Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Addresses of registered participants
- Addresses of non-participating authors
- Programme of lectures
- Conference photograph and key
- Symmetric presentations and orthogonal groups
- A constructive recognition algorithm for the special linear group
- Relations in M666
- A survey of symmetric generation of sporadic simple groups
- Harish-Chandra theory, q-Schur algebras, and decomposition matrices for finite classical groups
- The Meataxe as a tool in computational group theory
- Branching rules for modular projective representations of the symmetric groups
- Characters and surfaces: a survey
- On the characterization of finite groups by characters
- Finite linear groups of small degree
- Minimal parabolic systems for the symmetric and alternating groups
- Probabilistic methods in the generation of finite simple groups
- Condensing tensor product modules
- Intersections of Sylow subgroups in finite groups
- Anatomy of the Monster: I
- An integral ‘Meat-axe’
- Finite rational matrix groups: a survey
- Chamber graphs of sporadic group geometries
- An Atlas of sporadic group representations
- Presentations of reductive Fischer groups
- A brief history of the ATLAS
Branching rules for modular projective representations of the symmetric groups
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Addresses of registered participants
- Addresses of non-participating authors
- Programme of lectures
- Conference photograph and key
- Symmetric presentations and orthogonal groups
- A constructive recognition algorithm for the special linear group
- Relations in M666
- A survey of symmetric generation of sporadic simple groups
- Harish-Chandra theory, q-Schur algebras, and decomposition matrices for finite classical groups
- The Meataxe as a tool in computational group theory
- Branching rules for modular projective representations of the symmetric groups
- Characters and surfaces: a survey
- On the characterization of finite groups by characters
- Finite linear groups of small degree
- Minimal parabolic systems for the symmetric and alternating groups
- Probabilistic methods in the generation of finite simple groups
- Condensing tensor product modules
- Intersections of Sylow subgroups in finite groups
- Anatomy of the Monster: I
- An integral ‘Meat-axe’
- Finite rational matrix groups: a survey
- Chamber graphs of sporadic group geometries
- An Atlas of sporadic group representations
- Presentations of reductive Fischer groups
- A brief history of the ATLAS
Summary
Abstract
In this survey we shall discuss known results concerning the decomposition numbers for the p-modular projective representations of the symmetric groups (for p odd). Several open questions are mentioned.
Introduction
It is well-known (see [4]), that the problem of determining the decomposition numbers for p-modular projective representations of the symmetric groups (for odd p) is the same problem as determining the decomposition numbers for the faithful representations of a double cover of the symmetric groups. There are, in general, two non-isomorphic such double covers, one of which is denoted by S(n) and is generated by elements t1, …, tn-1 together with a central involution z satisfying the relations
A result of G. D. James [6] shows that it is possible to index the irreducible p-modular Brauer characters and the ordinary characters in such a way that the decomposition matrix is upper uni-triangular. This is not the case for projective representations, and we first use the modular atlas [7] to look at some of the situations that arise. The situation is more complicated here than in the linear case since no analogue has yet been found of the construction of the irreducible modules given by Specht modules. It is a well-known result of Schur (see Theorem 8.6 of [4]) that the irreducible complex projective representations of the symmetric group S(n) may be labelled by partitions of n into distinct parts. However, this method of labelling is not bijective. If λ has an even number of even parts then there is a unique irreducible associated with λ denoted by 〈λ〉.
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- Information
- The Atlas of Finite Groups - Ten Years On , pp. 82 - 89Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998