Tutorial: visualizing root systems¶
Root systems encode the positions of collections of hyperplanes in space, and form the fundamental combinatorial data underlying Coxeter and Weyl groups, Lie algebras and groups, etc. The theory can be a bit intimidating at first because of the many technical gadgets (roots, coroots, weights, …). Vizualizing them goes a long way toward building a geometric intuition.
This tutorial starts from simple plots and guides you all the way to advanced plots with your own combinatorial data drawn on top of it.
See also
Root systems – An overview of root systems in Sage
RootLatticeRealizations.ParentMethods.plot()
– the main plotting function, with pointers to all the subroutines
First plots¶
In this first plot, we draw the root system for type \(A_2\) in the ambient space. It is generated from two hyperplanes at a 120 degree angle:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2]).ambient_space()
sage: L.plot()
Graphics object consisting of 13 graphics primitives
Each of those hyperplane \(H_{\alpha^\vee_i}\) is described by a linear
form \(\alpha_i^\vee\) called simple coroot. To each such hyperplane
corresponds a reflection along a vector called root. In this picture,
the reflections are orthogonal and the two simple roots \(\alpha_1\) and
\(\alpha_2\) are vectors which are normal to the reflection hyperplanes.
The same color code is used uniformly: blue for 1, red for 2, green
for 3, … (see CartanType.color()
). The
fundamental weights, \(\Lambda_1\) and \(\Lambda_2\) form the dual basis of
the coroots.
The two reflections generate a group of order six which is nothing but the usual symmetric group \(S_3\), in its natural action by permutations of the coordinates of the ambient space. Wait, but the ambient space should be of dimension \(3\) then? That’s perfectly right. Here is the full picture in 3D:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2]).ambient_space()
sage: L.plot(projection=False)
Graphics3d Object
However in this space, the line \((1,1,1)\) is fixed by the action of the group. Therefore, the so called barycentric projection orthogonal to \((1,1,1)\) gives a convenient 2D picture which contains all the essential information. The same projection is used by default in type \(G_2\):
sage: L = RootSystem(["G",2]).ambient_space()
sage: L.plot(reflection_hyperplanes="all")
Graphics object consisting of 21 graphics primitives
The group is now the dihedral group of order 12, generated by the two reflections \(s_1\) and \(s_2\). The picture displays the hyperplanes for all 12 reflections of the group. Those reflections delimit 12 chambers which are in one to one correspondence with the elements of the group. The fundamental chamber, which is grayed out, is associated with the identity of the group.
Warning
The fundamental chamber is currently plotted as the cone generated by the fundamental weights. As can be seen on the previous 3D picture this is not quite correct if the fundamental weights do not span the space.
Another caveat is that some plotting features may require manipulating elements with rational coordinates which will fail if one is working in, say, the weight lattice. It is therefore recommended to use the root, weight, or ambient spaces for plotting purposes rather than their lattice counterparts.
Coming back to the symmetric group, here is the picture in the weight space, with all roots and all reflection hyperplanes; remark that, unlike in the ambient space, a root is not necessarily orthogonal to its corresponding reflection hyperplane:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2]).weight_space()
sage: L.plot(roots="all", reflection_hyperplanes="all").show(figsize=15)
Note
Setting a larger figure size as above can help reduce the overlap between the text labels when the figure gets crowded.
One can further customize which roots to display, as in the following example showing the positive roots in the weight space for type [‘G’,2], labelled by their coordinates in the root lattice:
sage: Q = RootSystem(["G",2]).root_space()
sage: L = RootSystem(["G",2]).ambient_space()
sage: L.plot(roots=list(Q.positive_roots()), fundamental_weights=False)
Graphics object consisting of 17 graphics primitives
One can also customize the projection by specifying a function. Here, we display all the roots for type \(E_8\) using the projection from its eight dimensional ambient space onto 3D described on Wikipedia%27s E8 3D picture:
sage: M = matrix([[0., -0.556793440452, 0.19694925177, -0.19694925177, 0.0805477263944, -0.385290876171, 0., 0.385290876171],
....: [0.180913155536, 0., 0.160212955043, 0.160212955043, 0., 0.0990170516545, 0.766360424875, 0.0990170516545],
....: [0.338261212718, 0, 0, -0.338261212718, 0.672816364803, 0.171502564281, 0, -0.171502564281]])
sage: L = RootSystem(["E",8]).ambient_space()
sage: L.dimension()
8
sage: L.plot(roots="all", reflection_hyperplanes=False, projection=lambda v: M*vector(v), labels=False) # long time
Graphics3d Object
The projection function should be linear or affine, and return a vector with rational coordinates. The rationale for the later constraint is to allow for using the PPL exact library for manipulating polytopes. Indeed exact calculations give cleaner pictures (adjacent objects, intersection with the bounding box, …). Besides the interface to PPL is indeed currently faster than that for CDD, and it is likely to become even more so.
