{align} $$

by

$$\begin{align*}v\otimes x\mapsto x_{(2)}\otimes S^{-1}(x_{(1)})\triangleright v.\end{align*}$$

Consider $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ with respect to the adjoint action. It follows from Theorem 3.3 that $(\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}, \tau )$ is a commutative algebra in $\mathrm {Z}_{\mathrm {Dr}}(\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G))$ .

Definition 3.24. The category of quantum Harish-Chandra bimodules is

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{HC}_q(G) = \mathrm{HC}(\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}_q(G), \mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})^{\mathrm{lf}}).\end{align*}$$

Remark 3.25. A similar definition of the category of quantum Harish-Chandra bimodules is given in [Reference Voigt and Yuncken89, Definition 5.26].

Remark 3.26. By [Reference Safronov73, Theorem 3.10], the notion of quantum moment maps in this setting coincides with the quantum moment maps for quantum group actions introduced in [Reference Varagnolo and Vasserot88, Section 1.5].

In this case, the algebra $\mathcal {D}$ from Theorem 3.12 is the algebra of quantum differential operators $\mathcal {D}_q(G)$ on G (see [Reference Backelin and Kremnizer5, Section 4.1], where it is denoted by $\mathcal {D}_q^{fin}$ ).

As in the case of classical Harish-Chandra bimodules, in the abelian case, the category $\mathrm {HC}_q(G)$ has a straightforward description. Let H be a torus and $\Lambda $ its weight lattice. Then $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {lf}} = \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h}) = \mathcal {O}(H)$ and $\mathrm {HC}_q(H)$ is equivalent to the category of $\Lambda $ -graded $\mathcal {O}(H)$ -modules. There is a homomorphism

$$\begin{align*}\Lambda\longrightarrow H\end{align*}$$

whose dual map $\mathcal {O}(H)=k[\Lambda ]\rightarrow \mathcal {O}(\Lambda )$ on the level of functions is

$$\begin{align*}K_\mu\mapsto \left(\lambda \mapsto q^{(\mu, \lambda)}\right)\end{align*}$$

for $\mu ,\lambda \in \Lambda $ . In particular, $\Lambda $ acts by translations on H, and we denote the induced functor by

$$\begin{align*}(q^\lambda)^*\colon \mathrm{LMod}_{\mathcal{O}(H)}\rightarrow \mathrm{LMod}_{\mathcal{O}(H)}.\end{align*}$$

The monoidal structure $\otimes ^{\mathrm {HC}}$ on $\mathrm {HC}_q(H)$ is given by

$$\begin{align*}M\otimes^{\mathrm{HC}} N = \bigoplus_{\lambda\in\Lambda} (q^\lambda)^*(M)\otimes N(\lambda).\end{align*}$$

Suppose $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)$ , $v\in V$ and $f\in \mathcal {O}(H)\cong \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})$ . Then the map given by equation (30) is

$$\begin{align*}v\otimes f(\lambda)\mapsto f(\lambda q^{-h}) \otimes v\end{align*}$$

for $\lambda \in H$ .

3.6 Harish-Chandra bimodules and bialgebroids

Let us again consider the general setup of section 3.1, where $\mathcal {C}$ is a cp-rigid monoidal category with a compact projective unit. In particular, $\mathrm {HC}$ is also a cp-rigid monoidal category with a compact projective unit. Our goal in this section is to describe a Tannaka reconstruction result for monoidal forgetful functors to $\mathrm {HC}$ .

Recall from Theorem 2.19 that the category $\mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}$ carries two monoidal structures: the pointwise monoidal structure on $\mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ and the convolution product. We will call the latter the Takeuchi product in this setting.

Definition 3.27. The Takeuchi product $\times _{\mathcal {L}}$ is the monoidal structure on $\mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}$ given by

$$\begin{align*}(M_1\boxtimes M_2)\times_{\mathcal{L}} (N_1\boxtimes N_2) = \mathrm{ev}(M_2, N_1)\otimes (M_1\boxtimes N_2)\end{align*}$$

with the unit $\mathrm {coev}(k)=\mathcal {D}\in \mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}$ .

Example 3.28. Consider the setup of Theorem 3.15. An object of $\mathrm {HC}(G)\otimes \mathrm {HC}(G)\cong \mathrm {HC}(G\times G)$ is a $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}\otimes (\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {op}}$ -bimodule with a certain integrability condition. For a $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {op}}$ -bimodule M and a $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ -bimodule N, the Takeuchi product is the subspace

$$\begin{align*}M\times_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}} N\subset M\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}} N\end{align*}$$

of elements $\sum _i m_i\otimes n_i$ satisfying

$$\begin{align*}\sum_i m_i x\otimes n_i = m_i\otimes n_ix\end{align*}$$

for every $x\in \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ ; see [Reference Takeuchi82].

We will now formulate the notion of bialgebroids in the category of Harish-Chandra bimodules. Recall that the algebra $\mathcal {D}\cong T^{\mathrm {R}}(\mathcal {L})\in \mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {op}}$ carries a natural quantum moment map given by equation (26).

Definition 3.29. A Harish-Chandra bialgebroid is an algebra $B\in \mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ equipped with a quantum moment map $s\otimes t\colon \mathcal {L}\boxtimes \mathcal {L}^{\mathrm {op}}\rightarrow B$ , which allows us to regard B as an algebra in $\mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ , together with a coassociative coproduct $\Delta \colon B\rightarrow B\times _{\mathcal {L}} B$ , a map of algebras in $\mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ , and a counit map $\varepsilon \colon B\rightarrow \mathcal {D}$ , a map of algebras in $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ compatible with quantum moment maps.

Example 3.30. Let H be a split torus and $\Lambda =\mathrm {Hom}(H, \mathbb {G}_{\mathrm {m}})$ its weight lattice, and consider the category of Harish-Chandra bimodules $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ . A bialgebroid in $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ is given by the following data:

  • An algebra with a bigrading

    $$\begin{align*}B = \bigoplus_{\alpha,\beta\in\Lambda} B_{\alpha\beta}.\end{align*}$$
  • Algebra maps

    $$\begin{align*}s, t\colon \mathcal{O}(\mathfrak{h}^*)\longrightarrow B\end{align*}$$
    that satisfy the quantum moment map equations
    $$\begin{align*}s(f(\lambda)) a = a s(f(\lambda + \alpha)),\qquad t(f(\lambda)) a = a t(f(\lambda+\beta))\end{align*}$$
    for $f\in \mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)$ and $a\in B_{\alpha \beta }$ .
  • The coproduct $\Delta \colon B\rightarrow B\times _{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}} B$ , a map of algebras compatible with the grading and quantum moment maps. Here the Takeuchi product is

    $$\begin{align*}(B\times_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}} B)_{\alpha\beta} = \bigoplus_{\delta\in\Lambda} B_{\alpha\delta}\otimes_{\mathcal{O}(\mathfrak{h}^*)} B_{\delta\beta},\end{align*}$$
    where the relative tensor product is the quotient of the k-linear tensor product modulo the relations $t(f)a\otimes b\sim a\otimes s(f) b$ for $a\otimes b\in B_{\alpha \delta }\otimes B_{\delta \beta }$ and $f\in \mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)$ .
  • The counit $\epsilon \colon B\rightarrow \mathrm {D}(H)$ , a map of algebras compatible with the grading and quantum moment maps.

Remark 3.31. Essentially, this data is an $\mathfrak {h}$ -bialgebroid in the sense of [Reference Etingof and Varchenko37, Section 4.1]. The differences are as follows:

  • For an $\mathfrak {h}$ -bialgebroid, the weights $\alpha ,\beta $ are not necessarily integral.

  • The counit of an $\mathfrak {h}$ -bialgebroid takes values in the algebra of difference operators on $\mathfrak {h}^*$ . However, it contains the subalgebra of difference operators with integral shifts (i.e., in $\Lambda \subset \mathfrak {h}^*$ ), which is equivalent to $\mathrm {D}(H)$ via the so-called Mellin transform; see, for instance, [Reference Ben-Zvi and Nadler10, Section 2.1].

So, a Harish-Chandra bialgebroid in $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ is an $\mathfrak {h}$ -bialgebroid with certain integrability assumptions.

Theorem 3.32. Suppose B is a Harish-Chandra bialgebroid. The functor $\bot \colon \mathrm {HC}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}$ given by

$$\begin{align*}\bot(M) = B\times_{\mathcal{L}} M\end{align*}$$

defines a lax monoidal comonad. Conversely, let $\bot \colon \mathrm {HC}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}$ be a colimit-preserving lax monoidal comonad on $\mathrm {HC}$ . Then $\bot (-)\cong B\times _{\mathcal {L}}(-)$ for some Harish-Chandra bialgebroid B.

Proof. Recall from [Reference Aguiar and Mahajan2, Definition 6.25] that a bimonoid in a duoidal category is an algebra with respect to one monoidal structure and a coalgebra with respect to the other monoidal structure, both compatible in a natural way. A coalgebra in $(\mathrm {Fun}^{\mathrm {L}}(\mathrm {HC}, \mathrm {HC}), \circ )$ is a colimit-preserving comonad on $\mathrm {HC}$ , and a bimonoid in $\mathrm {Fun}^{\mathrm {L}}(\mathrm {HC}, \mathrm {HC})$ is the same as lax monoidal comonad on $\mathrm {HC}$ .

A colimit-preserving lax monoidal comonad on $\mathrm {HC}$ is the same as a bimonoid in the duoidal category $\mathrm {Fun}^{\mathrm {L}}(\mathrm {HC}, \mathrm {HC})$ . By Theorem 2.20, we have an equivalence of duoidal categories $\mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}\cong \mathrm {Fun}^{\mathrm {L}}(\mathrm {HC}, \mathrm {HC})$ . So, $\bot $ corresponds to an object $B\in \mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}$ , which is both an algebra in $\mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ as well as a coalgebra in $(\mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}, \times _{\mathcal {L}})$ , both in a compatible way.

By Theorem 3.6, we have an equivalence of monoidal categories

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{HC}(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{L})\otimes \mathrm{HC}(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{L})^{\otimes\mathrm{op}}\cong \mathrm{HC}(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{L})\otimes \mathrm{HC}(\mathcal{C}^{\otimes\mathrm{op}}, \mathcal{L}^{\mathrm{op}}),\end{align*}$$

so by Theorem 3.10, the data of an algebra $B\in \mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ boils down to an algebra $B\in \mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ equipped with a quantum moment map $\mathcal {L}\boxtimes \mathcal {L}^{\mathrm {op}}\rightarrow B$ .

The data of a comonad boils down to a coalgebra $(B, \Delta , \epsilon )$ in $(\mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}, \times _{\mathcal {L}})$ . The counit is given by a map of algebras $\epsilon \colon B\rightarrow \mathrm {coev}(k)$ in $\mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ . Identifying algebras in $\mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ with algebras in $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ equipped with quantum moment maps by Theorem 3.10, the counit is the same as a map $\varepsilon \colon B\rightarrow T^{\mathrm {R}}(\mathcal {L})\cong \mathcal {D}$ of algebras in $\mathcal {C}\otimes \mathcal {C}^{\otimes \mathrm {op}}$ compatible with quantum moment maps from $\mathcal {L}\boxtimes \mathcal {L}^{\mathrm {op}}$ .

The definition of representations of Harish-Chandra bialgebroids is straightforward.

Definition 3.33. Suppose $B\in \mathrm {HC}\otimes \mathrm {HC}$ is a Harish-Chandra bialgebroid. A $\boldsymbol {B}$ -comodule is an object $M\in \mathrm {HC}$ together with a coassociative and counital coaction $M\rightarrow B\times _{\mathcal {L}} M$ .

Equivalently, by Theorem 3.32 a B-comodule is a coalgebra over the comonad $\bot (M) = B\times _{\mathcal {L}} M$ .

Example 3.34. Consider the category of Harish-Chandra bimodules $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ for a split torus H as in Theorem 3.30, and let B be a Harish-Chandra bialgebroid in $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ . Then a B-comodule is a $\mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)$ -module

$$\begin{align*}M = \bigoplus_{\alpha\in\Lambda} M_\alpha\end{align*}$$

together with a coaction map

$$\begin{align*}M_\alpha\longrightarrow \bigoplus_{\beta\in\Lambda} B_{\alpha\beta}\otimes_{\mathcal{O}(\mathfrak{h}^*)} M_\beta,\end{align*}$$

where B is considered a right $\mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)$ -module via the left action of $t\colon \mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)\rightarrow B$ . We require this coaction map to be compatible with the $\mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)$ -actions on both sides, where the $\mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)$ -action on the right is via the left multiplication by $s\colon \mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)\rightarrow B$ and coassociative and counital in the obvious way.

We obtain a Tannaka recognition statement for Harish-Chandra bialgebroids.

Theorem 3.35. Suppose $\mathcal {D}$ is a monoidal category with a monoidal functor $F\colon \mathcal {D}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}$ , which admits a colimit-preserving right adjoint $F^{\mathrm {R}}\colon \mathrm {HC}\rightarrow \mathcal {D}$ . Then there is a Harish-Chandra bialgebroid B such that $(F\circ F^{\mathrm {R}})(-)\cong B\times _{\mathcal {L}}(-)$ and F factors through a monoidal functor

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{D}\longrightarrow \mathrm{CoMod}_B(\mathrm{HC}).\end{align*}$$

If F is conservative and preserves equalisers, the above functor is an equivalence.

Proof. Since F is monoidal, $F^{\mathrm {R}}$ is lax monoidal. Therefore, $\bot = FF^{\mathrm {R}}$ is a colimit-preserving lax monoidal comonad on $\mathrm {HC}$ . By Theorem 3.32, there is a Harish-Chandra bialgebroid B such that $\bot (-)\cong B\times _{\mathcal {L}}(-)$ . By the standard monadic arguments, F factors through

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{D}\longrightarrow \mathrm{CoMod}_\bot(\mathrm{HC})\cong \mathrm{CoMod}_B(\mathrm{HC}),\end{align*}$$

which is monoidal (see [Reference Szlachányi81, Proposition 3.5] for the dual statement). If F is conservative and preserves equalisers, by the Barr–Beck theorem [Reference MacLane65, Theorem VI.7.1] the above functor is an equivalence.

4 Dynamical R-matrices

In this section, we explain how the dynamical twists and dynamical R-matrices arise from the categorical formalism explained in this paper.

4.1 Dynamical twists

Consider a Hopf algebra H, a commutative algebra $\mathcal {L}\in \mathrm {Z}_{\mathrm {Dr}}(\mathrm {LMod}_H)$ (see Theorem 3.3) with a coaction map $\delta \colon \mathcal {L}\rightarrow H\otimes \mathcal {L}$ (denoted by $x\mapsto x_{(-1)}\otimes x_{(0)}$ ) and a cp-rigid monoidal category $\mathcal {C}$ together with a forgetful functor $F\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathrm {LMod}_H$ , which we assume sends compact projective objects in $\mathcal {C}$ to finite-dimensional H-modules. It will be convenient to introduce the right H-coaction

$$\begin{align*}\delta^R\colon \mathcal{L}\longrightarrow \mathcal{L}\otimes H\end{align*}$$

by

$$\begin{align*}x\mapsto x_{(0)}\otimes S^{-1}(x_{(-1)}).\end{align*}$$

Proposition 4.1. A monoidal structure with a strict unit map on the composite

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{C} \longrightarrow \mathrm{LMod}_H \xrightarrow{\mathrm{free}} \mathrm{HC}(\mathrm{LMod}_H, \mathcal{L})\end{align*}$$

is the same as a natural collection of elements $J_{X, Y}\in \mathcal {L}\otimes \mathrm {Hom}(F(X)\otimes F(Y), F(X\otimes Y))$ for $X,Y\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ satisfying

  • The elements $J_{X, Y}$ are H-invariant.

