Coxeter element


In mathematics, the Coxeter number h is the order of a Coxeter element of an irreducible Coxeter group. It is named after H.S.M. Coxeter.

Definitions

Note that this article assumes a finite Coxeter group. For infinite Coxeter groups, there are multiple conjugacy classes of Coxeter elements, and they have infinite order.
There are many different ways to define the Coxeter number h of an irreducible root system.
A Coxeter element is a product of all simple reflections. The product depends on the order in which they are taken, but different orderings produce conjugate elements, which have the same order.
The Coxeter number for each Dynkin type is given in the following table:
The invariants of the Coxeter group acting on polynomials form a polynomial algebra
whose generators are the fundamental invariants; their degrees are given in the table above.
Notice that if m is a degree of a fundamental invariant then so is h + 2 − m.
The eigenvalues of a Coxeter element are the numbers ei/h as m runs through the degrees of the fundamental invariants. Since this starts with m = 2, these include the primitive hth root of unity, ζh = ei/h, which is important in the Coxeter plane, below.

Group order

There are relations between the order g of the Coxeter group, and the Coxeter number h:
An example, has h=30, so 64*30/g = 12 - 3 - 6 - 5 + 4/3 + 4/5 = 2/15, so g = 1920*15/2= 960*15 = 14400.

Coxeter elements

Distinct Coxeter elements correspond to orientations of the Coxeter diagram : the simple reflections corresponding to source vertices are written first, downstream vertices later, and sinks last. A special choice is the alternating orientation, in which the simple reflections are partitioned into two sets of non-adjacent vertices, and all edges are oriented from the first to the second set. The alternating orientation produces a special Coxeter element w satisfying, where w0 is the longest element, and we assume the Coxeter number h is even.
For, the symmetric group on n elements, Coxeter elements are certain n-cycles:
the product of simple reflections is the Coxeter element. For n even, the alternating orientation Coxeter element is:
There are distinct Coxeter elements among the n-cycles.
The dihedral group Dihp is generated by two reflections that form an angle of, and thus their product is a rotation by.

Coxeter plane

For a given Coxeter element w, there is a unique plane P on which w acts by rotation by 2π/h. This is called the Coxeter plane and is the plane on which P has eigenvalues ei/h and e−2πi/h = ei/h. This plane was first systematically studied in, and subsequently used in to provide uniform proofs about properties of Coxeter elements.
The Coxeter plane is often used to draw diagrams of higher-dimensional polytopes and root systems – the vertices and edges of the polytope, or roots are orthogonally projected onto the Coxeter plane, yielding a Petrie polygon with h-fold rotational symmetry. For root systems, no root maps to zero, corresponding to the Coxeter element not fixing any root or rather axis, so the projections of orbits under w form h-fold circular arrangements and there is an empty center, as in the E8 diagram at above right. For polytopes, a vertex may map to zero, as depicted below. Projections onto the Coxeter plane are depicted below for the Platonic solids.
In three dimensions, the symmetry of a regular polyhedron,, with one directed petrie polygon marked, defined as a composite of 3 reflections, has rotoinversion symmetry Sh, , order h. Adding a mirror, the symmetry can be doubled to antiprismatic symmetry, Dhd, , order 2h. In orthogonal 2D projection, this becomes dihedral symmetry, Dihh, , order 2h.
In four dimensions, the symmetry of a regular polychoron,, with one directed Petrie polygon marked is a double rotation, defined as a composite of 4 reflections, with symmetry +1/h, , order h.
In five dimensions, the symmetry of a regular 5-polytope,, with one directed Petrie polygon marked, is represented by the composite of 5 reflections.
In dimensions 6 to 8 there are 3 exceptional Coxeter groups, one uniform polytope from each dimension represents the roots of the En Exceptional lie groups. The Coxeter elements are 12, 18 and 30 respectively.
Coxeter groupE6E7E8
Graph
122

231

421
Coxeter plane
symmetry
Dih12, , Dih18, , Dih30, ,