canonicalize tensor formed by tensors
Parameters : | g : permutation representing the tensor dummies : list representing the dummy indices
msym : symmetry of the metric(s)
v : list, (base_i, gens_i, n_i, sym_i) for tensors of type \(i\) base_i, gens_i : BSGS for tensors of this type.
n_i : number of tensors of type \(i\). sym_i : symmetry under exchange of component tensors of type \(i\).
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Returns : | 0 if the tensor is zero, else return the array form of : the permutation representing the canonical form of the tensor. : |
Examples
one type of index with commuting metric;
\(A_{a b}\) and \(B_{a b}\) antisymmetric and commuting
\(T = A_{d0 d1} * B^{d0}{}_{d2} * B^{d2 d1}\)
\(ord = [d0,-d0,d1,-d1,d2,-d2]\) order of the indices
g = [1,3,0,5,4,2,6,7]
\(T_c = 0\)
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.tensor_can import get_symmetric_group_sgs, canonicalize, bsgs_direct_product
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> base2a, gens2a = get_symmetric_group_sgs(2, 1)
>>> t0 = (base2a, gens2a, 1, 0)
>>> t1 = (base2a, gens2a, 2, 0)
>>> g = Permutation([1,3,0,5,4,2,6,7])
>>> canonicalize(g, range(6), 0, t0, t1)
0
same as above, but with \(B_{a b}\) anticommuting
\(T_c = -A^{d0 d1} * B_{d0}{}^{d2} * B_{d1 d2}\)
can = [0,2,1,4,3,5,7,6]
>>> t1 = (base2a, gens2a, 2, 1)
>>> canonicalize(g, range(6), 0, t0, t1)
[0, 2, 1, 4, 3, 5, 7, 6]
two types of indices \([a,b,c,d,e,f]\) and \([m,n]\), in this order, both with commuting metric
\(f^{a b c}\) antisymmetric, commuting
\(A_{m a}\) no symmetry, commuting
\(T = f^c{}_{d a} * f^f{}_{e b} * A_m{}^d * A^{m b} * A_n{}^a * A^{n e}\)
ord = [c,f,a,-a,b,-b,d,-d,e,-e,m,-m,n,-n]
g = [0,7,3, 1,9,5, 11,6, 10,4, 13,2, 12,8, 14,15]
The canonical tensor is \(T_c = -f^{c a b} * f^{f d e} * A^m{}_a * A_{m d} * A^n{}_b * A_{n e}\)
can = [0,2,4, 1,6,8, 10,3, 11,7, 12,5, 13,9, 15,14]
>>> base_f, gens_f = get_symmetric_group_sgs(3, 1)
>>> base1, gens1 = get_symmetric_group_sgs(1)
>>> base_A, gens_A = bsgs_direct_product(base1, gens1, base1, gens1)
>>> t0 = (base_f, gens_f, 2, 0)
>>> t1 = (base_A, gens_A, 4, 0)
>>> dummies = [range(2, 10), range(10, 14)]
>>> g = Permutation([0,7,3,1,9,5,11,6,10,4,13,2,12,8,14,15])
>>> canonicalize(g, dummies, [0, 0], t0, t1)
[0, 2, 4, 1, 6, 8, 10, 3, 11, 7, 12, 5, 13, 9, 15, 14]
Algorithm
First one uses canonical_free to get the minimum tensor under lexicographic order, using only the slot symmetries. If the component tensors have not minimal BSGS, it is attempted to find it; if the attempt fails canonicalize_naive is used instead.
Compute the residual slot symmetry keeping fixed the free indices using tensor_gens(base, gens, list_free_indices, sym).
Reduce the problem eliminating the free indices.
Then use double_coset_can_rep and lift back the result reintroducing the free indices.
Butler-Portugal algorithm for tensor canonicalization with dummy indices
- dummies
- list of lists of dummy indices, one list for each type of index; the dummy indices are put in order contravariant, covariant [d0, -d0, d1, -d1, ...].
- sym
- list of the symmetries of the index metric for each type.
- possible symmetries of the metrics
- 0 symmetric
- 1 antisymmetric
- None no symmetry
- b_S
- base of a minimal slot symmetry BSGS.
- sgens
- generators of the slot symmetry BSGS.
- S_transversals
- transversals for the slot BSGS.
- g
- permutation representing the tensor.
Return 0 if the tensor is zero, else return the array form of the permutation representing the canonical form of the tensor.
A tensor with dummy indices can be represented in a number of equivalent ways which typically grows exponentially with the number of indices. To be able to establish if two tensors with many indices are equal becomes computationally very slow in absence of an efficient algorithm.
The Butler-Portugal algorithm [3] is an efficient algorithm to put tensors in canonical form, solving the above problem.