  • For a triple $X,Y,Z\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ , the equation

    $$\begin{align*}J_{X\otimes Y, Z}\circ(J_{X, Y}\otimes \mathrm{id}_Z) = J_{X, Y\otimes Z}\circ \delta^R_X(J_{Y, Z})\end{align*}$$
    holds, where $\delta ^R_X$ means the H-factor in $\delta ^R$ acts on X.
  • For any $X\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ , we have $J_{\mathbf {1}, X}=J_{X, \mathbf {1}} = 1\otimes \mathrm {id}_{F(X)}$ .

Proof. Recall that the monoidal structure on the functor $\mathrm {free}\colon \mathrm {LMod}_H \rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(\mathrm {LMod}_H, \mathcal {L})$ is given by the natural isomorphism

$$ \begin{align*} (\mathcal{L}\otimes X) \otimes_{\mathcal{L}} (\mathcal{L}\otimes Y) &\xrightarrow{\sim} \mathcal{L}\otimes X \otimes Y\\ a\otimes x \otimes b \otimes y &\mapsto ab_{(0)} \otimes S^{-1}(b_{(-1)}) \triangleright x \otimes y \end{align*} $$

for any $X,Y\in \mathrm {LMod}_H$ . So, the monoidal structure on $\mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(\mathrm {LMod}_H, \mathcal {L})$ is given by

$$\begin{align*}(\mathcal{L}\otimes F(X))\otimes_{\mathcal{L}} (\mathcal{L}\otimes F(Y))\cong \mathcal{L}\otimes F(X)\otimes F(Y)\xrightarrow{\sim} \mathcal{L}\otimes F(X\otimes Y),\end{align*}$$

where the first isomorphism is given by the monoidal structure on $\mathrm {free}$ and the second isomorphism is

$$\begin{align*}l\otimes a\otimes b\mapsto (l\otimes \mathrm{id}_{F(X\otimes Y)})J_{X, Y}(a\otimes b).\end{align*}$$

The composite is automatically a map of $\mathcal {L}$ -modules, and the compatibility with the H-action is the H-invariance condition on $J_{X, Y}$ .

The associativity condition for the monoidal structure on F is that for compact projective objects $X,Y,Z\in \mathcal {C}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ , the diagram

commutes. Considering the image of $(1\otimes a)\otimes (1\otimes b)\otimes (1\otimes c)$ under these maps, we get the second equation.

The unitality condition for the monoidal structure on F is equivalent to the last equation.

Let us now introduce a universal version of the previous statement. Suppose A is another Hopf algebra with a map of algebras $H\rightarrow A$ . We assume $\mathcal {C}=\mathrm {LMod}_A$ , and the forgetful functor

$$\begin{align*}F\colon \mathrm{LMod}_A\longrightarrow \mathrm{LMod}_H\end{align*}$$

is given by restriction of modules. Denote by $(A, \Delta , \varepsilon )$ the coalgebra structure on A.

Definition 4.2. A dynamical twist is an invertible element

$$\begin{align*}J=J^0 \otimes J^1 \otimes J^2 \in \mathcal{L} \otimes A \otimes A\end{align*}$$

satisfying

  1. 1. The invariance condition

    $$\begin{align*}h_{(1)} \triangleright J^0 \otimes h_{(2)} J^1 \otimes h_{(3)} J^2 = J^0\otimes J^1 h_{(1)} \otimes J^2 h_{(2)}\end{align*}$$
    for every $h\in H$ ;
  2. 2. The shifted cocycle equation

    $$\begin{align*}((\mathrm{id}\otimes \Delta \otimes \mathrm{id})J) (J \otimes 1) = ((\mathrm{id} \otimes \mathrm{id}\otimes \Delta)J)(J_{(0)}^0 \otimes S^{-1}(J_{(-1)}^0) \otimes J^1 \otimes J^2); \end{align*}$$
  3. 3. The normalisation condition

    $$\begin{align*}(\mathrm{id} \otimes \varepsilon \otimes \mathrm{id}) J = 1\otimes 1\otimes 1 = (\mathrm{id} \otimes \mathrm{id} \otimes \varepsilon) J.\end{align*}$$

Example 4.3. Consider the trivial pair $H=\mathcal {L}=k$ given by the ground field. The invariance condition is empty, while the cocycle equation and the normalisation condition imply that $J\in A\otimes A$ is a (constant) twist for the Hopf algebra in the sense of [Reference Chari and Pressley21, Proposition 4.2.13].

Example 4.4. Suppose $\mathfrak {h}$ is an abelian Lie algebra, and consider $H=\mathcal {L}=\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ as in section 3.3. Then a dynamical twist is a function $J\colon \mathfrak {h}^*\rightarrow A\otimes A$ . The invariance condition is that $J(\lambda )$ is $\mathfrak {h}$ -invariant with respect to the adjoint action (the zero-weight condition). The shifted cocycle equation is

$$\begin{align*}((\Delta\otimes\mathrm{id}) J(\lambda))J_{12}(\lambda) = ((\mathrm{id}\otimes\Delta) J(\lambda)) J_{23}(\lambda-h^{(1)}).\end{align*}$$

Proposition 4.5. The data of a dynamical twist is equivalent to the data of a monoidal structure on $\mathrm {LMod}_A \rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(\mathrm {LMod}_H, \mathcal {L})$ with a strict unit map.

Proof. By Theorem 4.1, the monoidal structure is specified by a collection of elements

$$\begin{align*}J_{X, Y}\in \mathcal{L}\otimes \mathrm{End}(X\otimes Y),\qquad X,Y\in\mathrm{LMod}_A.\end{align*}$$

By naturality, these are uniquely determined by the elements

$$\begin{align*}J = J_{A, A}(1_A\otimes 1_A)\in\mathcal{L}\otimes A\otimes A.\end{align*}$$

Two dynamical twists may be related by a gauge transformation.

Definition 4.6. A gauge transformation is an invertible H-invariant element $G\in \mathcal {L} \otimes A$ satisfying the normalisation condition

$$\begin{align*}(\mathrm{id} \otimes \varepsilon) (G) = 1 \otimes 1. \end{align*}$$

Given a dynamical twist J and a gauge transformation G, we obtain a new dynamical twist by the formula

(31) $$ \begin{align} J^G = (\mathrm{id} \otimes \Delta)G\cdot J\cdot ((\delta^R\otimes\mathrm{id})G)^{-1}(G \otimes 1)^{-1}. \end{align} $$

Example 4.7. Consider the pair $H=\mathcal {L}=\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ , as in Theorem 4.4. Then a gauge transformation is a zero-weight function $G\colon \mathfrak {h}^*\rightarrow A^\times $ satisfying $\varepsilon (G(\lambda )) = 1$ . Given a dynamical twist $J\colon \mathfrak {h}^*\rightarrow A\otimes A$ , its gauge transformation is

$$\begin{align*}J^G(\lambda) = (\mathrm{id}\otimes \Delta)G(\lambda) \cdot J(\lambda) \cdot (G_2(\lambda-h^{(1)}))^{-1}(G_1(\lambda))^{-1}.\end{align*}$$

Proposition 4.8. Suppose $J_1, J_2$ are two dynamical twists that give rise to monoidal structures on the functor $\mathrm {LMod}_A\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(\mathrm {LMod}_H, \mathcal {L})$ by Theorem 4.5. The data of a gauge transformation between them is a monoidal natural isomorphism

4.2 Dynamical FRT and reflection equation algebras

Let us describe the Harish-Chandra bialgebroid B from Theorem 3.35 explicitly. Let $\mathcal {D}$ be a cp-rigid monoidal category and $F\colon \mathcal {D}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}$ a monoidal functor that admits a colimit-preserving right adjoint $F^{\mathrm {R}}$ .

By Theorem 2.5, the functor $FF^{\mathrm {R}}$ can be calculated as

$$ \begin{align*} FF^{\mathrm{R}}(x) &= \int^{y\in \mathcal{D}^{\mathrm{cp}}} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathrm{HC}}(F(y)^\vee, x) \otimes F(y)^\vee \\ &\cong \int^{y\in\mathcal{D}^{\mathrm{cp}}} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathrm{HC}}(\mathcal{L}, F(y)\otimes_{\mathcal{L}} x)\otimes F(y)^\vee. \end{align*} $$

Recalling the definition of the Takeuchi product from Theorem 3.27, we obtain that $FF^{\mathrm {R}}(x)\cong B\times _{\mathcal {L}} x$ , where the Harish-Chandra bialgebroid B is

$$\begin{align*}B\cong \int^{y\in\mathcal{D}^{\mathrm{cp}}} F(y)^\vee\boxtimes F(y)\in\mathrm{HC}\otimes\mathrm{HC}.\end{align*}$$

As in section 2.5, denote by

$$\begin{align*}\pi_y\colon F(y)^\vee\boxtimes F(y)\longrightarrow B\end{align*}$$

the natural projections. The Harish-Chandra bialgebroid structure is given on generators as follows:

  1. 1. The coproduct

    $$\begin{align*}B\longrightarrow B\times_{\mathcal{L}} B\cong \int^{(y,z)\in \mathcal{D}^{\mathrm{cp}} \times \mathcal{D}^{\mathrm{cp}}} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathrm{HC}}(\mathcal{L}, F(y)\otimes_{\mathcal{L}} F(z)^\vee)\otimes F(y)^\vee\boxtimes F(z)\end{align*}$$
    is
    $$\begin{align*}F(y)^\vee\boxtimes F(y)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{coev}\otimes \mathrm{id}} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathrm{HC}}(\mathcal{L}, F(y)\otimes_{\mathcal{L}} F(y)^\vee)\otimes F(y)^\vee\boxtimes F(y)\xrightarrow{\pi_{y, y}} B\times_{\mathcal{L}} B.\end{align*}$$
  2. 2. The counit

    $$\begin{align*}B\longrightarrow T^{\mathrm{R}}_{\mathrm{HC}}(\mathcal{L}) = \int^{P\in\mathrm{HC}^{\mathrm{cp}}} P^\vee\boxtimes P\end{align*}$$
    is the projection
    $$\begin{align*}F(y)^\vee\boxtimes F(y) \rightarrow T^{\mathrm{R}}_{\mathrm{HC}}(\mathcal{L}).\end{align*}$$
  3. 3. The product is the composite

    $$ \begin{align*} (F(y)^\vee \boxtimes F(y)) \otimes_{\mathcal{L}\otimes \mathcal{L}} (F(z)^\vee \boxtimes F(z)) &= (F(y)^\vee\otimes_{\mathcal{L}} F(z)^\vee)\boxtimes (F(z)\otimes_{\mathcal{L}} F(y)) \\ &\cong (F(z)\otimes_{\mathcal{L}} F(y))^\vee\boxtimes (F(z)\otimes_{\mathcal{L}} F(y)) \\ &\xrightarrow{(J^{-1}_{z,y})^\vee\boxtimes J_{z,y}} F(z\otimes y)^\vee\boxtimes F(z\otimes y) \\ &\xrightarrow{\pi_{z\otimes y}} B. \end{align*} $$
  4. 4. The quantum moment map is

    $$\begin{align*}\mathcal{L} \boxtimes \mathcal{L}^{\mathrm{op}} \cong F(\mathbf{1}) \boxtimes F(\mathbf{1}) \xrightarrow{\pi_{\mathbf{1}}} B. \end{align*}$$

We will now concentrate on the case $\mathcal {C}=\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)$ for H a split torus with weight lattice $\Lambda $ and $\mathcal {L}=\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ , so $\mathrm {HC}=\mathrm {HC}(H)$ . Moreover, we assume that the functor $F\colon \mathcal {D}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)$ factors as the composite

$$\begin{align*}\mathcal{D}\longrightarrow \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(H)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{free}} \mathrm{HC}(H).\end{align*}$$

For an object $y\in \mathcal {D}$ , we denote its image in $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)$ by the same letter. In this case, the monoidal structure is given by a dynamical twist

$$\begin{align*}J_{y, z}(\lambda)\colon \mathfrak{h}^*\rightarrow \mathrm{End}(y\otimes z)\end{align*}$$

as in Theorem 4.1.

The projections

$$\begin{align*}\pi_y\colon (\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}\otimes y^\vee)\boxtimes (\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}\otimes y)\longrightarrow B\end{align*}$$

in $\mathrm {HC}(H\times H)$ may be encoded in elements

$$\begin{align*}T_y\in B\otimes \mathrm{End}(y).\end{align*}$$

Analogously to Theorem 2.26, we obtain the following explicit description of the bialgebroid B.

Theorem 4.9. The bialgebroid B is spanned, as an $\mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)$ -bimodule, by the matrix coefficients of $T_y$ for $y\in \mathcal {D}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ subject to the relation

$$\begin{align*}F(j)\circ T_x = T_y\circ F(j)\end{align*}$$

for every $j\colon x\rightarrow y$ . Moreover, we have:

  1. 1. $\Delta (T_y) = T_y\otimes T_y$ for every $y\in \mathcal {D}^{cp}$ .

  2. 2. $\epsilon (T_y) = 1\otimes \mathrm {id}_y\in \mathrm {D}(H)\otimes \mathrm {End}(y)$ for every $y\in \mathcal {D}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ .

  3. 3. For every $f\in \mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)$ and $y\in \mathcal {D}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ ,

    $$ \begin{align*} s(f(\lambda)) T_y &= T_y s(f(\lambda + h)) \\ t(f(\lambda+h)) T_y &= T_y t(f(\lambda )). \end{align*} $$
  4. 4. $J^t_{y, z}(\lambda )^{-1} T_{y\otimes z} J^s_{y, z}(\lambda ) = (T_y\otimes \mathrm {id})(\mathrm {id}\otimes T_z)$ , where by the superscripts, we mean the left multiplication with the $\mathcal {O}(\mathfrak {h}^*)$ -part by either the source $(s)$ or the target $(t)$ map.

  5. 5. $T_{\mathbf {1}}\in B$ is the unit.

Definition 4.10. Suppose $\mathcal {D}$ is a braided monoidal category together with a forgetful functor $\mathcal {D}\rightarrow \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)$ and a monoidal structure on the composite $\mathcal {D}\rightarrow \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)\xrightarrow {\mathrm {free}} \mathrm {HC}(H)$ . For $x,y\in \mathcal {D}$ , define the morphism $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}\otimes x\otimes y\rightarrow \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}\otimes y\otimes x$ by

$$\begin{align*}\check{R}_{x,y} \colon F(x) \otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}} F(y) \xrightarrow{J_{x,y}} F(x\otimes y) \xrightarrow{F(\sigma_{x,y})} F(y\otimes x) \xrightarrow{J_{x,y}^{-1}} F(y) \otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}} F(x).\end{align*}$$

The dynamical $\boldsymbol {R}$ -matrix is the map $R_{x, y}\colon \mathfrak {h}^*\rightarrow \mathrm {End}(x\otimes y)$ given by

$$\begin{align*}R_{x, y} = (\mathrm{id}_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}}\otimes \sigma_{x, y}^{-1})\circ \check{R}_{x, y}.\end{align*}$$

As in section 2.5, we use the standard notation $T_1 = T_x \otimes \mathrm {id}$ and $T_2=\mathrm {id}\otimes T_y$ and similarly for the R-matrix.

Proposition 4.11. Let $x,y,z\in \mathcal {D}^{\mathrm {cp}}$ .

