For any finite-dimensional semisimple Lie algebraa, Drinfeld defined an infinite-dimensional Hopf algebra Y, called the Yangian of a. This Hopf algebra is a deformation of the universal enveloping algebraU of the Lie algebra of polynomial loops of a given by explicit generators and relations. The relations can be encoded by identities involving a rational R-matrix. Replacing it with a trigonometric R-matrix, one arrives at affine quantum groups, defined in the same paper of Drinfeld. In the case of the general linear Lie algebraglN, the Yangian admits a simpler description in terms of a single ternaryrelation on the matrix generators due to Faddeev and coauthors. The Yangian Y is defined to be the algebra generated by elements with 1 ≤ i, j ≤ N and p ≥ 0, subject to the relations Defining, setting and introducing the R-matrixR = I + z−1P on CNCN, where P is the operator permuting the tensor factors, the above relations can be written more simply as the ternary relation: The Yangian becomes a Hopf algebra with comultiplication Δ, counit ε and antipode s given by At special values of the spectral parameter, the R-matrix degenerates to a rank one projection. This can be used to define the quantum determinant of , which generates the center of the Yangian. The twisted Yangian Y−, introduced by G. I. Olshansky, is the co-ideal generated by the coefficients of where σ is the involution of gl2N given by Quantum determinant is the center of Yangian.
Applications
Classical representation theory
G.I. Olshansky and I.Cherednik discovered that the Yangian of glN is closely related with the branching properties of irreducible finite-dimensional representations of general linear algebras. In particular, the classical Gelfand–Tsetlin construction of a basis in the space of such a representation has a natural interpretation in the language of Yangians, studied by M.Nazarov and V.Tarasov. Olshansky, Nazarov and Molev later discovered a generalization of this theory to other classical Lie algebras, based on the twisted Yangian.
Irreducible finite-dimensional representations of Yangians were parametrized by Drinfeld in a way similar to the highest weight theory in the representation theory of semisimple Lie algebras. The role of the highest weight is played by a finite set of Drinfeld polynomials. Drinfeld also discovered a generalization of the classical Schur–Weyl duality between representations of general linear and symmetric groups that involves the Yangian of slN and the degenerate affine Hecke algebra. Representations of Yangians have been extensively studied, but the theory is still under active development.