Exercise
Draw all finite root systems in 2D, using the canonical projection onto their Coxeter plane. See Stembridge’s page.
Alcoves and chambers¶
We now draw the root system for type \(G_2\), with its alcoves (in finite type, those really are the chambers) and the corresponding elements of the Weyl group. We enlarge a bit the bounding box to make sure everything fits in the picture:
sage: RootSystem(["G",2]).ambient_space().plot(alcoves=True, alcove_labels=True, bounding_box=5)
Graphics object consisting of 37 graphics primitives
The same picture in 3D, for type \(B_3\):
sage: RootSystem(["B",3]).ambient_space().plot(alcoves=True, alcove_labels=True)
Graphics3d Object
Exercise
Can you spot the fundamental chamber? The fundamental weights? The simple roots? The longest element of the Weyl group?
Alcove pictures for affine types¶
We now draw the usual alcove picture for affine type \(A_2^{(1)}\):
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2,1]).ambient_space()
sage: L.plot() # long time
Graphics object consisting of 160 graphics primitives
This picture is convenient because it is low dimensional and contains most of the relevant information. Beside, by choosing the ambient space, the elements of the Weyl group act as orthogonal affine maps. In particular, reflections are usual (affine) orthogonal reflections. However this is in fact only a slice of the real picture: the Weyl group actually acts by linear maps on the full ambient space. Those maps stabilize the so-called level \(l\) hyperplanes, and we are visualizing here what’s happening at level \(1\). Here is the full picture in 3D:
sage: L.plot(bounding_box=[[-3,3],[-3,3],[-1,1]], affine=False) # long time
Graphics3d Object
In fact, in type \(A\), this really is a picture in 4D, but as usual the barycentric projection kills the boring extra dimension for us.
It’s usually more readable to only draw the intersection of the reflection hyperplanes with the level \(1\) hyperplane:
sage: L.plot(affine=False, level=1) # long time
Graphics3d Object
Such 3D pictures are useful to better understand technicalities, like the fact that the fundamental weights do not necessarily all live at level 1:
sage: L = RootSystem(["G",2,1]).ambient_space()
sage: L.plot(affine=False, level=1)
Graphics3d Object
Note
Such pictures may tend to be a bit flat, and it may be helpful to
play with the aspect_ratio and more generally with the various
options of the show()
method:
sage: p = L.plot(affine=False, level=1)
sage: p.show(aspect_ratio=[1,1,2], frame=False)
Exercise
Draw the alcove picture at level 1, and compare the position of the fundamental weights and the vertices of the fundamental alcove.
As for finite root systems, the alcoves are indexed by the elements of the Weyl group \(W\). Two alcoves indexed by \(u\) and \(v\) respectively share a wall if \(u\) and \(v\) are neighbors in the right Cayley graph: \(u = vs_i\); the color of that wall is given by \(i\):
sage: L = RootSystem(["C",2,1]).ambient_space()
sage: L.plot(coroots="simple", alcove_labels=True) # long time
Graphics object consisting of 216 graphics primitives
Even 2D pictures of the rank \(1 + 1\) cases can give some food for thought. Here, we draw the root lattice, with the positive roots of small height in the root poset:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",1,1]).root_lattice()
sage: seed = L.simple_roots()
sage: succ = attrcall("pred")
sage: positive_roots = RecursivelyEnumeratedSet(seed, succ, structure='graded')
sage: it = iter(positive_roots)
sage: first_positive_roots = [next(it) for i in range(10)]
sage: L.plot(roots=first_positive_roots, affine=False, alcoves=False)
Graphics object consisting of 24 graphics primitives
Exercises
Use the same trick to draw the reflection hyperplanes in the weight lattice for the coroots of small height. Add the indexing of the alcoves by elements of the Weyl group. See below for a solution.
