In mathematics, the Garnir relations give a way of expressing a basis of the Specht modules V<sub>û</sub> in terms of standard polytabloids.
Given an integer partition û of n, one has the Specht module V<sub>û</sub>. In characteristic 0, this is an irreducible representation of the symmetric group S<sub>n</sub>. One can construct V<sub>û</sub> explicitly in terms of polytabloids as follows:
The above construction gives an explicit description of the Specht module V<sub>û</sub>. However, the polytabloids associated to different Young tableaux are not necessarily linearly independent, indeed, the dimension of V<sub>û</sub> is exactly the number of standard Young tableaux of shape û. In fact, the polytabloids associated to standard Young tableaux span V<sub>û</sub>; to express other polytabloids in terms of them, one uses a straightening algorithm.
Given a Young tableau S, we construct the polytabloid e<sub>S</sub> as above. Without loss of generality, all columns of S are increasing, otherwise we could instead start with the modified Young tableau with increasing columns, whose polytabloid will differ at most by a sign. S is then said to not have any column descents. We want to express e<sub>S</sub> as a linear combination of standard polytabloids, i.e. polytabloids associated to standard Young tableaux. To do this, we would like permutations ÃÂ<sub>i</sub> such that in all tableaux SÃÂ<sub>i</sub>, a row descent has been eliminated, with . This then expresses S in terms of polytabloids that are closer to being standard. The permutations that achieve this are the Garnir elements.
Suppose we want to eliminate a row descent from box to box in the Young tableau. We pick a subset and a subset of the boxes like the red and blue sets in the following diagram:
Then the Garnir element is defined to be , where the ÃÂ<sub>i</sub> are the permutations of the entries of the boxes of that keep both subsets A and B without column descents.
Consider the following Young tableau:
There is a row descent in the second row, so we choose the subsets A and B as indicated, which gives us the following:
This gives us the Garnir element . This allows us to remove the row descent in the second row, but this has also introduced other descents in other places. But there is a way in which all tableaux obtained like this are closer to being standard, this is measured by a dominance order on polytabloids. Therefore, one can repeatedly apply this procedure to straighten a polytabloid, eventually writing it as a linear combination of standard polytabloids, showing that the Specht module is spanned by the standard polytabloids. As they are also linearly independent, they form a basis of this module.
There is a similar description for the irreducible representations of GL<sub>n</sub>. In that case, one can consider the Weyl modules associated to a partition λ, which can be described in terms of bideterminants. One has a similar straightening algorithm, but this time in terms of semistandard Young tableaux.