  1. 1. The dynamical R-matrix satisfies the dynamical Yang-Baxter equation

    $$\begin{align*}R_{23}(\lambda)R_{13}(\lambda-h^{(2)}) R_{12}(\lambda) = R_{12}(\lambda-h^{(3)}) R_{13}(\lambda) R_{23}(\lambda-h^{(1)})\end{align*}$$
    in $\mathrm {End}(x\otimes y\otimes z)$ .
  2. 2. The element T satisfies the dynamical FRT relation

    $$\begin{align*}R^t(\lambda) T_1 T_2 = T_2 T_1 R^s(\lambda)\end{align*}$$
    in $B\otimes \mathrm {End}(x\otimes y)$ .

Proof. As in the proof of Theorem 2.28, the element $\hat {R}$ satisfies the braid relation

$$\begin{align*}\check{R}_{12} \check{R}_{23} \check{R}_{12} = \check{R}_{23} \check{R}_{12} \check{R}_{23}\end{align*}$$

in $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}\otimes \mathrm {End}(x\otimes y\otimes z)$ . Observing that $\check {R} = \sigma \circ R$ , we get the dynamical Yang–Baxter equation.

To show the second part, recall from Theorem 4.9 that

$$\begin{align*}F(\sigma_{x,y}) T_{x\otimes y} = T_{y\otimes x} F(\sigma_{x,y}).\end{align*}$$

Decomposing $T_{x\otimes y}$ and $T_{y\otimes x}$ into $T_x$ and $T_y$ using property $(4)$ of the same theorem, we get the result.

5 Fusion of Verma modules

In this section, we construct standard dynamical twists for $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ and $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ using the so-called exchange construction introduced in [Reference Etingof and Varchenko31].

5.1 Classical parabolic restriction

Let G be a reductive group over an algebraically closed field k of characteristic zero and $\mathfrak {g}$ its Lie algebra. Fix a Borel subgroup $B\subset G$ and denote $H = B / [B, B]$ ; their Lie algebras are denoted by $\mathfrak {b}$ and $\mathfrak {h}$ . We denote by N the kernel of $B\rightarrow H$ with Lie algebra $\mathfrak {n}$ . Let W be the Weyl group.

We will later use the Harish-Chandra isomorphism; see [Reference Humphreys49, Theorem 1.10].

Theorem 5.1. There is a unique homomorphism of algebras

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{hc}\colon \mathrm{Z}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g})\longrightarrow \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h},\end{align*}$$

the Harish-Chandra homomorphism, such that for any $z\in \mathrm {Z}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g})$ and $m\in M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ , we have

$$\begin{align*}z m = m \mathrm{hc}(z).\end{align*}$$

Definition 5.2. The universal category $\mathcal {O}$ is the category $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ of $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}, \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})$ -bimodules whose diagonal $\mathfrak {b}$ -action integrates to a B-action. The universal Verma module is

$$\begin{align*}M^{\mathrm{univ}} = \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{b}} \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h} \in \mathcal{O}^{\mathrm{univ}}.\end{align*}$$

Remark 5.3. Just like the usual category $\mathcal {O}$ is constructed to contain objects like Verma modules, we define $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ to contain objects like universal Verma modules.

Remark 5.4. We may identify $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ with the category of $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ -modules in the category $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)$ whose $\mathfrak {n}$ -action is locally nilpotent.

We will now define an important bimodule structure on $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ :

(32) $$ \begin{align} \mathrm{HC}(G)\curvearrowright \mathcal{O}^{\mathrm{univ}} \curvearrowleft \mathrm{HC}(H). \end{align} $$

Both actions are given by the relative tensor products of bimodules. Given a $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ -bimodule $X\in \mathrm {HC}(G)$ and a $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}, \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})$ -bimodule $M\in \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ , $X\otimes _{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}} M$ is an $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}, \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})$ -bimodule. Since the diagonal $\mathfrak {g}$ -action on X is integrable, so is the diagonal $\mathfrak {b}$ -action. Therefore, the diagonal $\mathfrak {b}$ -action on $X\otimes _{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}} M$ is integrable. The $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ action is defined similarly.

Let

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{act}_G\colon \mathrm{HC}(G)\longrightarrow \mathcal{O}^{\mathrm{univ}},\qquad \mathrm{act}_H\colon \mathrm{HC}(H)\longrightarrow \mathcal{O}^{\mathrm{univ}}\end{align*}$$

be the actions of $\mathrm {HC}(G)$ and $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ on the universal Verma module $M^{\mathrm {univ}}\in \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ . Using Theorem 2.21, we obtain the following lax monoidal functors.

Definition 5.5. The parabolic restriction is the lax monoidal functor

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{res}= \mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_H\circ \mathrm{act}_G\colon \mathrm{HC}(G)\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}(H).\end{align*}$$

The parabolic induction is the lax monoidal functor

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{ind} = \mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_G\circ \mathrm{act}_H\colon \mathrm{HC}(H)\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}(G).\end{align*}$$

Let us now make these functors more explicit. Consider the functor

$$\begin{align*}(-)^N\colon \mathcal{O}^{\mathrm{univ}}\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}(H),\end{align*}$$

which sends a $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}, \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})$ -bimodule to the subspace of highest-weight vectors with respect to the $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ -action. It still has a remaining $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ -bimodule structure, so it defines an object of $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ .

Proposition 5.6. The functor $(-)^N\colon \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)$ is right adjoint to $\mathrm {act}_H\colon \mathrm {HC}(H)\rightarrow \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ .

Proof. Identify $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ with the highest-weight $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ -modules in the category $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)$ following Theorem 5.4. For $M\in \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ and $X\in \mathrm {HC}(H)$ , we have

$$ \begin{align*} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{O}^{\mathrm{univ}}}(\mathrm{act}_H(X), M) &= \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{O}^{\mathrm{univ}}}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{b}} X, M) \\ &\cong \mathrm{Hom}_{{}_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{b}}\mathrm{BMod}_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}}}(X, M) \\ &\cong \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathrm{HC}(H)}(X, M^N). \end{align*} $$

So,

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{res}(X)\cong (X/X\mathfrak{n})^N.\end{align*}$$

The lax monoidal structure on $\mathrm {res}$ can be described explicitly as follows. For $X,Y\in \mathrm {HC}(G)$ , the morphism

(33) $$ \begin{align} (X/X\mathfrak{n})^N \otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}} (Y/Y/\mathfrak{n})^N \longrightarrow (X\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}} Y/(X\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}} Y)\mathfrak{n})^N \end{align} $$

is given by $[x] \otimes [y] \mapsto [x \otimes y]$ . This assignment is independent of the choice of a representative of $[x]$ since $[y]$ is N-invariant.

Remark 5.7. Since $\mathrm {res}\colon \mathrm {HC}(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)$ is lax monoidal, it sends algebras in $\mathrm {HC}(G)$ to algebras in $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ . By Theorem 3.10, an algebra in $\mathrm {HC}(G)$ is a G-algebra equipped with a quantum moment map $\mu \colon \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}\rightarrow A$ . It is easy to see that $\mathrm {res}(A)$ is the quantum Hamiltonian reduction $A/\!\!/ N$ . This algebra is known as the Mickelsson algebra [Reference Mickelsson67]; refer to [Reference Zhelobenko94] for more details.

Recall that the coinduction functor

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{coind}_B^G\colon \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(B)\longrightarrow \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(G)\end{align*}$$

is right adjoint to the obvious restriction functor $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)\rightarrow \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(B)$ . Denote in the same way the functor

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{coind}_B^G\colon \mathcal{O}^{\mathrm{univ}}\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}(G)\end{align*}$$

of coinduction from B to G using the diagonal B-action.

Proposition 5.8. The functor $\mathrm {coind}_B^G\colon \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(G)$ is right adjoint to $\mathrm {act}_G\colon \mathrm {HC}(G)\rightarrow \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ .

Proof. For $M\in \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ and $X\in \mathrm {HC}(G)$ , we have

$$ \begin{align*} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{O}^{\mathrm{univ}}}(\mathrm{act}_G(X), M) &= \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{O}^{\mathrm{univ}}}(X\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{b}} \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}, M) \\ &\cong \mathrm{Hom}_{{}_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}}\mathrm{BMod}_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{b}}}(X, M). \end{align*} $$

Both X and M are $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}, \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {b})$ -bimodules whose diagonal $\mathfrak {b}$ -action integrates to a B-action: that is, they are objects of $\mathrm {LMod}_{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}}(\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}} B)$ . Moreover, X lies in the image of the forgetful functor

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{HC}(G)=\mathrm{LMod}_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}}(\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}} G)\rightarrow \mathrm{LMod}_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}}(\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}} B).\end{align*}$$

But by definition, $\mathrm {coind}_B^G$ is the right adjoint to the forgetful functor $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}} G\rightarrow \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}} B$ .

Let us now compute the values of $\mathrm {res}$ and $\mathrm {ind}$ on the units.

Proposition 5.9. The natural morphism $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}\rightarrow \mathrm {res}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g})$ is an isomorphism.

Proof. By Theorem 5.6, $\mathrm {res}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}) \cong (M^{\mathrm {univ}})^N$ , and we have to show that

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}\longrightarrow (M^{\mathrm{univ}})^N\end{align*}$$

is an isomorphism. Let

$$\begin{align*}M^{\mathrm{univ}, \mathrm{gen}} = \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{b}}\mathrm{Frac}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}),\end{align*}$$

where $\mathrm {Frac}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})$ is the fraction field of $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ . The map $M^{\mathrm {univ}}\rightarrow M^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}$ is injective, and $(-)^N$ is left exact, so $(M^{\mathrm {univ}})^N\longrightarrow (M^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}})^N$ is injective. But the Verma module for generic highest weights is irreducible (see [Reference Humphreys49, Theorem 4.4]), so

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{Frac}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})\longrightarrow (M^{\mathrm{univ}, \mathrm{gen}})^N\end{align*}$$

is an isomorphism. This implies the claim.

Corollary 5.10. The induced map

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{res}\colon \mathrm{Z}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g})=\mathrm{End}_{\mathrm{HC}(G)}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g})\longrightarrow \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}=\mathrm{End}_{\mathrm{HC}(H)}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})\end{align*}$$

coincides with the Harish-Chandra homomorphism $\mathrm {hc}\colon \mathrm {Z}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g})\rightarrow \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ .

Proof. The map

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{act}_G\colon \mathrm{Z}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g})=\mathrm{End}_{\mathrm{HC}(G)}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g})\longrightarrow \mathrm{End}_{\mathcal{O}^{\mathrm{univ}}}(M^{\mathrm{univ}})\end{align*}$$

sends a central element $z\in \mathrm {Z}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g})$ to the left action of $z\in \mathrm {Z}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g})$ on $M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ . By Theorem 5.1, it is equal to the right action of $\mathrm {hc}(z)\in \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ on $M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ . To conclude, observe that the map

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}\longrightarrow (M^{\mathrm{univ}})^N\end{align*}$$

is an isomorphism of right $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ -modules.

Proposition 5.11. Suppose G is connected and simply connected. Then there is an isomorphism

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{ind}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})\cong \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}\otimes_{\mathrm{Z}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g})} \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h},\end{align*}$$

where the $\mathrm {Z}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g})$ -action on $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ is via the Harish-Chandra homomorphism $\mathrm {hc}$ .

Proof. By Theorem 5.8, $\mathrm {ind}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})\cong \mathrm {coind}_B^G(M^{\mathrm {univ}})$ . Identifying B-representations with G-equivariant quasi-coherent sheaves on $G/B$ , $M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ is sent to $(\pi _* \mathrm {D}_{G/N})^H$ , where $\pi \colon G/N\rightarrow G/B$ . Therefore,

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{coind}_B^G(M^{\mathrm{univ}})\cong \mathrm{D}(G/N)^H.\end{align*}$$

The claim then follows from [Reference Šapovalov90, Reference van den Hombergh and de Vries87]; see also [Reference Miličić68, Lemma 3.1].

Note that the functor $\mathrm {res}$ preserves neither limits nor colimits, and it is merely lax monoidal. We will now show that after a localisation, it becomes exact and monoidal.

Definition 5.12. A weight $\lambda \in \mathfrak {h}^*$ is generic if $\langle \lambda , \alpha ^\vee \rangle \not \in \mathbb {Z}$ for every root $\alpha $ . Denote by $\mathfrak {h}^{*, \mathrm {gen}}\subset \mathfrak {h}^*$ the subset of generic weights. Let $\mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}\subset \mathrm {HC}(H)$ and $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}\subset \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ be the full subcategories of right $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ -modules supported on generic weights. Let $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}}\subset \mathrm {Frac}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})$ be the subspace of rational functions on $\mathfrak {h}^*$ regular on $\mathfrak {h}^{*, \mathrm {gen}}$ .

By construction,

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{HC}(H)^{\mathrm{gen}} = \mathrm{HC}(\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(H), (\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}})\end{align*}$$

and similarly for $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}$ . Moreover, both $\mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}\subset \mathrm {HC}(H)$ and $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}\subset \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}$ admit left adjoints given by localisation. Let

$$\begin{align*}M^{\mathrm{univ}, \mathrm{gen}} = \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{b}} (\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}}\end{align*}$$

be the universal Verma module with generic highest weights.

Choose a Borel subgroup $B_-\subset G$ opposite to B, with Lie algebra $\mathfrak {b}_-$ . Let

$$\begin{align*}M^{\mathrm{univ}}_- = \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{b}_-} \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}\end{align*}$$

be the opposite universal Verma module.

Definition 5.13. The functor of $\mathfrak {n}_-$ -coinvariants

$$\begin{align*}(-)_{\mathfrak{n}_-}\colon \mathcal{O}^{\mathrm{univ}}\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}(H)\end{align*}$$

is $M_{\mathfrak {n}_-} = M^{\mathrm {univ}}_-\otimes _{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}} M$ .

We will now recall the extremal projector introduced in [Reference Asherova, Smirnov and Tolstoy4]; see also [Reference Zhelobenko94].

Theorem 5.14. An extension $T(\mathfrak {g})$ of $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ is obtained by replacing $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}\subset \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ with $\mathrm {Frac}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})$ and considering certain power series. There is an element $P\in T(\mathfrak {g})$ satisfying the following properties:

  1. 1. $\mathfrak {n} P = P\mathfrak {n}_- = 0$ .

  2. 2. $P-1\in T(\mathfrak {g})\mathfrak {n}\cap \mathfrak {n}_- T(\mathfrak {g})$ .

The action of P is well-defined on left $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ -modules whose $\mathfrak {n}$ -action is locally nilpotent and that have generic $\mathfrak {h}$ -weights.

Example 5.15. Suppose $\mathfrak {g}=\mathfrak {sl}_2$ . The extremal projector in this case is (see, e.g., [Reference Khoroshkin and Ogievetsky53])

$$\begin{align*}P = \sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{(-1)^n}{n!} g_n^{-1} f^n e^n,\end{align*}$$

where

$$\begin{align*}g_n = \prod_{j=1}^n (h+j+1).\end{align*}$$

We will now describe some applications of extremal projectors.

Proposition 5.16. There is a natural isomorphism of functors $(-)_{\mathfrak {n}_-}\cong (-)^N\colon \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ},\mathrm {gen}}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ . In particular, they are exact.

Proof. Take $M\in \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}$ , and consider the composite

$$\begin{align*}\pi\colon M^N\longrightarrow M\longrightarrow M_{\mathfrak{n}_-}.\end{align*}$$

We will prove that it is an isomorphism.