Draw the positive roots in the weight lattice and in the extended weight lattice.
Draw the reflection hyperplanes in the root lattice
Recreate John Stembridge’s “Sandwich” arrangement pictures by choosing appropriate coroots for the reflection hyperplanes.
Here is a polished solution for the first exercise:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",1,1]).weight_space()
sage: seed = L.simple_coroots()
sage: succ = attrcall("pred")
sage: positive_coroots = RecursivelyEnumeratedSet(seed, succ, structure='graded')
sage: it = iter(positive_coroots)
sage: first_positive_coroots = [next(it) for i in range(20)]
sage: p = L.plot(fundamental_chamber=True, reflection_hyperplanes=first_positive_coroots,
....: affine=False, alcove_labels=1,
....: bounding_box=[[-9,9],[-1,2]],
....: projection=lambda x: matrix([[1,-1],[1,1]])*vector(x))
sage: p.show(figsize=20) # long time
Higher dimension affine pictures¶
We now do some plots for rank 4 affine types, at level 1. The space is tiled by the alcoves, each of which is a 3D simplex:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",3,1]).ambient_space()
sage: L.plot(reflection_hyperplanes=False, bounding_box=85/100) # long time
Graphics3d Object
It is recommended to use a small bounding box here, for otherwise the number of simplices grows quicker than what Sage can handle smoothly. It can help to specify explicitly which alcoves to visualize. Here is the fundamental alcove, specified by an element of the Weyl group:
sage: W = L.weyl_group()
sage: L.plot(reflection_hyperplanes=False, alcoves=[W.one()], bounding_box=2)
Graphics3d Object
and the fundamental polygon, specified by the coordinates of its center in the root lattice:
sage: W = L.weyl_group()
sage: L.plot(reflection_hyperplanes=False, alcoves=[[0,0]], bounding_box=2)
Graphics3d Object
Finally, we draw the alcoves in the classical fundamental chambers,
using that those are indexed by the elements of the Weyl group having
no other left descent than \(0\). In order to see the inner structure,
we only draw the wireframe of the facets of the alcoves. Specifying
the wireframe
option requires a more flexible syntax for plots
which will be explained later on in this tutorial:
sage: L = RootSystem(["B",3,1]).ambient_space()
sage: W = L.weyl_group()
sage: alcoves = [~w for d in range(12) for w in W.affine_grassmannian_elements_of_given_length(d)]
sage: p = L.plot_fundamental_chamber("classical")
sage: p += L.plot_alcoves(alcoves=alcoves, wireframe=True)
sage: p += L.plot_fundamental_weights()
sage: p.show(frame=False)
Exercises
Draw the fundamental alcove in the ambient space, just by itself (no reflection hyperplane, root, …). The automorphism group of the Dynkin diagram for \(A_3^{(1)}\) (a cycle of length 4) is the dihedral group. Visualize the corresponding symmetries of the fundamental alcove.
Draw the fundamental alcoves for the other rank 4 affine types, and recover the automorphism groups of their Dynkin diagram from the pictures.