Portugal observed that a tensor can be represented by a permutation, and that the class of tensors equivalent to it under slot and dummy symmetries is equivalent to the double coset \(D*g*S\) (Note: in this documentation we use the conventions for multiplication of permutations p, q with (p*q)(i) = p[q[i]] which is opposite to the one used in the Permutation class)
Using the algorithm by Butler to find a representative of the double coset one can find a canonical form for the tensor.
To see this correspondence, let \(g\) be a permutation in array form; a tensor with indices \(ind\) (the indices including both the contravariant and the covariant ones) can be written as
\(t = T(ind[g[0],..., ind[g[n-1]])\),
where \(n= len(ind)\); \(g\) has size \(n + 2\), the last two indices for the sign of the tensor (trick introduced in [4]).
A slot symmetry transformation \(s\) is a permutation acting on the slots \(t -> T(ind[(g*s)[0]],..., ind[(g*s)[n-1]])\)
A dummy symmetry transformation acts on \(ind\) \(t -> T(ind[(d*g)[0]],..., ind[(d*g)[n-1]])\)
Being interested only in the transformations of the tensor under these symmetries, one can represent the tensor by \(g\), which transforms as
\(g -> d*g*s\), so it belongs to the coset \(D*g*S\).
Let us explain the conventions by an example.
\(T^{a0 a1 a2 a3 a4 a5} = -T^{a2 a1 a0 a3 a4 a5}\)
\(T^{a0 a1 a2 a3 a4 a5} = -T^{a4 a1 a2 a3 a0 a5}\)
and symmetric metric, find the tensor equivalent to it which is the lowest under the ordering of indices: lexicographic ordering \(d1, d2, d3\) then and contravariant index before covariant index; that is the canonical form of the tensor.
The canonical form is \(-T^{d1 d2 d3}{}_{d1 d2 d3}\) obtained using \(T^{a0 a1 a2 a3 a4 a5} = -T^{a2 a1 a0 a3 a4 a5}\).
To convert this problem in the input for this function, use the following labelling of the index names (- for covariant for short) \(d1, -d1, d2, -d2, d3, -d3\)
\(T^{d3 d2 d1}{}_{d1 d2 d3}\) corresponds to \(g = [4,2,0,1,3,5,6,7]\) where the last two indices are for the sign
\(sgens = [Permutation(0,2)(6,7), Permutation(0,4)(6,7)]\)
sgens[0] is the slot symmetry \(-(0,2)\) \(T^{a0 a1 a2 a3 a4 a5} = -T^{a2 a1 a0 a3 a4 a5}\)
sgens[1] is the slot symmetry \(-(0,4)\) \(T^{a0 a1 a2 a3 a4 a5} = -T^{a4 a1 a2 a3 a0 a5}\)
The dummy symmetry group D is generated by the strong base generators \([(0,1),(2,3),(4,5),(0,1)(2,3),(2,3)(4,5)]\)
The dummy symmetry acts from the left \(d = [1,0,2,3,4,5,6,7]\) exchange \(d1 -> -d1\) \(T^{d3 d2 d1}{}_{d1 d2 d3} == T^{d3 d2}{}_{d1}{}^{d1}{}_{d2 d3}\)
\(g=[4,2,0,1,3,5,6,7] -> [4,2,1,0,3,5,6,7] = _af_rmul(d, g)\) which differs from \(_af_rmul(g, d)\).
The slot symmetry acts from the right \(s = [2,1,0,3,4,5,7,6]\) exchanges slots 0 and 2 and changes sign \(T^{d3 d2 d1}{}_{d1 d2 d3} == -T^{d1 d2 d3}{}_{d1 d2 d3}\)
\(g=[4,2,0,1,3,5,6,7] -> [0,2,4,1,3,5,7,6] = _af_rmul(g, s)\)
Example in which the tensor is zero, same slot symmetries as above: \(T^{d3}{}_{d1,d2}{}^{d1}{}_{d3}{}^{d2}\)
\(= -T^{d3}{}_{d1,d3}{}^{d1}{}_{d2}{}^{d2}\) under slot symmetry \(-(2,4)\);
\(= T_{d3 d1}{}^{d3}{}^{d1}{}_{d2}{}^{d2}\) under slot symmetry \(-(0,2)\);
\(= T^{d3}{}_{d1 d3}{}^{d1}{}_{d2}{}^{d2}\) symmetric metric;
\(= 0\) since two of these lines have tensors differ only for the sign.
The double coset D*g*S consists of permutations \(h = d*g*s\) corresponding to equivalent tensors; if there are two \(h\) which are the same apart from the sign, return zero; otherwise choose as representative the tensor with indices ordered lexicographically according to \([d1, -d1, d2, -d2, d3, -d3]\) that is \(rep = min(D*g*S) = min([d*g*s for d in D for s in S])\)
The indices are fixed one by one; first choose the lowest index for slot 0, then the lowest remaining index for slot 1, etc. Doing this one obtains a chain of stabilizers
\(S -> S_{b0} -> S_{b0,b1} -> ...\) and \(D -> D_{p0} -> D_{p0,p1} -> ...\)
where \([b0, b1, ...] = range(b)\) is a base of the symmetric group; the strong base \(b_S\) of S is an ordered sublist of it; therefore it is sufficient to compute once the strong base generators of S using the Schreier-Sims algorithm; the stabilizers of the strong base generators are the strong base generators of the stabilizer subgroup.