Since the weights of the right $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ -action on M are generic and the weights of the diagonal $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ -action are integral, the weights of the left $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ -action are also generic. Moreover, the left $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {n}$ -action is locally nilpotent. In particular, the action of the extremal projector from Theorem 5.14

$$\begin{align*}P\colon M\longrightarrow M\end{align*}$$

is well-defined. It lands in N-invariants by the property $\mathfrak {n} P = 0$ . It factors through $\mathfrak {n}_-$ -coinvariants by the property $P\mathfrak {n}_- = 0$ . So, it gives a map

$$\begin{align*}P\colon M_{\mathfrak{n}_-}\longrightarrow M^N.\end{align*}$$

For $m\in M^N$ , we have $Pm = m$ since $P-1\in T(\mathfrak {g})\mathfrak {n}$ . In particular, $P\circ \pi = \mathrm {id}$ . For $m\in M$ , $[m] = [Pm]$ in $M_{\mathfrak {n}_-}$ since $P-1\in \mathfrak {n}_- T(\mathfrak {g})$ . In particular, $\pi \circ P = \mathrm {id}$ .

Theorem 5.17. The category $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}$ is free of rank 1 as a $\mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ -module category in the sense of Theorem 2.22.

Proof. The unit of the adjunction $\mathrm {act}_H\dashv (-)^N$ between $\mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ and $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}$ is

$$\begin{align*}X\longrightarrow (\mathrm{act}_H(X))^N\xrightarrow{\sim} (M^{\mathrm{univ}}\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}} X)_{\mathfrak{n}_-}.\end{align*}$$

By the PBW isomorphism, this map is an isomorphism. In particular, $\mathrm {act}_H\colon \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}\rightarrow \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}$ is fully faithful.

Since the $\mathfrak {n}$ -action on $M\in \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}$ is locally nilpotent, $M^N = 0$ if and only if $M=0$ . But $(-)^N\colon \mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ is exact by Theorem 5.16. Therefore, it is conservative. Since its left adjoint $\mathrm {act}_H$ is fully faithful, it is an equivalence.

Corollary 5.18. The composite

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}\colon \mathrm{HC}(G)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{res}} \mathrm{HC}(H)\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}(H)^{\mathrm{gen}}\end{align*}$$

is strongly monoidal and colimit-preserving.

Proof. By Theorem 5.17, $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}$ is free of rank 1 as a $\mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ -module category. The claim then follows from Theorem 2.23.

Remark 5.19. Consider the morphism of stacks $p\colon [\mathfrak {b}/B]\rightarrow [\mathfrak {h}/H]$ . It admits a section $s\colon [\mathfrak {h}/H]\rightarrow [\mathfrak {b}/B]$ , so $p\circ s=\mathrm {id}_{[\mathfrak {h}/H]}$ . It is shown in [Reference Sevostyanov76] that, restricting to generic weights, there is a homotopy $s\circ p\sim \mathrm {id}_{[\mathfrak {b}/B]}$ given by the classical limit of the extremal projector. The proof of Theorem 5.17 gives an analogous interpretation of the extremal projector on the quantum level.

We will now show that $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}$ gives rise to a dynamical twist. For this, according to Theorem 4.1, we have to show that $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}$ of a free Harish–Chandra bimodule is free: that is, we have to establish an isomorphism between $(V\otimes M^{\mathrm {univ}})^N$ and $V\otimes (\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}}$ in $\mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ , for every $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ .

Theorem 5.20. The morphism

$$\begin{align*}(V\otimes M^{\mathrm{univ}, \mathrm{gen}})^N\subset V\otimes M^{\mathrm{univ}, \mathrm{gen}} \longrightarrow V\otimes (\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}},\end{align*}$$

where the second morphism is induced by the projection $M^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}\rightarrow (\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}}$ onto the highest weights, defines a natural isomorphism witnessing commutativity of the diagram

Proof. Let $M_\lambda $ be the Verma module of a generic highest weight $\lambda \in \mathfrak {h}^*$ , and denote by $x_\lambda \in M_\lambda $ the highest-weight vector. We have to show that the map $(V\otimes M_\lambda )^N\rightarrow V$ given by

$$\begin{align*}v\otimes x_\lambda + \dots\mapsto v\otimes 1,\end{align*}$$

where $\dots $ contain elements of $M_\lambda $ of weight less than $\lambda $ , is an isomorphism. This is the content of [Reference Etingof and Varchenko31, Theorem 8].

Remark 5.21. The $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}}$ -module $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}(V\otimes \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g})$ admits another natural basis constructed in [Reference Khoroshkin54].

Consider $V,W\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ . Let us recall that Etingof and Varchenko [Reference Etingof and Varchenko31] have introduced the fusion matrix

$$\begin{align*}J^{EV}_{V, W}(\lambda)\colon V\otimes W\rightarrow V\otimes W\end{align*}$$

depending rationally on a parameter $\lambda \in \mathfrak {h}^*$ as follows. Consider the Verma module $M_\lambda $ with highest-weight $\lambda \in \mathfrak {h}^*$ . For $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ denote by $V=\oplus _{\lambda \in \Lambda } V[\lambda ]$ its weight decomposition. Consider a morphism $M_\lambda \rightarrow M_\mu \otimes V$ . The image of a highest-weight vector $x_\lambda \in M_\lambda $ has the form

$$\begin{align*}x_\mu\otimes v + \dots,\end{align*}$$

where $\dots $ denote terms containing elements of $M_\mu $ of lower weight. This determines a morphism

(34) $$ \begin{align} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}}(M_\lambda, M_\mu\otimes V)\longrightarrow V[\lambda-\mu]. \end{align} $$

For generic $\mu $ , it is an isomorphism, and for $v\in V[\lambda -\mu ]$ , we denote by $\Phi ^v_\lambda \in \mathrm {Hom}_{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}}(M_\lambda , M_\mu \otimes V)$ the preimage of v under this map.

For $v\in V$ and $w\in W$ of weights $\mathrm {wt}(v)$ and $\mathrm {wt}(w)$ , consider the composite

(35) $$ \begin{align} M_\lambda\xrightarrow{\Phi_\lambda^v} M_{\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v)}\otimes V\xrightarrow{\Phi^w_{\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v)}\otimes \mathrm{id}} M_{\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v)-\mathrm{wt}(w)} \otimes W\otimes V. \end{align} $$

The fusion matrix is defined so that this composite is $\Phi ^{J^{EV}_{W, V}(\lambda )(w\otimes v)}_\lambda $ . By [Reference Etingof and Varchenko31, Theorem 48], $J^{EV}_{W, V}(\lambda )$ quantises the standard rational solution of the dynamical Yang–Baxter equation (see [Reference Etingof and Varchenko36, Theorem 3.2]).

Combining Theorem 5.18 and Theorem 5.20, we obtain a monoidal structure on the composite

$$\begin{align*}\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(G)\longrightarrow \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(H)\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}(H)^{\mathrm{gen}}.\end{align*}$$

In particular, as in Theorem 4.1, this gives rise to linear maps

$$\begin{align*}J_{V, W}(\lambda)\colon V\otimes W\rightarrow V\otimes W\end{align*}$$

depending rationally on $\lambda \in \mathfrak {h}^*$ .

Proposition 5.22. Let $V,W\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ . The map $J_{V, W}(\lambda )\colon V\otimes W\rightarrow V\otimes W$ coincides with a permutation of the fusion matrix

$$\begin{align*}J_{V, W}(\lambda) = \tau J^{EV}_{W,V}(\lambda)\tau,\end{align*}$$

where $\tau $ is the flip of tensor factors.

Proof. Let $x^{\mathrm {univ}}\in M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ be the generator of the universal Verma module and $x_\lambda \in M_\lambda $ be the generator of the Verma module of highest weight $\lambda $ . Using the PBW identification $M^{\mathrm {univ}}\cong \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {n}_-\otimes \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ , we identify elements of $M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ with functions $\mathfrak {h}^*\rightarrow \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {n}_-$ .

For $v\in V$ , we denote by $\sum v_i\otimes a_i x^{\mathrm {univ}}$ the unique highest-weight element of $V\otimes M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ , which has an expansion $v\otimes x^{\mathrm {univ}}+\dots $ . Similarly, for $w\in W$ , we denote by $\sum w_i\otimes b_i x^{\mathrm {univ}} = w\otimes x^{\mathrm {univ}} + \dots $ the highest-weight element of $W\otimes M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ .

Under the morphism given by equation (33)

$$\begin{align*}(V\otimes M^{\mathrm{univ}})^N\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}} (W\otimes M^{\mathrm{univ}})^N\longrightarrow (V\otimes W\otimes M^{\mathrm{univ}})^N\end{align*}$$

we have

$$\begin{align*}\sum_{i, j} (v_i\otimes a_i x^{\mathrm{univ}})\otimes (w_j\otimes b_j x^{\mathrm{univ}})\mapsto \sum_{i, j} v_i\otimes (a_i)_{(1)} w_j\otimes (a_i)_{(2)} b_j x^{\mathrm{univ}}.\end{align*}$$

It is then easy to see that

$$\begin{align*}J_{V,W}(\lambda)(v\otimes w) = \sum_i v_i\otimes a_i(\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v)) w.\end{align*}$$

Using the same notations, the map $\Phi _\lambda ^v\colon M_\lambda \rightarrow M_{\lambda -\mathrm {wt}(v)} \otimes V$ is

$$\begin{align*}x_\lambda\mapsto \sum_i a_i(\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v)) x_{\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v)}\otimes v_i.\end{align*}$$

Therefore, the composite given by equation (35) is

$$ \begin{align*} x_\lambda &\mapsto \sum_i a_i(\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v)) x_{\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v)}\otimes v_i\\ &\mapsto \sum_{i,j} a_i(\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v))_{(1)} b_j(\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v)-\mathrm{wt}(w))x_{\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v)-\mathrm{wt}(w)}\otimes a_i(\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v))_{(2)} w_j\otimes v_i. \end{align*} $$

The resulting element of $M_{\lambda -\mathrm {wt}(v)-\mathrm {wt}(w)}\otimes W\otimes V$ is

$$\begin{align*}\sum_i x_{\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v)-\mathrm{wt}(w)}\otimes a_i(\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v)) w\otimes v_i + \dots,\end{align*}$$

which proves the claim.

Moreover, in [Reference Etingof and Varchenko31, Section 5], Etingof and Varchenko have introduced an $\mathfrak {h}$ -bialgebroid $F(G)$ .

Theorem 5.23. Consider the monoidal functor

$$\begin{align*}\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(G)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{free}_G} \mathrm{HC}(G)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}}\mathrm{HC}(H)^{\mathrm{gen}}.\end{align*}$$

It admits a colimit-preserving right adjoint; denote by $B\in \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}\otimes \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ the Harish-Chandra bialgebroid corresponding to this monoidal functor constructed in Theorem 3.35. Then we have an isomorphism of $\mathfrak {h}$ -bialgebroids

$$\begin{align*}B\otimes_{(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}}\otimes (\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}}} (\mathrm{Frac}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})\otimes \mathrm{Frac}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}))\cong F(G).\end{align*}$$

Proof. By Theorem 5.20, the functor $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ factors as

$$\begin{align*}\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(G)\longrightarrow \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(H)\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}(H)^{\mathrm{gen}}.\end{align*}$$

Under this composite, a finite-dimensional G-representation $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ is sent to a compact projective object $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}}\otimes V\in \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ , so this functor admits a colimit-preserving right adjoint.

Since G is semisimple, by Theorem 4.9, the Harish-Chandra bialgebroid B is isomorphic to

$$\begin{align*}\bigoplus_{V\in\mathrm{Irr}(G)} ((\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}}\otimes V^\vee)\boxtimes ((\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}}\otimes V)\in\mathrm{HC}(H)^{\mathrm{gen}}\otimes \mathrm{HC}(H)^{\mathrm{gen}},\end{align*}$$

where the sum is over isomorphism classes of irreducible finite-dimensional G-representations. In particular, we get an isomorphism of $(\mathrm {Frac}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}),\mathrm {Frac}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}))$ -bimodules

$$\begin{align*}B\otimes_{(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}}\otimes (\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}}} (\mathrm{Frac}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})\otimes \mathrm{Frac}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}))\cong F(G).\end{align*}$$

In the notations of Theorem 4.9 and [Reference Etingof and Varchenko31, Section 5], the isomorphism is given by

$$ \begin{align*} T_V & \mapsto L^V, \\ t(f(\lambda)) & \mapsto f(\lambda^1), \\ s(f(\lambda)) & \mapsto f(\lambda^2). \end{align*} $$

It is clear that this isomorphism preserves coproduct, counit and unit and the only nontrivial check is that the product is preserved as well. The relations $(18),(19)$ in Reference Etingof and Varchenko31 are clearly satisfied. For $(20)$ , the claim follows from Theorem 5.22.

5.2 Quantum parabolic restriction

In this section, we define a parabolic restriction in the setting of quantum groups; we use the notation from section 3.4.

Definition 5.24. The universal quantum category $\mathcal {O}$ is the category $\mathcal {O}_q^{\mathrm {univ}}$ of $(\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g}),\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h}))$ -bimodules whose diagonal $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {b})$ -action is integrable. The universal quantum Verma module is the object

$$\begin{align*}M^{\mathrm{univ}} = \mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})\otimes_{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{b})}\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{h})\in\mathcal{O}_q^{\mathrm{univ}}.\end{align*}$$

Remark 5.25. As in the classical case, we may identify $\mathcal {O}_q^{\mathrm {univ}}$ with the full subcategory of $\mathrm {LMod}_{\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})}(\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(H))$ of $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -modules whose $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {n})$ -action is locally finite.

We will now define a quantum analogue of the bimodules given by equation (32):

(36) $$ \begin{align} \mathrm{HC}_q(G)\curvearrowright \mathcal{O}_q^{\mathrm{univ}} \curvearrowleft \mathrm{HC}_q(H). \end{align} $$

Lemma 5.26. Suppose $X\in \mathrm {HC}_q(G)$ . The left $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}$ -module structure on $X\otimes _{\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}} \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ has a canonically extension to a $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -module structure. Moreover, the left $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {n})$ -action on $X\otimes _{\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}} M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ is locally finite.

Proof. Recall from Theorem 3.4 that the left action of $a\in \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}$ on $x\in X$ is

$$\begin{align*}a\triangleright x = (\operatorname{\mathrm{ad}} a_{(1)})(x) \triangleleft a_{(2)},\end{align*}$$

where $\operatorname {\mathrm {ad}}$ refers to the diagonal $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -action on X. So, we may extend the left $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}$ -action on the relative tensor product $X\otimes _{\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}} \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ to a $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -action by the formula

$$\begin{align*}a\triangleright (x\otimes h) = (\operatorname{\mathrm{ad}} a_{(1)})(x)\otimes a_{(2)} h\end{align*}$$

for $a\in \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ an $x\otimes h\in X\otimes _{\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}} \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ . It is well-defined (i.e., descends to the relative tensor product) using the formula $(\operatorname {\mathrm {ad}} a_{(1)})(l)a_{(2)} = al$ for any $a\in \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ and $l\in \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}$ .

The diagonal $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {n})$ -action on $X\otimes _{\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}} M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ is locally finite since it is so on X and $M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ .

A $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}$ -bimodule $X\in \mathrm {HC}_q(G)$ acts on a $(\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g}), \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h}))$ -bimodule $M\in \mathcal {O}_q^{\mathrm {univ}}$ via

$$\begin{align*}X, M\mapsto X\otimes_{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})^{\mathrm{lf}}} M.\end{align*}$$

By construction, it is a $(\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g}), \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h}))$ -bimodule. Since the diagonal $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {n})$ -action on X and the left $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {n})$ -action on M are locally finite, so is the left $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {n})$ -action on this bimodule. In particular, it lies in $\mathcal {O}_q^{\mathrm {univ}}$ .

