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In the mathematical fields of representation theory and group theory, a linear representation (rho) of a group is a monomial representation if there is a finite-index subgroup and a one-dimensional linear representation of , such that is equivalent to the induced representation .
Alternatively, one may define it as a representation whose image is in the monomial matrices.
Here for example and may be finite groups, so that induced representation has a classical sense. The monomial representation is only a little more complicated than the permutation representation of on the cosets of . It is necessary only to keep track of scalars coming from applied to elements of .
Definition
editTo define the monomial representation, we first need to introduce the notion of monomial space. A monomial space is a triple where is a finite-dimensional complex vector space, is a finite set and is a family of one-dimensional subspaces of such that .
Now Let be a group, the monomial representation of on is a group homomorphism such that for every element , permutes the 's, this means that induces an action by permutation of on .
References
edit- "Monomial representation", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]
- Karpilovsky, Gregory (1985). Projective Representations of Finite Groups. M. Dekker. ISBN 978-0-8247-7313-7.