1 Introduction
Let
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
be an affine Weyl group or extended affine Weyl group, and let
$\mathbf {H}$
be its associated Hecke algebra over
$\mathcal {A}:=\mathbb {C}[\mathbf {q}^{1/2},\mathbf {q}^{-1/2}]$
, where
$\mathbf {q}$
is a formal variable. The representation theory of
$\mathbf {H}$
is very well understood, behaving well and uniformly when
$\mathbf {q}$
is specialized to any
$q\in \mathbb {C}^\times $
that is not a root of the Poincaré polynomial
$P_W$
of the finite Weyl group
$W\subset W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
.
When
$\mathbf {q}$
is specialized to a prime power q, the category of finite-dimensional modules over the specialized algebra H is equivalent to the category of admissible representations with nonzero Iwahori-fixed vector of some p-adic group. A form of local Langlands correspondence, the Deligne-Langlands conjecture, has been established by Kazhdan and Lusztig in [Reference Kazhdan and Lusztig25], where they classified modules over the generic algebra
$\mathbf {H}$
using algebraic K-theory. A slightly different approach to this classification due to Ginzburg is explained in [Reference Chriss and Ginzburg12]. In both treatments, a first step is to fix a central character. In particular, one must choose a complex number
$q\in \mathbb {C}^\times $
by which
$\mathbf {q}$
will act. Decomposing the K-theory of certain subvarieties of Springer fibres into irreducible representations of a certain finite group yields the standard modules. It can happen that the standard modules are themselves simple (for example, simple tempered representations, which play an essential role in the present paper, are of this form), but in general simple modules are obtained as a certain unique nonzero quotient of standard modules. This quotient exists when
$q\in \mathbb {C}^\times $
is not a root of unity, but can be zero otherwise. Lusztig conjectured in [Reference Lusztig30] that this classification would in fact hold whenever q was not a root of
$P_W$
, and this result was proven by Xi in [Reference Xi52]. Xi also showed that the classification fails in general at roots of the Poincaré polynomial, and presented this failure by giving an example related to a lack of simple
$\mathbf {H}|_{\mathbf {q}=q}$
-modules attached to the lowest two-sided cell. Our results in this paper explain that the lowest two-sided cell is, in a precise sense, maximally singular with respect to the parameter
$\mathbf {q}$
.
One way Lusztig expressed the uniformity in q of the representation theory of the various algebras
$ \mathbf {H}|_{\mathbf {q}=q}$
is via the asymptotic Hecke algebra J. This is a
$\mathbb {C}$
-algebra (in fact, a
$\mathbb {Z}$
-algebra) J with distinguished basis
$\{t_w\}_{w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}}$
, equipped with an injection
$\phi \colon \mathbf {H}\mathrel {\hookrightarrow } J\otimes _{\mathbb {C}}\mathcal {A}$
. In this way there is a map from J-modules to
$\mathbf {H}$
-modules, and Lusztig has shown in [Reference Lusztig29] and [Reference Lusztig17] that when q is not a root of unity (other than
$1$
), the specialized map
$\phi _q$
induces a bijection between simple
$\mathbf {H}|_{\mathbf {q}=q}$
-modules and simple J-modules, these last being defined over
$\mathbb {C}$
. Moreover, he showed that when
$P_W(q)\neq 0$
, the map
$\phi _q$
induces an isomorphism

of Grothendieck groups. The map
$\phi $
becomes a bijection after completing
$\mathbf {H}$
and
$J\otimes _{\mathbb {C}}\mathcal {A}$
by replacing
$\mathcal {A}$
with
$\mathbb {C}((\mathbf {q}^{-1/2}))$
and allowing infinite sums convergent in the
$(\mathbf {q}^{-1/2})$
-adic topology. In this way one can write a basis element
$t_w$
as an infinite sum

where each
$a_{x,w}$
is a formal Laurent series in
$\mathbf {q}^{-1/2}$
, and
${}^\dagger (-)$
is the involution of
$\mathbf {H}$
defined in Definition 1.6. It agrees with the Goldman involution of
$\mathbf {H}$
when G is simply connected. In this paper we will almost exclusively work with
$\phi \circ {}^\dagger (-)$
, for reasons explained in Section 1.1.
In light of the above, it is natural to ask how
$a_{x,w}$
behaves when
$\mathbf {q}$
is specialized to a root of unity.
1.1 The asymptotic Hecke algebra and p-adic groups
This paper is prompted by the work of Braverman and Kazhdan in [Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11], who related the asymptotic Hecke algebra to harmonic analysis on p-adic groups. Specifically, in [Reference Lusztig17], Lusztig relates simple J-modules to certain
$\mathbf {H}\otimes _{\mathcal {A}}\mathbb {C}(\mathbf {q}^{-1/2})$
-modules termed tempered because their definition is made in analogy with Casselman’s criterion for temperedness of p-adic groups. In [Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11], Braverman and Kazhdan showed essentially that the analytic meaning of the word ‘tempered’ can be substituted into Lusztig’s results from [Reference Lusztig17].
More precisely, let
$\mathbf {G}$
be a connected reductive group defined and split over a non-archimedean local field F whose extended affine Weyl group is
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. Then in [Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11], Braverman and Kazhdan define a map expressing J as sitting between the Iwahori-Hecke algebra of
$G=\mathbf {G}(F)$
and the Harish-Chandra Schwartz algebra
$\mathcal {C}$
, and propose a spectral characterization of J via the operator Paley-Wiener theorem, obtaining a diagram