For a $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})$ -bimodule $X\in \mathrm {HC}_q(H)$ and a $(\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g}), \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h}))$ -bimodule $M\in \mathcal {O}_q^{\mathrm {univ}}$ , the action is

$$\begin{align*}M, X\mapsto M\otimes_{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{h})} X.\end{align*}$$

Let

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{act}_G\colon \mathrm{HC}_q(G)\longrightarrow \mathcal{O}_q^{\mathrm{univ}},\qquad \mathrm{act}_H\colon \mathrm{HC}_q(H)\longrightarrow \mathcal{O}_q^{\mathrm{univ}}\end{align*}$$

be the actions of $\mathrm {HC}_q(G)$ and $\mathrm {HC}_q(H)$ on the universal Verma module $M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ .

Definition 5.27. The parabolic restriction and parabolic induction are the lax monoidal functors

$$ \begin{align*} \mathrm{res}&=\mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_H\circ \mathrm{act}_G\colon \mathrm{HC}_q(G)\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}_q(H) \\ \mathrm{ind}&=\mathrm{act}^{\mathrm{R}}_G\circ \mathrm{act}_H\colon \mathrm{HC}_q(H)\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}_q(G). \end{align*} $$

We have a functor

$$\begin{align*}(-)^{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{n})}\colon \mathcal{O}_q^{\mathrm{univ}}\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}_q(H)\end{align*}$$

of $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {n})$ -invariants.

Proposition 5.28. The functor $(-)^{\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {n})}\colon \mathcal {O}_q^{\mathrm {univ}}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}_q(H)$ is right adjoint to $\mathrm {act}_H\colon \mathrm {HC}_q(H)\rightarrow \mathcal {O}_q^{\mathrm {univ}}$ .

Proof. For $M\in \mathcal {O}_q^{\mathrm {univ}}$ and $X\in \mathrm {HC}_q(H)$ , we have

$$ \begin{align*} \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{O}_q^{\mathrm{univ}}}(\mathrm{act}_H(X), M)&= \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathcal{O}_q^{\mathrm{univ}}}(\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})\otimes_{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{b})} X, M) \\ &\cong \mathrm{Hom}_{{}_{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{b})}\mathrm{BMod}_{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{h})}}(X, M) \\ &\cong \mathrm{Hom}_{\mathrm{HC}_q(H)}(X, M^{\mathrm{U}_q(n)}). \end{align*} $$

Proposition 5.29. The natural morphism $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})\rightarrow \mathrm {res}(\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}})$ is an isomorphism.

Proof. The proof is similar to the proof of Theorem 5.9, where we again use the fact that the quantum Verma module is irreducible for generic parameters [Reference Voigt and Yuncken89, Theorem 4.15].

A weight for a $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -module is specified by an element of $H(k)\cong \mathrm {Hom}(\Lambda , k^\times )$ . We will use an additive notation for weights, so a vector v of weight $\lambda $ satisfies $K_\mu v= q^{(\lambda , \mu )} v$ . For a root $\alpha $ , we denote $q_\alpha = q^{(\alpha , \alpha )/2}$ .

Definition 5.30. A weight $\lambda $ is generic if $q^{(\alpha , \lambda )}\not \in \pm q_\alpha ^{\mathbf {Z}}$ for every root $\alpha $ . Denote by $H^{\mathrm {gen}}\subset H$ the subset of generic weights. We denote by $\mathrm {HC}_q^{\mathrm {gen}}(H)\subset \mathrm {HC}_q(H)$ and $\mathcal {O}_q^{\mathrm {univ},\mathrm {gen}}\subset \mathcal {O}_q^{\mathrm {univ}}$ the full subcategories of modules with generic $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})$ -weights. Let $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}}\subset \mathrm {Frac}(\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h}))$ be the subspace of rational functions on H regular on $H^{\mathrm {gen}}$ .

We denote by

$$\begin{align*}M^{\mathrm{univ}, \mathrm{gen}} = \mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})\otimes_{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{b})} \mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}}\end{align*}$$

the universal quantum Verma module with generic highest weights.

A generalisation of the extremal projector to quantum groups was introduced in [Reference Khoroshkin and Tolstoy55].

Theorem 5.31. An extension $T_q(\mathfrak {g})$ of $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ is obtained by replacing $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})\subset \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ with $\mathrm {Frac}(\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h}))$ and considering certain power series. There is an element $P\in T_q(\mathfrak {g})$ satisfying the following properties:

  1. 1. $\mathrm {U}_q^{>0}(\mathfrak {n}) P = P \mathrm {U}_q^{>0}(\mathfrak {n}_-) = 0$ .

  2. 2. $P-1\in T_q(\mathfrak {g})\mathrm {U}_q^{>0}(\mathfrak {n})\cap \mathrm {U}_q^{>0}(\mathfrak {n}_-) T_q(\mathfrak {g})$ .

The action of P is well-defined on left $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -modules whose $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {n})$ -action is locally nilpotent and that have generic $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})$ -weights.

Example 5.32. Consider $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {sl}_2)$ with generators $E,K,F$ as in Theorem 3.21. Let $[n] = \frac {q^n-q^{-n}}{q-q^{-1}}$ be the quantum integer, $[n]! = \prod _{j=1}^n [j]!$ the quantum factorial and

$$\begin{align*}[h+n] = \frac{Kq^n-K^{-1}q^{-n}}{q-q^{-1}}\in\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{sl}_2)\end{align*}$$

for $n\in \mathbf {Z}$ . Then the extremal projector is (see, e.g., [Reference Khoroshkin and Ogievetsky53, Section 9])

$$\begin{align*}P = \sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{(-1)^n}{[n]!} g_n^{-1} F^n E^n,\end{align*}$$

where $g_n = \prod _{j=1}^n [h+j+1]$ .

Completely analogously to the proof of Theorem 5.17, one proves the following statement.

Theorem 5.33. The category $\mathcal {O}_q^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}$ is free of rank $1$ as a $\mathrm {HC}_q(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ -module category.

Corollary 5.34. The functor $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}\colon \mathrm {HC}_q(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}_q(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ is strongly monoidal and colimit-preserving.

Similar to the classical case, the parabolic restriction of a free Harish-Chandra bimodule is free.

Theorem 5.35. For every $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ , the morphism

$$\begin{align*}(V\otimes M^{\mathrm{univ}, \mathrm{gen}})^{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{n})}\subset V\otimes M^{\mathrm{univ}, \mathrm{gen}} \longrightarrow V\otimes \mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}},\end{align*}$$

where the second morphism is induced by the projection $M^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}\rightarrow \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}}$ onto highest weights, defines a natural isomorphism witnessing commutativity of the diagram

Combining Theorem 5.34 and Theorem 5.35, we obtain a monoidal structure on the composite

$$\begin{align*}\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}_q(G)\longrightarrow \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}_q(H)\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}_q(H)^{\mathrm{gen}}.\end{align*}$$

In particular, by Theorem 4.1, this gives rise to linear maps

$$\begin{align*}J_{V, W}(\lambda)\colon V\otimes W\rightarrow V\otimes W,\end{align*}$$

rational functions on H.

Example 5.36. Consider $G=\mathrm {SL}_2$ and $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(\mathrm {SL}_2)$ the irreducible two-dimensional representation with the basis $\{v_+,v_- \}$ such that

$$\begin{align*}K v_+ = q v_+,\qquad K v_- = q^{-1} v_+,\qquad F v_+ = v_-.\end{align*}$$

The isomorphism $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}} \otimes V \rightarrow (V \otimes M^{\mathrm {univ},\mathrm {gen}})^{\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {n})}$ is given by

$$ \begin{align*} 1 \otimes v_+ & \mapsto v_+ \otimes 1, \\ 1 \otimes v_- & \mapsto v_- \otimes 1 - q^{-1} v_+ \otimes F\cdot [h]^{-1} x^{\mathrm{univ}}. \end{align*} $$

Then the matrix of $J_{V,V}(\lambda )$ in the basis $\{ v_+ \otimes v_+,v_+ \otimes v_-, v_- \otimes v_+, v_- \otimes v_- \}$ is given by

$$\begin{align*}\left( \begin{array}{cccc} 1 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & 1 & -q^{-\lambda-1}[\lambda+1]^{-1} & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 1 & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 0 & 1 \end{array} \right).\end{align*}$$

Our convention for the coproduct on $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ follows [Reference Lusztig62, Lemma 3.1.4]. For two $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -modules $V,W$ , we denote by $V\overline {\otimes } W$ the vector space $V\otimes W$ equipped with the $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -module structure via the opposite coproduct:

$$\begin{align*}h\triangleright (v\otimes w) = h_{(2)}\triangleright v\otimes h_{(1)}\triangleright w.\end{align*}$$

Consider $V,W\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ . Similarly to the classical case, Etingof and Varchenko [Reference Etingof and Varchenko31] have introduced the fusion matrix $J^{EV}_{V, W}(\lambda )\colon V\otimes W\rightarrow V\otimes W$ , a rational function on H, using intertwiners of quantum Verma modules. Note, however, that in our notations, they are considering maps

$$\begin{align*}\Phi^v_{\lambda}\colon M_\lambda\longrightarrow M_{\lambda-\mathrm{wt}(v)}\overline{\otimes} V\end{align*}$$

with the property that $\Phi ^v_{\lambda }(x_\lambda ) = x_\lambda \otimes v + \dots $ . Analogously to Theorem 5.22, we have the following statement.

Proposition 5.37. Let $V,W\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ . The maps $J_{V, W}$ and $J^{EV}_{W, V}$ are related as follows:

$$\begin{align*}J_{V, W}(\lambda) = \tau J^{EV}_{W, V} \tau.\end{align*}$$

In [Reference Etingof and Varchenko31, Section 5], Etingof and Varchenko have introduced an $\mathfrak {h}$ -bialgebroid $F_q(G)$ . Analogously to Theorem 5.23, we obtain the following statement.

Theorem 5.38. Consider the monoidal functor

$$\begin{align*}\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}_q(G)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{free}_G} \mathrm{HC}_q(G)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}}\mathrm{HC}_q(H)^{\mathrm{gen}}.\end{align*}$$

It admits a colimit-preserving right adjoint; denote by $B\in \mathrm {HC}_q(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}\otimes \mathrm {HC}_q(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ the Harish-Chandra bialgebroid corresponding to this monoidal functor constructed in Theorem 3.35. Then we have an isomorphism of $\mathfrak {h}$ -algebroids

$$\begin{align*}B\otimes_{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}}\otimes \mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}}}\otimes (\mathrm{Frac}(\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{h}))\otimes \mathrm{Frac}(\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{h})))\cong F_q(G).\end{align*}$$

6 Dynamical Weyl groups

In this section, we introduce a Weyl symmetry of the parabolic restriction functors $\mathrm {res}\colon \mathrm {HC}(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)$ and $\mathrm {res}\colon \mathrm {HC}_q(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}_q(H)$ introduced in section 5 and relate it to dynamical Weyl groups.

6.1 Classical Zhelobenko operators

Fix a group G and its Lie algebra $\mathfrak {g}$ as in section 5.1. Recall that the Weyl group is

$$\begin{align*}W = \mathrm{N}(H) / H,\end{align*}$$

where $\mathrm {N}(H)$ is the normaliser of H in G. Denote by $\hat {W}$ the corresponding braid group generated by simple reflections $s_\alpha \in W$ with the relation (for $\alpha \neq \beta $ )

$$\begin{align*}\underbrace{s_\alpha s_\beta s_\alpha \dots}_{m_{\alpha\beta}} = \underbrace{s_\beta s_\alpha s_\beta \dots}_{m_{\alpha\beta}},\end{align*}$$

where $m_{\alpha \beta }$ is the Coxeter matrix. There is a canonical map $W\rightarrow \hat {W}$ , which sends a reduced expression $w=s_1\cdot \dots \cdot s_n\in W$ to the corresponding element in $\hat {W}$ .

We may lift $w\in W$ to elements $T_w\in \mathrm {N}(H)$ satisfying the braid relations. Moreover, for a simple reflection $s_\alpha \in W$ , the element $T_{s_\alpha }^2\in H$ has order at most 2 [Reference Tits84]. For concreteness, we assume that the elements $T_w$ act via the $q=1$ version of Lusztig’s operators $T^{\prime }_{w, 1}$ as in [Reference Lusztig62, Section 5.2.1].

Denote by $\rho \in \mathfrak {h}^*$ the half-sum of positive roots. For an element $w\in W$ and $\lambda \in \mathfrak {h}^*$ , denote by $w\cdot \lambda \in \mathfrak {h}^*$ the dot action :

$$\begin{align*}w\cdot\lambda = w(\lambda+\rho) - \rho.\end{align*}$$

The induced action on $h\in \mathfrak {h}\subset \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ is denoted by

$$\begin{align*}w\cdot h = w(h) + \langle h, w(\rho) - \rho\rangle,\end{align*}$$

where the usual W action on $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ is simply denoted by $w(d)$ for $d\in \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ .

Recall that for a right $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ -module X, $X\otimes _{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}} M^{\mathrm {univ}}\cong X/X\mathfrak {n}$ . In the study of Mickelsson algebras, Zhelobenko [Reference Zhelobenko93] has introduced a collection of operators acting on $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ -bimodules for each element of the Weyl group. Refer to [Reference Khoroshkin and Ogievetsky53, Section 6] for the proof of the following results.

Theorem 6.1. Suppose $X\in \mathrm {HC}(G)$ . Suppose $\alpha $ is a simple root, and denote by $\{e_\alpha , h_\alpha , f_\alpha \}$ the standard generators of the corresponding $\mathfrak {sl}_2$ subalgebra $\mathfrak {g}_\alpha \subset \mathfrak {g}$ . Consider the Zhelobenko operator $\breve {q}_\alpha \colon X\rightarrow X$ given by an infinite series

$$\begin{align*}\breve{q}_\alpha(x) = \sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{(-1)^n}{n!} (\operatorname{\mathrm{ad}} e_\alpha)^n(T_{s_\alpha}(x)) f_\alpha^n g_{n, \alpha}^{-1},\end{align*}$$

where

$$\begin{align*}g_{n,\alpha} = \prod_{j=1}^n (h_\alpha-j+1)\end{align*}$$

and $\operatorname {\mathrm {ad}} e_\alpha $ refers to the diagonal $\mathfrak {g}$ -action on X. Then the operators $\breve {q}_\alpha $ descend to well-defined linear isomorphisms

$$\begin{align*}\breve{q}_\alpha\colon (X\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}} M^{\mathrm{univ}, \mathrm{gen}})^N\longrightarrow (X\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}} M^{\mathrm{univ}, \mathrm{gen}})^N,\end{align*}$$

which satisfy the following relations:

  1. 1. $\breve {q}_\alpha ((\operatorname {\mathrm {ad}} d)(x)) = (\operatorname {\mathrm {ad}} s_\alpha (d))(\breve {q}_\alpha (x))$ for every $d\in \mathfrak {h}$ and $x\in X$ .

  2. 2. $\breve {q}_\alpha (dx) = (s_\alpha \cdot d)\breve {q}_\alpha (x)$ for every $d\in \mathfrak {h}$ and $x\in X$ .

  3. 3. $\underbrace {\breve {q}_\alpha \breve {q}_\beta \breve {q}_\alpha \dots }_{m_{\alpha \beta }} = \underbrace {\breve {q}_\beta \breve {q}_\alpha \breve {q}_\beta \dots }_{m_{\alpha \beta }}$ for $\alpha \neq \beta $ .

  4. 4. $\breve {q}_\alpha ^2(x) = (h_\alpha +1)^{-1}T_{s_\alpha }^2(x) (h_{\alpha }+1)$ for every $x\in X$ .