Drawing on top of a root system plot¶
The root system plots have been designed to be used as wallpaper on top of which to draw more information. In the following example, we draw an alcove walk, specified by a word of indices of simple reflections, on top of the weight lattice in affine type \(A_{2,1}\):
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2,1]).ambient_space()
sage: w1 = [0,2,1,2,0,2,1,0,2,1,2,1,2,0,2,0,1,2,0]
sage: L.plot(alcove_walk=w1, bounding_box=6) # long time
Graphics object consisting of 535 graphics primitives
Now, what about drawing several alcove walks, and specifying some colors? A single do-it-all plot method would be cumbersome; so instead, it is actually built on top of many methods (see the list below) that can be called independently and combined at will:
sage: L.plot_roots() + L.plot_reflection_hyperplanes()
Graphics object consisting of 12 graphics primitives
Note
By default the axes are disabled in root system plots since they tend to pollute the picture. Annoyingly they come back when combining them. Here is a workaround:
sage: p = L.plot_roots() + L.plot_reflection_hyperplanes()
sage: p.axes(False)
sage: p
Graphics object consisting of 12 graphics primitives
In order to specify common information for all the pieces of a root
system plot (choice of projection, bounding box, color code for the
index set, …), the easiest is to create an option object using
plot_parse_options()
,
and pass it down to each piece. We use this to plot our two walks:
sage: plot_options = L.plot_parse_options(bounding_box=[[-2,5],[-2,6]])
sage: w2 = [2,1,2,0,2,0,2,1,2,0,1,2,1,2,1,0,1,2,0,2,0,1,2,0,2]
sage: p = L.plot_alcoves(plot_options=plot_options) # long time
sage: p += L.plot_alcove_walk(w1, color="green", plot_options=plot_options) # long time
sage: p += L.plot_alcove_walk(w2, color="orange", plot_options=plot_options) # long time
sage: p # long time
Graphics object consisting of ... graphics primitives
And another with some foldings:
sage: p += L.plot_alcove_walk([0,1,2,0,2,0,1,2,0,1],
....: foldings=[False, False, True, False, False, False, True, False, True, False],
....: color="purple")
sage: p.axes(False)
sage: p.show(figsize=20)
Here we show a weight at level \(0\) and the reduced word implementing the translation by this weight:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2,1]).ambient_space()
sage: P = RootSystem(["A",2,1]).weight_space(extended=True)
sage: Lambda = P.fundamental_weights()
sage: t = 6*Lambda[1] - 2*Lambda[2] - 4*Lambda[0]
sage: walk = L.reduced_word_of_translation(L(t))
sage: plot_options = L.plot_parse_options(bounding_box=[[-2,5],[-2,5]])
sage: p = L.plot(plot_options=plot_options) # long time
sage: p += L.plot_alcove_walk(walk, color="green", plot_options=plot_options) # long time
sage: p += plot_options.family_of_vectors({t: L(t)}) # long time
sage: plot_options.finalize(p) # long time
Graphics object consisting of ... graphics primitives
sage: p # long time
Graphics object consisting of ... graphics primitives
Note that the coloring of the translated alcove does not match with that of the fundamental alcove: the translation actually lives in the extended Weyl group and is the composition of the simple reflections indexed by the alcove walk together with a rotation implementing an automorphism of the Dynkin diagram.
We conclude with a rank \(3 + 1\) alcove walk:
sage: L = RootSystem(["B",3,1]).ambient_space()
sage: w3 = [0,2,1,3,2,0,2,1,0,2,3,1,2,1,3,2,0,2,0,1,2,0]
sage: L.plot_fundamental_weights() + L.plot_reflection_hyperplanes(bounding_box=2) + L.plot_alcove_walk(w3)
Graphics3d Object
Exercise
Draw the tiling of 3D space by the fundamental polygons for types A,B,C,D. Hints: use the
wireframe
option ofRootLatticeRealizations.ParentMethods.plot_alcoves()
and thecolor
option ofplot()
to only draw the alcove facets indexed by \(0\).
Solution
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",3,1]).ambient_space()
sage: alcoves = cartesian_product([[0,1],[0,1],[0,1]])
sage: color = lambda i: "black" if i==0 else None
sage: L.plot_alcoves(alcoves=alcoves, color=color, bounding_box=10,wireframe=True).show(frame=False) # long time
Hand drawing on top of a root system plot (aka Coxeter graph paper)¶
Taken from John Stembridge’s excellent data archive:
“If you’ve ever worked with affine reflection groups, you’ve probably wasted lots of time drawing the reflecting hyperplanes of the rank 2 groups on scraps of paper. You may also have wished you had pads of graph paper with these lines drawn in for you. If so, you’ve come to the right place. Behold! Coxeter graph paper!”.
Now you can create your own customized color Coxeter graph paper:
sage: L = RootSystem(["C",2,1]).ambient_space()
sage: p = L.plot(bounding_box=[[-8,9],[-5,7]], coroots="simple") # long time (10 s)
sage: p # long time
Graphics object consisting of ... graphics primitives
By default Sage’s plot are bitmap pictures which would come out ugly if printed on paper. Instead, we recommend saving the picture in postscript or svg before printing it:
sage: p.save("C21paper.eps") # not tested
Note
Drawing pictures with a large number of alcoves is currently somewhat ridiculously slow. This is due to the use of generic code that works uniformly in all dimension rather than taylor-made code for 2D. Things should improve with the fast interface to the PPL library (see e.g. trac ticket #12553).