\(dbase = [p0,p1,...]\) is not in general in lexicographic order, so that one must recompute the strong base generators each time; however this is trivial, there is no need to use the Schreier-Sims algorithm for D.
The algorithm keeps a TAB of elements \((s_i, d_i, h_i)\) where \(h_i = d_i*g*s_i\) satisfying \(h_i[j] = p_j\) for \(0 <= j < i\) starting from \(s_0 = id, d_0 = id, h_0 = g\).
The equations \(h_0[0] = p_0, h_1[1] = p_1,...\) are solved in this order, choosing each time the lowest possible value of p_i
For \(j < i\) \(d_i*g*s_i*S_{b_0,...,b_{i-1}}*b_j = D_{p_0,...,p_{i-1}}*p_j\) so that for dx in \(D_{p_0,...,p_{i-1}}\) and sx in \(S_{base[0],...,base[i-1]}\) one has \(dx*d_i*g*s_i*sx*b_j = p_j\)
Search for dx, sx such that this equation holds for \(j = i\); it can be written as \(s_i*sx*b_j = J, dx*d_i*g*J = p_j\) \(sx*b_j = s_i**-1*J; sx = trace(s_i**-1, S_{b_0,...,b_{i-1}})\) \(dx**-1*p_j = d_i*g*J; dx = trace(d_i*g*J, D_{p_0,...,p_{i-1}})\)
\(s_{i+1} = s_i*trace(s_i**-1*J, S_{b_0,...,b_{i-1}})\) \(d_{i+1} = trace(d_i*g*J, D_{p_0,...,p_{i-1}})**-1*d_i\) \(h_{i+1}*b_i = d_{i+1}*g*s_{i+1}*b_i = p_i\)
\(h_n*b_j = p_j\) for all j, so that \(h_n\) is the solution.
Add the found \((s, d, h)\) to TAB1.
At the end of the iteration sort TAB1 with respect to the \(h\); if there are two consecutive \(h\) in TAB1 which differ only for the sign, the tensor is zero, so return 0; if there are two consecutive \(h\) which are equal, keep only one.
Then stabilize the slot generators under \(i\) and the dummy generators under \(p_i\).
Assign \(TAB = TAB1\) at the end of the iteration step.
At the end \(TAB\) contains a unique \((s, d, h)\), since all the slots of the tensor \(h\) have been fixed to have the minimum value according to the symmetries. The algorithm returns \(h\).
It is important that the slot BSGS has lexicographic minimal base, otherwise there is an \(i\) which does not belong to the slot base for which \(p_i\) is fixed by the dummy symmetry only, while \(i\) is not invariant from the slot stabilizer, so \(p_i\) is not in general the minimal value.
Examples
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.permutations import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.perm_groups import PermutationGroup
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.tensor_can import double_coset_can_rep, get_transversals
>>> gens = [Permutation(x) for x in [[2,1,0,3,4,5,7,6], [4,1,2,3,0,5,7,6]]]
>>> base = [0, 2]
>>> g = Permutation([4,2,0,1,3,5,6,7])
>>> transversals = get_transversals(base, gens)
>>> double_coset_can_rep([list(range(6))], [0], base, gens, transversals, g)
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 6]
>>> g = Permutation([4,1,3,0,5,2,6,7])
>>> double_coset_can_rep([list(range(6))], [0], base, gens, transversals, g)
0
Return base, gens of the minimal BSGS for (anti)symmetric tensor
n rank of the tensor
antisym = False symmetric tensor antisym = True antisymmetric tensor
Examples
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.tensor_can import get_symmetric_group_sgs
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> get_symmetric_group_sgs(3)
([0, 1], [Permutation(4)(0, 1), Permutation(4)(1, 2)])
direct product of two BSGS
base1 base of the first BSGS.
gens1 strong generating sequence of the first BSGS.
base2, gens2 similarly for the second BSGS.
signed flag for signed permutations.
Examples
>>> from sympy.combinatorics import Permutation
>>> from sympy.combinatorics.tensor_can import (get_symmetric_group_sgs, bsgs_direct_product)
>>> Permutation.print_cyclic = True
>>> base1, gens1 = get_symmetric_group_sgs(1)
>>> base2, gens2 = get_symmetric_group_sgs(2)
>>> bsgs_direct_product(base1, gens1, base2, gens2)
([1], [Permutation(4)(1, 2)])