For an element $w\in W$ with a reduced decomposition $w=s_{\alpha _1}\dots s_{\alpha _n}$ , we define

$$\begin{align*}\breve{q}_w = \breve{q}_{\alpha_{i_1}}\dots \breve{q}_{\alpha_{i_n}}.\end{align*}$$

The third relation in Theorem 6.1 shows that $\breve {q}_w$ is independent of the chosen decomposition.

In addition, we have the following important multiplicativity property of the Zhelobenko operators proven in [Reference Khoroshkin and Ogievetsky53, Theorem 3].

Theorem 6.2. Let $X,Y\in \mathrm {HC}(G)$ , and take $x\in X$ and $y\in Y$ , where $\mathfrak {n} y\in Y\mathfrak {n}$ . Then we have an equality

$$\begin{align*}\breve{q}_w(x\otimes y) = \breve{q}_w(x)\otimes \breve{q}_w(y)\end{align*}$$

in $X\otimes _{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}} Y\otimes _{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}} M^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}$ .

6.2 Classical dynamical Weyl group

Given a group G, we may regard it as a discrete monoidal category $\mathrm {Cat}(G)$ . Let us recall the notion of a G-action on a monoidal category and the category of G-equivariant objects (see, e.g., [Reference Etingof, Gelaki, Nikshych and Ostrik34, Section 2.7]).

Definition 6.3. Let $\mathcal {C}\in \mathrm {Pr}^{\mathrm {L}}$ be a monoidal category. A $\boldsymbol {G}$ -action on $\mathcal {C}$ is a monoidal functor

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{Cat}(G)\longrightarrow \mathrm{Fun}^{\mathrm{L}, \otimes}(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{C})\end{align*}$$

to the monoidal category of monoidal colimit-preserving endofunctors on $\mathcal {C}$ .

Explicitly, for every element $g\in G$ , we have a monoidal functor $S_g\colon \mathcal {C}\rightarrow \mathcal {C}$ together with a natural isomorphism $S_e\cong \mathrm {id}$ and natural isomorphisms $S_{gh}\cong S_g\circ S_h$ for a pair of elements $g,h\in G$ satisfying an associativity axiom.

Definition 6.4. Suppose $\mathcal {C}$ is a monoidal category with a G-action. A $\boldsymbol {G}$ -equivariant object is an object $x\in \mathcal {C}$ equipped with isomorphisms $S_g(x)\cong x$ compatible with the isomorphisms $S_{gh}\cong S_g\circ S_h$ and $S_e\cong \mathrm {id}$ . We denote by $\mathcal {C}^G$ the category of G-equivariant objects.

The category $\mathrm {HC}(H)\cong \mathrm {LMod}_{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}}(\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}} H)$ carries a natural action of the Weyl group W defined as follows. Let us regard $X\in \mathrm {HC}(H)$ as a $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ -bimodule. Then the action of $w\in W$ twists the left and right $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ -actions by the dot action: $S_w(X) = X$ as a plain vector space with the $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ -bimodule structure given by

$$\begin{align*}d\triangleright^w x = (w\cdot d)\triangleright x,\qquad x\triangleleft^w d = x\triangleleft(w\cdot d)\end{align*}$$

for $x\in X$ and $d\in \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ . The dot action of W on $\mathfrak {h}$ is given by affine transformations, so the corresponding diagonal $\mathfrak {h}$ -action on $S_w(X)$ is given by its linear part: that is, we twist the diagonal $\mathfrak {h}$ -action on X by the usual W-action. By construction, $S_e=\mathrm {id}$ and $S_{w_1w_2} = S_{w_1}\circ S_{w_2}$ . Moreover, the identity map of vector spaces

$$\begin{align*}S_w(X)\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}} S_w(Y)\longrightarrow S_w(X\otimes_{\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}} Y)\end{align*}$$

together with the dot action

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}\longrightarrow S_w(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})\end{align*}$$

define a monoidal structure on the collection $\{S_w\}_{w\in W}$ .

The functor

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{free}\colon \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(H)\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}(H)\end{align*}$$

is naturally W-equivariant, where the maps

(37) $$ \begin{align} \mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}\otimes S_w(V)\rightarrow S_w(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h}\otimes V) \end{align} $$

are given by the dot action on the $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ factor.

Restricting the W-action on $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ under the quotient map $\hat {W}\rightarrow W$ from the braid group, we obtain a natural action of $\hat {W}$ on $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ .

Recall that by Theorem 5.18, the parabolic restriction functor

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}\colon \mathrm{HC}(G)\longrightarrow \mathrm{HC}(H)^{\mathrm{gen}}\end{align*}$$

given by $X\mapsto (X\otimes _{\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}} M^{\mathrm {univ}})^N$ is monoidal. We will now show that it factors through $\hat {W}$ -invariants.

Theorem 6.5. The Zhelobenko operators define a factorisation

of $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}\colon \mathrm {HC}(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ through a monoidal functor $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}\colon \mathrm {HC}(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}, \hat {W}}$ .

Proof. Let us first construct a factorisation of $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}$ through $\mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}, \hat {W}}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ as a plain (nonmonoidal) functor. Since the braid group $\hat {W}$ is generated by simple reflections $\{s_\alpha \}$ , for $X\in \mathrm {HC}(G)$ , we have to specify natural isomorphisms

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}(X)\xrightarrow{\sim} S_{s_\alpha}(\mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}(X))\end{align*}$$

satisfying the braid relations. We define them to be the Zhelobenko operators $\breve {q}_\alpha $ . The compatibility with the $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ -bimodule action follows from parts (1) and (2) of Theorem 6.1. The braid relations follow from part (3) of the same theorem.

Next, we have to construct a monoidal structure on $\mathrm {HC}(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}, \hat {W}}$ compatible with the one on $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}\colon \mathrm {HC}(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ , which we recall is given by equation (33). The unit map is the natural inclusion $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}\hookrightarrow (M^{\mathrm {univ}})^N$ .

We begin by showing compatibility with the tensor products. By Theorem 5.16, the functor of N-invariants $\mathcal {O}^{\mathrm {univ}}\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ is exact. In particular, we may exchange the order of left N-invariants and right $\mathfrak {n}$ -coinvariants in the definition of $\mathrm {res}(X) = (X/X\mathfrak {n})^N$ . But then the diagram

(38)

is commutative by Theorem 6.2.

Next, we have to show compatibility with the unit maps. Consider the diagram

To show that it is commutative, we have to compute the action of $\breve {q}_{\alpha }$ on $\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}\hookrightarrow M^{\mathrm {univ}}$ . By part (2) of Theorem 6.1, $\breve {q}_{\alpha }(d\cdot 1) = (s_\alpha \cdot d) \breve {q}_{\alpha }(1)$ , where $d\in \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h}$ and $1\in \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}$ is the unit. But it is obvious from the explicit formula for $\breve {q}_{\alpha }$ that $\breve {q}_{\alpha }(1)=1$ .

Let us now analyse the composite monoidal functor

$$\begin{align*}\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}(G)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{free}_G}\mathrm{HC}(G)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}} \mathrm{HC}(H)^{\mathrm{gen}, \hat{W}}.\end{align*}$$

Recall that by Theorem 5.20, we have a commutative diagram

of plain (nonmonoidal) categories.

Consider $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ . Using the natural isomorphism

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}\otimes V)\cong (\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}}\otimes V\end{align*}$$

in $\mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ provided by the above diagram, we obtain that the $\hat {W}$ -invariance of $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g}\otimes V)$ boils down to maps $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}}\otimes V\rightarrow (\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}}\otimes S_w(V)$ obtained via the composite

$$\begin{align*}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}}\otimes V \xleftarrow{\sim} \mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}\otimes V)\xrightarrow{\breve{q}_w} S_w(\mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}(\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{g}\otimes V))\xrightarrow{\sim} S_w((\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}}\otimes V)\xrightarrow{\sim} (\mathrm{U}\mathfrak{h})^{\mathrm{gen}}\otimes S_w(V). \end{align*}$$

Such maps are uniquely determined by their value on $1\otimes v$ , which gives linear maps

$$\begin{align*}A_{w, V}(\lambda)\colon V\longrightarrow V\end{align*}$$

depending rationally on a parameter $\lambda \in \mathfrak {h}^*$ .

Let $V,U\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ , and recall the matrix $J_{V, U}(\lambda )\colon V\otimes U\rightarrow V\otimes U$ defined in section 5.1, which controls the monoidal structure on the composite $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)\rightarrow \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(H)\xrightarrow {\mathrm {free}_H} \mathrm {HC}(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ .

Proposition 6.6. For any simple reflection $s_\alpha $ and $V,U\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ , we have an equality

$$\begin{align*}A_{s_\alpha, V\otimes U}(\lambda) J_{V,U}(\lambda) = J_{V,U}(s_\alpha\cdot \lambda) A_{s_\alpha, U}^{(1)}(\lambda)A_{s_\alpha, U}^{(2)}(\lambda-h^{(1)})\end{align*}$$

of rational functions $\mathfrak {h}^*\rightarrow \mathrm {End}(V\otimes U)$ , where $A^{(1)}$ denotes $A\otimes 1$ and $A^{(2)}$ denotes $1\otimes A$ .

Proof. Consider the diagram

where the middle square is given by equation (38).

The left vertical arrow is $A_{s_\alpha , V}^{(1)}(\lambda )A_{s_\alpha , U}^{(2)}(\lambda -h^{(1)}) $ , and the right vertical arrow is $A_{s_\alpha , V\otimes U}(\lambda )$ . Using the isomorphism given by equation (37), the bottom horizontal arrow is $J_{V,U}(s_{\alpha }\cdot \lambda )$ .

Let us now compute a particular example of the operators $A_{w, V}(\lambda )$ . Consider $G=\mathrm {SL}_2$ , V the two-dimensional irreducible representation, $H\subset G$ the subgroup of diagonal matrices and w the unique simple reflection. We can lift it to the matrix $T\in \mathrm {N}(H)$ given by

$$\begin{align*}T = \left(\begin{array}{cc} 0 & -1 \\ 1 & 0\end{array}\right). \end{align*}$$

Let $\{e, h, f\}$ be the standard basis of $\mathfrak {sl}_2$ . Let $\{v_+, v_-\}$ be the basis of V such that

$$\begin{align*}hv_+ = v_+, \qquad hv_- = -v_-,\qquad fv_+ = v_-.\end{align*}$$

Proposition 6.7. The action of $A_{w, V}(\lambda )$ is given as follows:

$$ \begin{align*} A_{w, V}(\lambda) v_+ &= v_- \\ A_{w, V}(\lambda) v_- &= -\frac{\lambda+2}{\lambda+1} v_+. \end{align*} $$

Proof. The isomorphism $(\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}} \otimes V \rightarrow (V \otimes M^{\mathrm {univ},\mathrm {gen}})^N$ is given by

$$ \begin{align*} 1 \otimes v_+ & \mapsto v_+ \otimes x^{\mathrm{univ}}, \\ 1 \otimes v_- & \mapsto v_- \otimes x^{\mathrm{univ}} - v_+ \otimes fh^{-1} x^{\mathrm{univ}}, \end{align*} $$

where $x^{\mathrm {univ}}\in M^{\mathrm {univ},\mathrm {gen}}$ is the generator. We have

$$\begin{align*}\breve{q}_w(v_+ \otimes 1) = \sum\limits_n \frac{(-1)^n}{n!} \operatorname{\mathrm{ad}}_e^n(v_- \otimes 1) f^n g_n^{-1} = v_- \otimes 1 - v_+ \otimes fh^{-1}, \end{align*}$$

hence $A_{w,V}(\lambda )(v_+) = v_-$ . To compute $A_{w,V}(\lambda )(v_-)$ , we use the property in (4) from Theorem 6.1, namely,

$$\begin{align*}\breve{q}_w(v_- \otimes 1 - v_+ \otimes fh^{-1}) = \breve{q}_w^2 (v_+ \otimes 1) = - (h+1)^{-1}(v_+ \otimes 1)(h+1) = -h(h+1)^{-1}(v_+ \otimes 1). \end{align*}$$

Under identification $S_w(\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}} (V \otimes \mathrm {U}\mathfrak {g})) \cong (\mathrm {U}\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}} \otimes S_w(V)$ , we have

$$\begin{align*}\breve{q}_w(v_- \otimes 1 - v_+ \otimes fh^{-1}) \mapsto -\frac{w\cdot \lambda }{w\cdot\lambda + 1} \otimes v_+ = - \frac{\lambda+2}{\lambda+1} \otimes v_+, \end{align*}$$

and the claim follows.

We return to the case of arbitrary G. Recall that Tarasov and Varchenko [Reference Tarasov and Varchenko83] have introduced the dynamical Weyl group: that is, a collection of operators $A^{TV}_{w, V}(\lambda )\colon V\rightarrow V$ for every finite-dimensional $\mathfrak {g}$ -representation V and $w\in W$ depending rationally on the parameter $\lambda \in \mathfrak {h}^*$ . We will now prove that the operators $A_{w, V}$ constructed from the Zhelobenko operators coincide with the dynamical Weyl group.

Theorem 6.8. For any $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}(G)$ and $w\in W$ , we have an equality of rational functions

$$\begin{align*}A^{TV}_{w, V}(\lambda) = A_{w, V}(\lambda).\end{align*}$$

Proof. Both $A^{TV}_{w, V}(\lambda )$ and $A_{w, V}(\lambda )$ are given by products in terms of simple reflections, so it is enough to establish the fact for a simple reflection $w=s_\alpha $ along a simple root $\alpha $ .

In turn, both $A^{TV}_{s_\alpha , V}(\lambda )$ and $A_{s_\alpha , V}(\lambda )$ are defined by considering the corresponding $\mathfrak {sl}_2$ -subalgebra $\mathfrak {g}_\alpha \subset \mathfrak {g}$ generated by $\{e_\alpha , h_\alpha , f_\alpha \}$ . So, it is enough to prove the claim for $G=\mathrm {SL}_2$ .

For a tensor product of representations, $A_{w, V}(\lambda )$ satisfies a multiplicativity property given by Theorem 6.6, and so does $A^{TV}_{w, V}(\lambda )$ (see [Reference Tarasov and Varchenko83, Lemma 7], where the relationship between $J_{V, U}(\lambda )$ and $J^{EV}_{V, U}(\lambda )$ is given by Theorem 5.22). Therefore, it is enough to check the equality on the 2-dimensional irreducible representation of $\mathfrak {sl}_2$ , which follows by comparing the expressions given in Theorem 6.7 with the explicit expressions given in [Reference Tarasov and Varchenko83, Section 2.5] (see also [Reference Etingof and Varchenko32, Lemma 5] for an explicit description of the dynamical Weyl group in the 2-dimensional representation of quantum $\mathfrak {sl}_2$ ).

6.3 Quantum Zhelobenko operators

We continue to use notations for quantum groups from section 5.2. It was shown by Lusztig [Reference Lusztig62], Soibelman [Reference Soibelman80] and Kirillov–Reshetikhin [Reference Kirillov and Reshetikhin57] that one can introduce an action of the braid group $\hat {W}$ on modules in $\operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ . For $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ and $w\in W$ , we denote by $T_w\colon V\rightarrow V$ the corresponding operator of the quantum Weyl group (for definitiveness, we consider $T^{\prime }_{w, +1}$ in the notation of [Reference Lusztig62, Chapter 5]).

Example 6.9. Consider $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {sl}_2)$ with generators $E,K,F$ , as in Theorem 3.21, $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(\mathrm {SL}_2)$ and $v\in V$ a vector of weight n. Then

$$\begin{align*}T_w(v) = \sum_{a,b,c;a-b+c=n} (-1)^b q^{-ac+b} \frac{F^a E^b F^c}{[a]![b]![c]!} v\end{align*}$$

for the unique nontrivial element $w\in W$ .