Drawing custom objects on top of a root system plot¶
So far so good. Now, what if one wants to draw, on top of a root
system plot, some object for which there is no preexisting plot
method? Again, the plot_options
object come in handy, as it can be
used to compute appropriate coordinates. Here we draw the
permutohedron, that is the Cayley graph of the symmetric group \(W\), by
positioning each element \(w\) at \(w(\rho)\), where \(\rho\) is in the
fundamental alcove:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2]).ambient_space()
sage: rho = L.rho()
sage: plot_options = L.plot_parse_options()
sage: W = L.weyl_group()
sage: g = W.cayley_graph(side="right")
sage: positions = {w: plot_options.projection(w.action(rho)) for w in W}
sage: p = L.plot_alcoves()
sage: p += g.plot(pos = positions, vertex_size=0,
....: color_by_label=plot_options.color)
sage: p.axes(False)
sage: p
Graphics object consisting of 30 graphics primitives
Todo
Could we have nice \(\LaTeX\) labels in this graph?
The same picture for \(A_3\) gives a nice 3D permutohedron:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",3]).ambient_space()
sage: rho = L.rho()
sage: plot_options = L.plot_parse_options()
sage: W = L.weyl_group()
sage: g = W.cayley_graph(side="right")
sage: positions = {w: plot_options.projection(w.action(rho)) for w in W}
sage: p = L.plot_roots()
sage: p += g.plot3d(pos3d=positions, color_by_label=plot_options.color)
sage: p
Graphics3d Object
Exercises
Locate the identity element of \(W\) in the previous picture
Rotate the picture appropriately to highlight the various symmetries of the permutohedron.
Make a function out of the previous example, and explore the Cayley graphs of all rank 2 and 3 Weyl groups.
Draw the root poset for type \(B_2\) and \(B_3\)
Draw the root poset for type \(E_8\) to recover the picture from Wikipedia article File:E8_3D.png
Similarly, we display a crystal graph by positioning each element according to its weight:
sage: C = crystals.Tableaux(["A",2], shape=[4,2])
sage: L = C.weight_lattice_realization()
sage: plot_options = L.plot_parse_options()
sage: g = C.digraph()
sage: positions = {x: plot_options.projection(x.weight()) for x in C}
sage: p = L.plot()
sage: p += g.plot(pos=positions,
....: color_by_label=plot_options.color, vertex_size=0)
sage: p.axes(False)
sage: p.show(figsize=15)
Note
In the above picture, many pairs of tableaux have the same weight and are thus superposed (look for example near the center). Some more layout logic would be needed to separate those nodes properly, but the foundations are laid firmly and uniformly across all types of root systems for writing such extensions.
Here is an analogue picture in 3D:
sage: C = crystals.Tableaux(["A",3], shape=[3,2,1])
sage: L = C.weight_lattice_realization()
sage: plot_options = L.plot_parse_options()
sage: g = C.digraph()
sage: positions = {x:plot_options.projection(x.weight()) for x in C}
sage: p = L.plot(reflection_hyperplanes=False, fundamental_weights=False)
sage: p += g.plot3d(pos3d=positions, vertex_labels=True,
....: color_by_label=plot_options.color, edge_labels=True)
sage: p
Graphics3d Object
Exercise
Explore the previous picture and notice how the edges of the crystal graph are parallel to the simple roots.
Enjoy and please post your best pictures on the Sage-Combinat wiki.
- class sage.combinat.root_system.plot.PlotOptions(space, projection=True, bounding_box=3, color=<bound method CartanTypeFactory.color of <class 'sage.combinat.root_system.cartan_type.CartanTypeFactory'>>, labels=True, level=None, affine=None, arrowsize=5)¶
Bases:
object
A class for plotting options for root lattice realizations.
See also
RootLatticeRealizations.ParentMethods.plot()
for a description of the plotting optionsTutorial: visualizing root systems for a tutorial on root system plotting
- color(i)¶
Return the color to be used for objects indexed by \(i\).
INPUT:
i
– an index
See also
EXAMPLES:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2]).root_lattice() sage: options = L.plot_parse_options(labels=False) sage: alpha = L.simple_roots() sage: options.color(1) 'blue' sage: options.color(2) 'red' sage: for alpha in L.roots(): ....: print("{} {}".format(alpha, options.color(alpha))) alpha[1] blue alpha[2] red alpha[1] + alpha[2] black -alpha[1] black -alpha[2] black -alpha[1] - alpha[2] black
- cone(rays=[], lines=[], color='black', thickness=1, alpha=1, wireframe=False, label=None, draw_degenerate=True, as_polyhedron=False)¶
Return the cone generated by the given rays and lines.
INPUT:
rays
,lines
– lists of elements of the root lattice realization (default:[]
)color
– a color (default:"black"
)alpha
– a number in the interval \([0, 1]\) (default: \(1\)) the desired transparencylabel
– an object to be used as for this cone. The label itself will be constructed by callinglatex()
orrepr()
on the object depending on the graphics backend.draw_degenerate
– a boolean (default:True
) whether to draw cones with a degenerate intersection with the bounding boxas_polyhedron
– a boolean (default:False
) whether to return the result as a polyhedron, without clipping it to the bounding box, and without making a plot out of it (for testing purposes)
OUTPUT:
A graphic object, a polyhedron, or
0
.EXAMPLES:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2]).root_lattice() sage: options = L.plot_parse_options() sage: alpha = L.simple_roots() sage: p = options.cone(rays=[alpha[1]], lines=[alpha[2]], color='green', label=2) sage: p Graphics object consisting of 2 graphics primitives sage: list(p) [Polygon defined by 4 points, Text '$2$' at the point (3.15...,3.15...)] sage: options.cone(rays=[alpha[1]], lines=[alpha[2]], color='green', label=2, as_polyhedron=True) A 2-dimensional polyhedron in ZZ^2 defined as the convex hull of 1 vertex, 1 ray, 1 line
An empty result, being outside of the bounding box:
sage: options = L.plot_parse_options(labels=True, bounding_box=[[-10,-9]]*2) sage: options.cone(rays=[alpha[1]], lines=[alpha[2]], color='green', label=2) 0
Test that the options are properly passed down:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2]).root_lattice() sage: options = L.plot_parse_options() sage: p = options.cone(rays=[alpha[1]+alpha[2]], color='green', label=2, thickness=4, alpha=.5) sage: list(p) [Line defined by 2 points, Text '$2$' at the point (3.15...,3.15...)] sage: sorted(p[0].options().items()) [('alpha', 0.500000000000000), ('legend_color', None), ('legend_label', None), ('rgbcolor', 'green'), ('thickness', 4), ('zorder', 1)]
This method is tested indirectly but extensively by the various plot methods of root lattice realizations.
- empty(*args)¶
Return an empty plot.
EXAMPLES:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2]).root_lattice() sage: options = L.plot_parse_options(labels=True)
This currently returns
int(0)
:sage: options.empty() 0
This is not a plot, so may cause some corner cases. On the other hand, \(0\) behaves as a fast neutral element, which is important given the typical idioms used in the plotting code:
sage: p = point([0,0]) sage: p + options.empty() is p True
- family_of_vectors(vectors)¶
Return a plot of a family of vectors.
INPUT:
vectors
– family or vectors inself
The vectors are labelled by their index.
EXAMPLES:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2]).root_lattice() sage: options = L.plot_parse_options() sage: alpha = L.simple_roots() sage: p = options.family_of_vectors(alpha); p Graphics object consisting of 4 graphics primitives sage: list(p) [Arrow from (0.0,0.0) to (1.0,0.0), Text '$1$' at the point (1.05,0.0), Arrow from (0.0,0.0) to (0.0,1.0), Text '$2$' at the point (0.0,1.05)]
Handling of colors and labels:
sage: color=lambda i: "purple" if i==1 else None sage: options = L.plot_parse_options(labels=False, color=color) sage: p = options.family_of_vectors(alpha) sage: list(p) [Arrow from (0.0,0.0) to (1.0,0.0)] sage: p[0].options()['rgbcolor'] 'purple'
Matplotlib emits a warning for arrows of length 0 and draws nothing anyway. So we do not draw them at all:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2,1]).ambient_space() sage: options = L.plot_parse_options() sage: Lambda = L.fundamental_weights() sage: p = options.family_of_vectors(Lambda); p Graphics object consisting of 5 graphics primitives sage: list(p) [Text '$0$' at the point (0.0,0.0), Arrow from (0.0,0.0) to (0.5,0.86602451838...), Text '$1$' at the point (0.525,0.909325744308...), Arrow from (0.0,0.0) to (-0.5,0.86602451838...), Text '$2$' at the point (-0.525,0.909325744308...)]