The Weyl group W acts in the standard way on the weight lattice $\Lambda $ . We introduce the dot action of W on $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})=k[\Lambda ]$ by

$$\begin{align*}w\cdot K_\mu = K_{w(\mu)} q^{(\mu, w(\rho)-\rho)}\end{align*}$$

for every $\mu \in \Lambda $ .

Recall that for a root $\alpha $ , we denote $q_\alpha = q^{(\alpha , \alpha )/2}$ . The quantum integer is

$$\begin{align*}[n]_\alpha = \frac{q_\alpha^n - q_\alpha^{-n}}{q_\alpha-q_\alpha^{-1}}\end{align*}$$

and the quantum factorial is defined similarly. The quantum Zhelobenko operators were introduced in [Reference Khoroshkin and Ogievetsky53, Section 9]. For the following statement, recall Theorem 5.26, which explains that the infinite sums in the quantum Zhelobenko operators are well-defined.

Theorem 6.10. Suppose $X\in \mathrm {HC}_q(G)$ . For a simple root $\alpha $ , we denote by $\{E_\alpha , K_\alpha , F_\alpha \}$ the corresponding subset of generators of $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ . Consider the quantum Zhelobenko operator on X given by

$$\begin{align*}\breve{q}_\alpha(x) = \sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{(-1)^n}{[n]_\alpha!} (\operatorname{\mathrm{ad}} (K_\alpha^{-1}E_\alpha))^n((\operatorname{\mathrm{ad}} T_{s_\alpha})(x)) F_\alpha^n g_{n,\alpha}^{-1},\end{align*}$$

where

$$\begin{align*}g_{n,\alpha} = \prod_{j=1}^n [h_\alpha-j+1]_\alpha\end{align*}$$

and $\operatorname {\mathrm {ad}} (K_{\alpha }^{-1} E_\alpha )$ refers to the diagonal $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})$ -action. Then the operators $\breve {q}_\alpha $ descend to linear isomorphisms

$$\begin{align*}(X\otimes_{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})^{\mathrm{lf}}} M_q^{\mathrm{univ}, \mathrm{gen}})^{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{n})}\longrightarrow (X\otimes_{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{g})^{\mathrm{lf}}} M_q^{\mathrm{univ}, \mathrm{gen}})^{\mathrm{U}_q(\mathfrak{n})},\end{align*}$$

which satisfy the following relations:

  1. 1. $\breve {q}_\alpha ((\operatorname {\mathrm {ad}} d)(x)) = (\operatorname {\mathrm {ad}} s_\alpha (d))(\breve {q}_\alpha (x))$ for every $d\in \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})$ and $x\in X$ .

  2. 2. $\breve {q}_\alpha (dx) = (s_\alpha \cdot d)\breve {q}_\alpha (x)$ for every $d\in \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})$ and $x\in X$ .

  3. 3. $\underbrace {\breve {q}_\alpha \breve {q}_\beta \breve {q}_\alpha \dots }_{m_{\alpha \beta }} = \underbrace {\breve {q}_\beta \breve {q}_\alpha \breve {q}_\beta \dots }_{m_{\alpha \beta }}$ for $\alpha \neq \beta $ .

The third property allows us to define $\breve {q}_w$ for any element $w\in \hat {W}$ . We also have a multiplicativity property.

Theorem 6.11. Let $X,Y\in \mathrm {HC}_q(G)$ , and take $x\in X$ and $y\in Y$ , where $\mathrm {U}_q^{>0}(\mathfrak {n})y\in Y\mathrm {U}_q^{>0}(\mathfrak {n})$ . Then we have an equality

$$\begin{align*}\breve{q}_w(x\otimes y) = \breve{q}_w(x)\otimes \breve{q}_w(y)\end{align*}$$

in $X\otimes _{\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}} Y\otimes _{\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {g})^{\mathrm {lf}}} M_q^{\mathrm {univ}, \mathrm {gen}}$ .

6.4 Quantum dynamical Weyl group

As in section 6.2, quantum Zhelobenko operators define the Weyl symmetry of the parabolic restriction functor $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}\colon \mathrm {HC}_q(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}_q(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ .

The W-action on $\mathrm {HC}_q(H)$ is defined similarly to the W-action on $\mathrm {HC}(H)$ . An element $w\in W$ gives rise to a functor $S_w\colon \mathrm {HC}_q(H)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}_q(H)$ given as follows. For $X\in \mathrm {HC}_q(H)$ , we set $S_w(X) = X$ as a vector space with the $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})$ -bimodule structure given by

$$\begin{align*}d\triangleright^w x = (w\cdot d)\triangleright x,\qquad x\triangleleft^w d = x\triangleleft(w\cdot d),\end{align*}$$

where $d\in \mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})$ and $x\in X$ . The functors $\{S_w\}$ have obvious monoidal structures.

Consider the action of the quantum Zhelobenko operators

$$\begin{align*}\breve{q}_{\alpha}\colon \mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}(X)\xrightarrow{\sim} S_{s_\alpha}(\mathrm{res}^{\mathrm{gen}}(X)).\end{align*}$$

Theorem 6.12. The quantum Zhelobenko operators define a factorisation

of $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}_q\colon \mathrm {HC}_q(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}_q(H)^{\mathrm {gen}}$ through a monoidal functor $\mathrm {res}^{\mathrm {gen}}\colon \mathrm {HC}_q(G)\rightarrow \mathrm {HC}_q(H)^{\mathrm {gen}, \hat {W}}$ .

By Theorem 5.35, we have a commutative diagram

which gives rise to a monoidal structure on the composite

$$\begin{align*}\operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}_q(G)\longrightarrow \operatorname{\mathrm{Rep}}_q(H)\xrightarrow{\mathrm{free}_H} \mathrm{HC}_q(H)^{\mathrm{gen}, \hat{W}}.\end{align*}$$

As in section 6.2, we obtain linear maps $A_{w, V}(\lambda )\colon V\rightarrow V$ for every $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ , which are rational functions on H. For $V,U\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ , recall the matrix $J_{V, U}(\lambda )\colon V\otimes U\rightarrow V\otimes U$ defined in section 5.2.

Proposition 6.13. For any simple reflection $s_\alpha $ and $V,U\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ , we have an equality

$$\begin{align*}A_{s_\alpha, V\otimes U}(\lambda) J_{V,U}(\lambda) = J_{V,U}(s_\alpha\cdot \lambda) A_{s_\alpha, V}^{(1)}(\lambda)A_{s_\alpha, U}^{(2)}(\lambda-h^{(1)})\end{align*}$$

of rational functions $H\rightarrow \mathrm {End}(V\otimes U)$ .

Let us now compute the operators $A_{w, V}$ for $G=\mathrm {SL}_2$ . Consider the irreducible two-dimensional representation $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ with the basis $\{v_+, v_-\}$ such that

$$\begin{align*}K v_+ = q v_+,\qquad K v_- = q^{-1} v_+,\qquad F v_+ = v_-.\end{align*}$$

Proposition 6.14. The action of $A_{w, V}(\lambda )$ is given as follows:

$$ \begin{align*} A_{w, V}(\lambda) v_+ &= v_- \\ A_{w, V}(\lambda) v_- &= -\frac{[\lambda+2]}{[\lambda+1]} v_+. \end{align*} $$

Proof. The isomorphism $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {h})^{\mathrm {gen}} \otimes V \rightarrow (V \otimes M^{\mathrm {univ},\mathrm {gen}})^N$ is given by

$$ \begin{align*} 1 \otimes v_+ & \mapsto v_+ \otimes x^{\mathrm{univ}}, \\ 1 \otimes v_- & \mapsto v_- \otimes 1 - q^{-1} v_+ \otimes F\cdot [h]^{-1} \cdot x^{\mathrm{univ}}. \end{align*} $$

By [Reference Lusztig62, Proposition 5.2.2], we have

$$\begin{align*}T_w(v_+) = v_-,\qquad T_w(v_-) = -qv_+.\end{align*}$$

Therefore,

$$\begin{align*}\breve{q}_w(v_+\otimes 1) = \sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{(-1)^n}{[n]!} (\operatorname{\mathrm{ad}} (K^{-1}E))^n(v_-\otimes 1) F^n g_{n}^{-1} = v_-\otimes 1 - q^{-1} v_+\otimes F[h]^{-1},\end{align*}$$

which implies that

$$\begin{align*}A_{w, V}(\lambda)v_+ = v_-.\end{align*}$$

Using the formula for the square of the quantum Zhelobenko operator [Reference Khoroshkin and Ogievetsky53, Corollary 9.6], we obtain

$$\begin{align*}\breve{q}_w(v_-\otimes 1 - q^{-1} v_+\otimes F[h]^{-1}) = - [h+1]^{-1}(v_+\otimes 1)[h+1] = -\frac{[h]}{[h+1]} (v_+\otimes 1),\end{align*}$$

which implies that

$$\begin{align*}A_{w, V}(\lambda) v_- = -\frac{[\lambda+2]}{[\lambda+1]} v_+.\end{align*}$$

Remark 6.15. The formulas (9.10) and (9.11) in [Reference Khoroshkin and Ogievetsky53] are missing a sign; see [Reference Lusztig62, Proposition 5.2.2].

Etingof and Varchenko [Reference Etingof and Varchenko32] have introduced a quantum analogue of the dynamical Weyl group: that is, a collection of rational functions $A^{EV}_{w, V}(\lambda )\colon V\rightarrow V$ for every $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ and $w\in W$ . We are now ready to relate $A_{w, V}$ and $A^{EV}_{w, V}$ .

Theorem 6.16. For any $V\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Rep}}_q(G)$ an $w\in W$ , we have an equality of rational functions

(39) $$ \begin{align} A^{EV}_{w, V}(\lambda) = q^{(w(\rho)-\rho, h)} A_{w, V}(\lambda). \end{align} $$

Proof. The proof is analogous to the proof of Theorem 6.8. Both $A^{EV}_{w, V}$ and $A_{w, V}$ are given by a product over simple reflections, so it is enough to establish this equality for a simple reflection $w=s_\alpha $ .

We have $s_\alpha (\rho ) = \rho - \alpha $ , so

$$\begin{align*}q^{(s_\alpha(\rho)-\rho, h)} A_{s_\alpha, V}(\lambda) = q^{-(\alpha, h)} A_{s_\alpha, V}(\lambda) = K_\alpha^{-1} A_{s_\alpha, V}(\lambda).\end{align*}$$

In particular, both sides of the equality given by equation (39) are defined in terms of the corresponding $\mathrm {U}_q(\mathfrak {sl}_2)$ -subalgebra, so it is enough to restrict our attention to $G=\mathrm {SL}_2$ . Using the multiplicativity property of $A^{EV}_{w, V}$ and $A_{w, V}$ given by [Reference Etingof and Varchenko32, Lemma 4] and Theorem 6.13, we reduce to the case of the defining representation. The equality on the defining representation of $\mathrm {SL}_2$ follows from comparing the formulas in [Reference Etingof and Varchenko32, Lemma 5] and Theorem 6.14.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Adrien Brochier, Damien Calaque, Sam Gunningham and David Jordan for useful discussions.

Conflicts of Interest

None.

Financial support

The authors were supported by the NCCR SwissMAP grant of the Swiss National Science Foundation.

References

Adámek, Jiří and Rosický, Jiří. Locally Presentable and Accessible Categories, volume 189 of London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1994. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511600579.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aguiar, Marcelo and Mahajan, Swapneel. Monoidal Functors, Species and Hopf Algebras, volume 29 of CRM Monograph Series. American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI, 2010. With forewords by Kenneth Brown and Stephen Chase and André Joyal.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Appel, Andrea and Laredo, Valerio Toledano. Coxeter categories and quantum groups. Selecta Math. (N.S.), 25(3):Paper No. 44, 97, 2019. arXiv:1610.09741, doi:10.1007/s00029-019-0490-y.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Asherova, R. M., Smirnov, Ju. F., and Tolstoy, V. N.. Projection operators for simple Lie groups. Teoret. Mat. Fiz., 8(2):255271, 1971.Google Scholar
Backelin, Erik and Kremnizer, Kobi. Quantum flag varieties, equivariant quantum $\mathbf{\mathcal{D}}$ -modules, and localization of quantum groups. Adv. Math., 203(2):408429, 2006. arXiv:math/0401108, doi:10.1016/j.aim.2005.04.012.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baxter, Rodney J.. Exactly solved models in statistical mechanics. Academic Press, Inc. [Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Publishers], London, 1989. Reprint of the 1982 original.Google Scholar
Beilinson, Alexandre and Bernstein, Joseph. Localisation de $g$ -modules. C. R. Acad. Sci. Paris Sér. I Math., 292(1):1518, 1981.Google Scholar
Ben-Zvi, David, Brochier, Adrien, and Jordan, David. Quantum character varieties and braided module categories. Selecta Math. (N.S.), 24(5):47114748, 2018. arXiv:1606.04769, doi:10.1007/s00029-018-0426-y.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ben-Zvi, David and Nadler, David. Beilinson-Bernstein localization over the Harish-Chandra center. 2012. arXiv:1209.0188.Google Scholar
Ben-Zvi, David and Nadler, David. Betti geometric Langlands. In Algebraic Geometry: Salt Lake City 2015, volume 97 of Proc. Sympos. Pure Math., pages 341. Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI, 2018.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernstein, J. N. and Gelfand, S. I.. Tensor products of finite- and infinite-dimensional representations of semisimple Lie algebras. Compositio Math., 41(2):245285, 1980.Google Scholar
Bezrukavnikov, Roman and Finkelberg, Michael. Equivariant Satake category and Kostant-Whittaker reduction. Mosc. Math. J., 8(1):3972, 183, 2008. arXiv:0707.3799, doi:10.17323/1609-4514-2008-8-1-39-72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bird, Greg. Limits in 2-categories of locally-presented categories. PhD thesis, University of Sydney, 1984. URL: http://maths.mq.edu.au/~street/BirdPhD.pdf.Google Scholar
Boalch, P. P.. Riemann-Hilbert for tame complex parahoric connections. Transform. Groups, 16(1):2750, 2011. arXiv:1003.3177, doi:10.1007/s00031-011-9121-1.Google Scholar
Brandenburg, Martin, Chirvasitu, Alexandru, and Johnson-Freyd, Theo. Reflexivity and dualizability in categorified linear algebra. Theory Appl. Categ., 30:Paper No. 23, 808835, 2015. arXiv:1409.5934.Google Scholar
Braverman, Alexander and Finkelberg, Michael. Dynamical Weyl groups and equivariant cohomology of transversal slices on affine Grassmannians. Math. Res. Lett., 18(3):505512, 2011. arXiv:1010.2135, doi:10.4310/MRL.2011.v18.n3.a10.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brochier, Adrien. Cyclotomic associators and finite type invariants for tangles in the solid torus. Algebr. Geom. Topol., 13(6):33653409, 2013. arXiv:1209.0417, doi:10.2140/agt.2013.13.3365.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brochier, Adrien, Jordan, David, and Snyder, Noah. On dualizability of braided tensor categories. Compos. Math., 157(3):435483, 2021. doi: 10.1112/s0010437x20007630.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calaque, Damien. Lagrangian structures on mapping stacks and semi-classical TFTs. In Stacks and categories in geometry, topology, and algebra, volume 643 of Contemp. Math., pages 123. Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI, 2015. arXiv:1306.3235, doi:10.1090/conm/643/12894.Google Scholar
Calaque, Damien, Pantev, Tony, Toën, Bertrand, Vaquié, Michel, and Vezzosi, Gabriele. Shifted Poisson structures and deformation quantization. J. Topol., 10(2):483584, 2017. arXiv:1506.03699, doi: 10.1112/topo.12012.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chari, Vyjayanthi and Pressley, Andrew. A Guide to Quantum Groups. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1995. Corrected reprint of the 1994 original.Google Scholar
Chriss, Neil and Ginzburg, Victor. Representation Theory and Complex Geometry. Modern Birkhäuser Classics. Birkhäuser Boston, Ltd., Boston, MA, 2010. Reprint of the 1997 edition. doi:10.1007/978-0-8176-4938-8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dancer, Andrew, Kirwan, Frances, and Swann, Andrew. Implosion for hyperkähler manifolds. Compos. Math., 149(9):15921630, 2013. arXiv:1209.1578, doi:10.1112/S0010437X13007203.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Day, Brian. Construction of biclosed categories. PhD thesis, University of New South Wales, 1970. URL: http://maths.mq.edu.au/~street/DayPhD.pdf.Google Scholar
Deligne, P.. Catégories tannakiennes. In The Grothendieck Festschrift, Vol. II, volume 87 of Progr. Math., pages 111195. Birkhäuser Boston, Boston, MA, 1990.Google Scholar
Donin, J., Kulish, P. P., and Mudrov, A. I.. On a universal solution to the reflection equation. Lett. Math. Phys., 63(3):179194, 2003. arXiv:math/0210242, doi:10.1023/A:1024438101617.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donin, J. and Mudrov, A.. Reflection equation, twist, and equivariant quantization. Israel J. Math., 136:1128, 2003. arXiv:math/0204295, doi:10.1007/BF02807191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donin, J. and Mudrov, A.. Dynamical Yang-Baxter equation and quantum vector bundles. Comm. Math. Phys., 254(3):719760, 2005. arXiv:math/0306028, doi:10.1007/s00220-004-1247-8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donin, J. and Mudrov, A.. Quantum groupoids and dynamical categories. J. Algebra, 296(2):348384, 2006. arXiv:math/0311316, doi:10.1016/j.jalgebra.2006.01.001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drinfeld, V. G.. Quantum groups. In Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Vol. 1, 2 (Berkeley, Calif., 1986), pages 798820. Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI, 1987.Google Scholar
Etingof, P. and Varchenko, A.. Exchange dynamical quantum groups. Comm. Math. Phys., 205(1):1952, 1999. arXiv:math/9801135, doi: 10.1007/s002200050665.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Etingof, P. and Varchenko, A.. Dynamical Weyl groups and applications. Adv. Math., 167(1):74127, 2002. arXiv:math/0011001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Etingof, Pavel. On the dynamical Yang-Baxter equation. In Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Vol. II (Beijing, 2002), pages 555570. Higher Ed. Press, Beijing, 2002. arXiv:math/0207008.Google Scholar
Etingof, Pavel, Gelaki, Shlomo, Nikshych, Dmitri, and Ostrik, Victor. Tensor categories, volume 205 of Mathematical Surveys and Monographs. American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI, 2015. doi:10.1090/surv/205.Google Scholar
Etingof, Pavel and Schiffmann, Olivier. Lectures on the dynamical Yang-Baxter equations. In Quantum Groups and Lie Theory (Durham, 1999), volume 290 of London Math. Soc. Lecture Note Ser., pages 89129. Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 2001. arXiv:math/9908064.Google Scholar
Etingof, Pavel and Varchenko, Alexander. Geometry and classification of solutions of the classical dynamical Yang-Baxter equation. Comm. Math. Phys., 192(1):77120, 1998. arXiv:q-alg/9703040, doi:10.1007/s002200050292.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Etingof, Pavel and Varchenko, Alexander. Solutions of the quantum dynamical Yang-Baxter equation and dynamical quantum groups. Comm. Math. Phys., 196(3):591640, 1998. arXiv:q-alg/9708015, doi:10.1007/s002200050437.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Faddeev, L. D., Reshetikhin, N. Yu., and Takhtadzhyan, L. A.. Quantization of Lie groups and Lie algebras. Algebra i Analiz, 1(1):178206, 1989.Google Scholar
Faddeev, L. D., Skljanin, E. K., and Tahtadžjan, L. A.. Quantum inverse problem method. I. Teoret. Mat. Fiz., 40(2):194220, 1979.Google Scholar
Feigin, B. L. and Odesskii, A. V.. Vector bundles on an elliptic curve and Sklyanin algebras. In Topics in Quantum Groups and Finite-Type Invariants, volume 185 of Amer. Math. Soc. Transl. Ser. 2, pages 6584. Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI, 1998. arXiv:q-alg/9509021, doi: 10.1090/trans2/185/04.Google Scholar
Felder, Giovanni. Elliptic quantum groups. In XIth International Congress of Mathematical Physics (Paris, 1994), pages 211218. Int. Press, Cambridge, MA, 1995. arXiv:hep-th/9412207.Google Scholar
Garner, Richard and Franco, Ignacio López. Commutativity. J. Pure Appl. Algebra, 220(5):17071751, 2016. arXiv:1507.08710, doi:10.1016/j.jpaa.2015.09.003.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gervais, J.-L. and Neveu, A.. Novel triangle relation and absence of tachyons in Liouville string field theory. Nuclear Phys. B, 238(1):125141, 1984. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(84)90469-3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ginzburg, Victor and Riche, Simon. Differential operators on $G/ U$ and the affine Grassmannian. J. Inst. Math. Jussieu, 14(3):493575, 2015. arXiv:1306.6754, doi:10.1017/S1474748014000085.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guillemin, Victor, Jeffrey, Lisa, and Sjamaar, Reyer. Symplectic implosion. Transform. Groups, 7(2):155184, 2002. arXiv:math/0101159, doi:10.1007/s00031-002-0009-y.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gunningham, Sam. Generalized Springer theory for $D$ -modules on a reductive Lie algebra. Selecta Math. (N.S.), 24(5):42234277, 2018. arXiv:1510.02452, doi:10.1007/s00029-018-0443-x.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoyois, Marc, Safronov, Pavel, Scherotzke, Sarah, and Sibilla, Nicolò. The categorified Grothendieck-Riemann-Roch theorem. Compos. Math., 157(1):154214, 2021. doi:10.1112/s0010437x20007642.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hua, Zheng and Polishchuk, Alexander. Shifted Poisson structures and moduli spaces of complexes. Adv. Math., 338:9911037, 2018. arXiv:1706.09965, doi:10.1016/j.aim.2018.09.018.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Humphreys, James E.. Representations of Semisimple Lie Algebras in the BGG Category $\mathbf{\mathcal{O}}$ , volume 94 of Graduate Studies in Mathematics. American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI, 2008. doi:10.1090/gsm/094.Google Scholar
Joseph, Anthony. Quantum Groups and Their Primitive Ideals, volume 29 of Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete (3) [Results in Mathematics and Related Areas (3)]. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1995. doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-78400-2.Google Scholar
Kashiwara, Masaki and Schapira, Pierre. Categories and Sheaves, volume 332 of Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften [Fundamental Principles of Mathematical Sciences]. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 2006. doi: 10.1007/3-540-27950-4.Google Scholar
Kassel, Christian. Quantum Groups, volume 155 of Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Springer-Verlag, New York, 1995. doi:10.1007/978-1-4612-0783-2.Google Scholar
Khoroshkin, S. and Ogievetsky, O.. Mickelsson algebras and Zhelobenko operators. J. Algebra, 319(5):21132165, 2008. arXiv:math/0606259, doi:10.1016/j.jalgebra.2007.04.020.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khoroshkin, S. M.. An extremal projector and a dynamical twist. Teoret. Mat. Fiz., 139(1):158176, 2004. doi:10.1023/B:TAMP.0000022749. 42512.fd.Google Scholar
Khoroshkin, S. M. and Tolstoy, V. N.. Extremal projector and universal $R$ -matrix for quantized contragredient Lie (super)algebras. In Quantum Groups and Related Topics (Wrocław, 1991), volume 13 of Math. Phys. Stud., pages 2332. Kluwer Acad. Publ., Dordrecht, 1992.Google Scholar
Khoroshkin, Sergey, Nazarov, Maxim, and Vinberg, Ernest. A generalized Harish-Chandra isomorphism. Adv. Math., 226(2):11681180, 2011. arXiv:0912.1100, doi:10.1016/j.aim.2010.08.001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirillov, A. N. and Reshetikhin, N.. $q$ -Weyl group and a multiplicative formula for universal $R$ -matrices. Comm. Math. Phys., 134(2):421431, 1990.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kulish, P. P. and Sklyanin, E. K.. Algebraic structures related to reflection equations. J. Phys. A, 25(22):59635975, 1992. arXiv:hep-th/9209054.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Laurent-Gengoux, Camille, Stiénon, Mathieu, and Ping, Xu. Lectures on Poisson groupoids. In Lectures on Poisson Geometry, volume 17 of Geom. Topol. Monogr., pages 473502. Geom. Topol. Publ., Coventry, 2011. arXiv:0707.2405, doi:10.2140/gt.Google Scholar
Loregian, Fosco. Coend calculus. 2019. arXiv:1501.02503.Google Scholar
Jiang-Hua, Lu. Hopf algebroids and quantum groupoids. Internat. J. Math., 7(1):4770, 1996. arXiv:q-alg/9505024, doi:10.1142/S0129167X96000050.Google Scholar
Lusztig, George. Introduction to Quantum Groups. Modern Birkhäuser Classics. Birkhäuser/Springer, New York, 2010. Reprint of the 1994 edition. doi:10.1007/978-0-8176-4717-9.Google Scholar
Lyubashenko, V.. Modular transformations for tensor categories. J. Pure Appl. Algebra, 98(3):279327, 1995. doi:10.1016/0022-4049(94) 00045-K.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lyubashenko, Volodimir and Majid, Shahn. Braided groups and quantum Fourier transform. J. Algebra, 166(3):506528, 1994. doi:10.1006/jabr. 1994.1165.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacLane, Saunders. Categories for the Working Mathematician. Springer-Verlag, New York-Berlin, 1971. Graduate Texts in Mathematics, Vol. 5.Google Scholar
Majid, Shahn. Foundations of Quantum Group Theory. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1995. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511613104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mickelsson, Jouko. Step algebras of semi-simple subalgebras of Lie algebras. Rep. Mathematical Phys., 4:307318, 1973. doi:10.1016/0034-4877(73) 90006-2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miličić, Dragan. Algebraic $\mathbf{\mathcal{D}}$ -modules and representation theory of semisimple Lie groups. In The Penrose Transform and Analytic Cohomology in Representation Theory (South Hadley, MA, 1992), volume 154 of Contemp. Math., pages 133168. Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI, 1993. doi:10.1090/conm/154/01361.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pantev, Tony, Toën, Bertrand, Vaquié, Michel, and Vezzosi, Gabriele. Shifted symplectic structures. Publ. Math. Inst. Hautes Études Sci., 117:271–328, 2013. arXiv:1111.3209, doi:10.1007/s10240-013-0054-1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosso, Marc. Analogues de la forme de Killing et du théorème d’Harish-Chandra pour les groupes quantiques. Ann. Sci. École Norm. Sup. (4), 23(3):445467, 1990.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rivano, Neantro Saavedra. Catégories Tannakiennes. Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol. 265. Springer-Verlag, Berlin-New York, 1972.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Safronov, Pavel. Symplectic implosion and the Grothendieck-Springer resolution. Transform. Groups, 22(3):767792, 2017. arXiv:1411.2962, doi:10.1007/s00031-016-9398-1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Safronov, Pavel. A categorical approach to quantum moment maps. Theory Appl. Categ., 37:Paper No. 24, 818862, 2021.Google Scholar
Safronov, Pavel. Poisson-Lie structures as shifted Poisson structures. Adv. Math., 381:Paper No. 107633, 68, 2021. doi:10.1016/j.aim.2021.107633.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schauenburg, Peter. Tannaka duality for arbitrary Hopf algebras, volume 66 of Algebra Berichte [Algebra Reports]. Verlag Reinhard Fischer, Munich, 1992.Google Scholar
Sevostyanov, A.. The geometric meaning of Zhelobenko operators. Transform. Groups, 18(3):865875, 2013. arXiv:1206.3947, doi:10. 1007/s00031-013-9234-9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shimizu, Kenichi. Tannaka theory and the FRT construction over non-commutative algebras. 2019. arXiv:1912.13160.Google Scholar
Shimizu, Kenichi. Further results on the structure of (co)ends in finite tensor categories. Appl. Categ. Structures, 28(2):237286, 2020. arXiv:1801.02493, doi:10.1007/s10485-019-09577-7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sklyanin, E. K.. Some algebraic structures connected with the Yang-Baxter equation. Representations of a quantum algebra. Funktsional. Anal. i Prilozhen., 17(4):3448, 1983.Google Scholar
Soibelman, Ya. S.. Algebra of functions on a compact quantum group and its representations. Algebra i Analiz, 2(1):190212, 1990.Google Scholar
Szlachányi, Kornél. The monoidal Eilenberg-Moore construction and bialgebroids. J. Pure Appl. Algebra, 182(2-3):287315, 2003. arXiv:math/0208198, doi:10.1016/S0022-4049(03)00018-5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Takeuchi, Mitsuhiro. Groups of algebras over $A\otimes \overline{A}$ . J. Math. Soc. Japan, 29(3):459492, 1977. doi:10.2969/jmsj/02930459.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tarasov, V. and Varchenko, A.. Difference equations compatible with trigonometric KZ differential equations. Internat. Math. Res. Notices, (15):801829, 2000. arXiv:math/0002132, doi:10.1155/S1073792800000441.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tits, J.. Normalisateurs de tores. I. Groupes de Coxeter étendus. J. Algebra, 4:96116, 1966. doi:10.1016/0021-8693(66)90053-6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ulbrich, K.-H.. Fibre functors of finite-dimensional comodules. Manuscripta Math., 65(1):3946, 1989. doi:10.1007/BF01168365.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ulbrich, K.-H.. On Hopf algebras and rigid monoidal categories. Israel Journal of Mathematics volume 72, pages 252256. 1990. doi:10.1007/BF02764622.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van den Hombergh, A. and de Vries, H.. On the differential operators on the quasi-affine variety $G/ N$ . Nederl. Akad. Wetensch. Indag. Math., 40(4):460466, 1978.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Varagnolo, M. and Vasserot, E.. Double affine Hecke algebras at roots of unity. Represent. Theory, 14:510600, 2010. arXiv:math/0603744, doi:10.1090/S1088-4165-2010-00384-2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Voigt, Christian and Yuncken, Robert. Complex Semisimple Quantum Groups and Representation Theory, volume 2264 of Lecture Notes in Mathematics. Springer, 2020. arXiv:1705.05661.Google Scholar
Šapovalov, N. N.. On a certain conjecture of Gelfand and Kirillov. Funkcional. Anal. i Priložen., 7(2):9394, 1973.Google Scholar
Wischnewsky, Manfred B.. On linear representations of affine groups. I. Pacific J. Math., 61(2):551572, 1975.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ping, Xu. Quantum groupoids. Comm. Math. Phys., 216(3):539581, 2001. arXiv:math/9905192, doi:10.1007/s002200000334.Google Scholar
Zhelobenko, D. P.. Extremal cocycles on Weyl groups. Funktsional. Anal. i Prilozhen., 21(3):1121, 95, 1987.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhelobenko, D. P.. An introduction to the theory of $S$ -algebras over reductive Lie algebras. In Representation of Lie Groups and Related Topics, volume 7 of Adv. Stud. Contemp. Math., pages 155221. Gordon and Breach, New York, 1990.Google Scholar