- finalize(G)¶
Finalize a root system plot.
INPUT:
G
– a root system plot or0
This sets the aspect ratio to 1 and remove the axes. This should be called by all the user-level plotting methods of root systems. This will become mostly obsolete when customization options won’t be lost anymore upon addition of graphics objects and there will be a proper empty object for 2D and 3D plots.
EXAMPLES:
sage: L = RootSystem(["B",2,1]).ambient_space() sage: options = L.plot_parse_options() sage: p = L.plot_roots(plot_options=options) sage: p += L.plot_coroots(plot_options=options) sage: p.axes() True sage: p = options.finalize(p) sage: p.axes() False sage: p.aspect_ratio() 1.0 sage: options = L.plot_parse_options(affine=False) sage: p = L.plot_roots(plot_options=options) sage: p += point([[1,1,0]]) sage: p = options.finalize(p) sage: p.aspect_ratio() [1.0, 1.0, 1.0]
If the input is
0
, this returns an empty graphics object:sage: type(options.finalize(0)) <class 'sage.plot.plot3d.base.Graphics3dGroup'> sage: options = L.plot_parse_options() sage: type(options.finalize(0)) <class 'sage.plot.graphics.Graphics'> sage: list(options.finalize(0)) []
- in_bounding_box(x)¶
Return whether
x
is in the bounding box.INPUT:
x
– an element of the root lattice realization
This method is currently one of the bottlenecks, and therefore cached.
EXAMPLES:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2,1]).ambient_space() sage: options = L.plot_parse_options() sage: alpha = L.simple_roots() sage: options.in_bounding_box(alpha[1]) True sage: options.in_bounding_box(3*alpha[1]) False
- index_of_object(i)¶
Try to return the node of the Dynkin diagram indexing the object \(i\).
OUTPUT: a node of the Dynkin diagram or
None
EXAMPLES:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",3]).root_lattice() sage: alpha = L.simple_roots() sage: omega = RootSystem(["A",3]).weight_lattice().fundamental_weights() sage: options = L.plot_parse_options(labels=False) sage: options.index_of_object(3) 3 sage: options.index_of_object(alpha[1]) 1 sage: options.index_of_object(omega[2]) 2 sage: options.index_of_object(omega[2]+omega[3]) sage: options.index_of_object(30) sage: options.index_of_object("bla")
- intersection_at_level_1(x)¶
Return
x
scaled at the appropriate level, if level is set; otherwise returnx
.INPUT:
x
– an element of the root lattice realization
EXAMPLES:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2,1]).weight_space() sage: options = L.plot_parse_options() sage: options.intersection_at_level_1(L.rho()) 1/3*Lambda[0] + 1/3*Lambda[1] + 1/3*Lambda[2] sage: options = L.plot_parse_options(affine=False, level=2) sage: options.intersection_at_level_1(L.rho()) 2/3*Lambda[0] + 2/3*Lambda[1] + 2/3*Lambda[2]
When
level
is not set,x
is returned:sage: options = L.plot_parse_options(affine=False) sage: options.intersection_at_level_1(L.rho()) Lambda[0] + Lambda[1] + Lambda[2]
- projection(v)¶
Return the projection of
v
.INPUT:
x
– an element of the root lattice realization
OUTPUT:
An immutable vector with integer or rational coefficients.
EXAMPLES:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2,1]).ambient_space() sage: options = L.plot_parse_options() sage: options.projection(L.rho()) (0, 989/571) sage: options = L.plot_parse_options(projection=False) sage: options.projection(L.rho()) (2, 1, 0)
- reflection_hyperplane(coroot, as_polyhedron=False)¶
Return a plot of the reflection hyperplane indexed by this coroot.
coroot
– a coroot
EXAMPLES:
sage: L = RootSystem(["B",2]).weight_space() sage: alphacheck = L.simple_coroots() sage: options = L.plot_parse_options() sage: H = options.reflection_hyperplane(alphacheck[1]); H Graphics object consisting of 2 graphics primitives
Todo
Display the periodic orientation by adding a \(+\) and a \(-\) sign close to the label. Typically by using the associated root to shift a bit from the vertex upon which the hyperplane label is attached.
- text(label, position, rgbcolor=(0, 0, 0))¶
Return text widget with label
label
at positionposition
INPUT:
label
– a string, or a Sage object upon which latex will be calledposition
– a positionrgbcolor
– the color as an RGB tuple
EXAMPLES:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2]).root_lattice() sage: options = L.plot_parse_options() sage: list(options.text("coucou", [0,1])) [Text 'coucou' at the point (0.0,1.0)] sage: list(options.text(L.simple_root(1), [0,1])) [Text '$\alpha_{1}$' at the point (0.0,1.0)] sage: list(options.text(L.simple_root(2), [1,0], rgbcolor=(1,0.5,0))) [Text '$\alpha_{2}$' at the point (1.0,0.0)] sage: options = RootSystem(["A",2]).root_lattice().plot_parse_options(labels=False) sage: options.text("coucou", [0,1]) 0 sage: options = RootSystem(["B",3]).root_lattice().plot_parse_options() sage: print(options.text("coucou", [0,1,2]).x3d_str()) <Transform translation='0 1 2'> <Shape><Text string='coucou' solid='true'/><Appearance><Material diffuseColor='0.0 0.0 0.0' shininess='1.0' specularColor='0.0 0.0 0.0'/></Appearance></Shape> </Transform>
- thickness(i)¶
Return the thickness to be used for lines indexed by \(i\).
INPUT:
i
– an index
See also
EXAMPLES:
sage: L = RootSystem(["A",2,1]).root_lattice() sage: options = L.plot_parse_options(labels=False) sage: alpha = L.simple_roots() sage: options.thickness(0) 2 sage: options.thickness(1) 1 sage: options.thickness(2) 1 sage: for alpha in L.simple_roots(): ....: print("{} {}".format(alpha, options.thickness(alpha))) alpha[0] 2 alpha[1] 1 alpha[2] 1
- sage.combinat.root_system.plot.barycentric_projection_matrix(n, angle=0)¶
Returns a family of \(n+1\) vectors evenly spaced in a real vector space of dimension \(n\)
Those vectors are of norm \(1\), the scalar product between any two vector is \(1/n\), thus the distance between two tips is constant.
The family is built recursively and uniquely determined by the following property: the last vector is \((0,\dots,0,-1)\), and the projection of the first \(n\) vectors in dimension \(n-1\), after appropriate rescaling to norm \(1\), retrieves the family for \(n-1\).
OUTPUT:
A matrix with \(n+1\) columns of height \(n\) with rational or symbolic coefficients.
EXAMPLES:
One vector in dimension \(0\):
sage: from sage.combinat.root_system.root_lattice_realizations import barycentric_projection_matrix sage: m = barycentric_projection_matrix(0); m [] sage: matrix(QQ,0,1).nrows() 0 sage: matrix(QQ,0,1).ncols() 1
Two vectors in dimension 1:
sage: barycentric_projection_matrix(1) [ 1 -1]
Three vectors in dimension 2:
sage: barycentric_projection_matrix(2) [ 1/2*sqrt(3) -1/2*sqrt(3) 0] [ 1/2 1/2 -1]
Four vectors in dimension 3:
sage: m = barycentric_projection_matrix(3); m [ 1/3*sqrt(3)*sqrt(2) -1/3*sqrt(3)*sqrt(2) 0 0] [ 1/3*sqrt(2) 1/3*sqrt(2) -2/3*sqrt(2) 0] [ 1/3 1/3 1/3 -1]
The columns give four vectors that sum up to zero:
sage: sum(m.columns()) (0, 0, 0)
and have regular mutual angles:
sage: m.transpose()*m [ 1 -1/3 -1/3 -1/3] [-1/3 1 -1/3 -1/3] [-1/3 -1/3 1 -1/3] [-1/3 -1/3 -1/3 1]
Here is a plot of them:
sage: sum(arrow((0,0,0),x) for x in m.columns()) Graphics3d Object
For 2D drawings of root systems, it is desirable to rotate the result to match with the usual conventions:
sage: barycentric_projection_matrix(2, angle=2*pi/3) [ 1/2 -1 1/2] [ 1/2*sqrt(3) 0 -1/2*sqrt(3)]