where the outer vertical maps are Fourier transform
$f\mapsto \pi (f)$
and the rings
$\mathcal {E}^I$
and
$\mathcal {E}^I_t$
of endomorphisms of forgetful functors to vector spaces are as described by the operator Paley-Wiener theorem, as we recall in Section 2.3.
The map
$\eta $
is defined in [Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11] and we will recall its definition below. In particular, it induces the map
$\tilde {\phi }$
, which then associates a Harish-Chandra Schwartz function to every element of J such that
$\eta (j)=\pi (\tilde {\phi }(j))$
, giving another way of associating to
$t_w$
an expression similar to (1.1).
This prompts several questions: whether
$\eta $
(equivalently
$\tilde {\phi }$
) is injective, whether it is surjective, and the nature of the relationship between the Schwartz function
$\tilde {\phi }(t_w)$
and the expression (1.1).
1.1.1 Denominators in the affine Hecke algebra and injectivity of
$\eta $
In the first part of this paper we prove that
$\eta $
is injective. Along the way, we prove in Proposition 3.18 that
$\tilde {\phi }$
is essentially the map
$\phi ^{-1}$
. Our strategy is to determine that the Schwartz functions
$f_w$
on the p-adic group G satisfy the statements of Theorem 1.2 below, and are in addition sufficiently well-behaved so as to lift to elements of a certain completion
of
$\mathbf {H}$
, thus defining a map

We therefore obtain two maps : the inverse
${}^\dagger (-)\circ \phi ^{-1}$
of Lusztig’s map, and our map
$\phi _1$
induced by the construction in [Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11]. We prove in Proposition 3.18 that these maps agree, at which point Theorem 3.21 and the first statement of Theorem 1.2 follow.
In particular,
$\phi _1$
is injective. Using that the representation theory of J is sufficiently independent of q, we then show in Corollary 3.20 that
$\tilde {\phi }$
is injective for any
$q>1$
. This is obviously equivalent to
Theorem 1.1 (Corollary 3.20).
The map
$\eta $
is injective for any
$q>1$
.
A weaker form of the following Theorem, which is the main result of this paper, was conjectured by Kazhdan.
Theorem 1.2. Let
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
be an affine Weyl group,
$\mathbf {H}$
its affine Hecke algebra over
$\mathcal {A}$
, and J its asymptotic Hecke algebra. Let
$\phi \colon \mathbf {H}\mathrel {\hookrightarrow } J\otimes _{\mathbb {C}}\mathcal {A}$
be Lusztig’s map.
-
1. For all
$x,w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$ ,
$a_{x,w}$ is a rational function of
$\mathbf {q}$ . The denominator of
$a_{x,w}$ is independent of x. As a function of w, it is constant on two-sided cells.
-
2. There exists
$N_{W_{\mathrm {aff}}}\in \mathbb {N}$ such that upon writing
$$\begin{align*}{}^\dagger(-)\circ\phi^{-1}(t_w)=\sum_{x\in W_{\mathrm{aff}}}a_{x,w}T_x, \end{align*}$$
$$\begin{align*}P_W(\mathbf{q})^{N_{W_{\mathrm{aff}}}}a_{x,w}\in\mathcal{A} \end{align*}$$
$x,w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$ .
-
3. If d is a distinguished involution in the lowest two-sided cell, then
$a_{1,d}=1/P_W(\mathbf {q})$ exactly.
In [Reference Dawydiak14], the author proved Theorem 1.2 in type
$\tilde {A}_1$
, but with different conventions. To translate to the conventions of this paper, the reader should replace j with the involution
${}^\dagger (-)$
, and the completion of
$\mathbf {H}$
with respect to the
$C_w$
basis and positive powers of
$\mathbf {q}^{1/2}$
with the completion of
$\mathbf {H}$
with respect to the basis
$\{(-1)^{\ell (w)}C^{\prime }_w\}_{w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}}$
and negative powers of
$\mathbf {q}^{1/2}$
. Note also that we write
$a_{x,w}$
instead of
$a_{w,x}$
as in [Reference Dawydiak14]. In [Reference Neunhöfer36], Neunhöffer described the coefficients
$a_{x,w}$
for finite Weyl groups.
In future, it would be desirable to also treat the case of unequal parameters, where a result like that of [Reference Bezrukavnikov, Dawydiak and Dobrovolska7] governing denominators is not yet available. On the other hand, when
$G=\mathrm {GL}_n$
, we are able to be slightly more precise than Theorem 1.2, while also not appealing to [Reference Bezrukavnikov, Dawydiak and Dobrovolska7]. For this reason we treat the case
$G=\mathrm {GL}_n$
separately as Theorem 3.21 in Section 3.4.
Our main tool is Harish-Chandra’s Plancherel formula for the p-adic group G associated to
$\mathbf {H}$
and the surjection of cocentres induced by Lusztig’s map
$\phi $
after inverting
$P_W(\mathbf {q})$
proved in [Reference Bezrukavnikov, Dawydiak and Dobrovolska7]Footnote
1
. We invoke [Reference Bezrukavnikov, Dawydiak and Dobrovolska7] only at the very end of our argument, which, absent [Reference Bezrukavnikov, Dawydiak and Dobrovolska7], still proves that
$a_{x,w}$
are rational functions with denominator depending only on the two-sided cell containing w. We do so with an eye to future work dealing with Hecke algebras with unequal parameters.
In [Reference Dawydiak14], the author related a conjecture of Kazhdan concerning the positivity of some coefficients related to the coefficients
$a_{x,w}$
. Historically, proofs of such positivity phenomena have also provided interpretations of the positive quantities in question. While we cannot currently prove the conjecture in [Reference Dawydiak14], our results in Section 4 hint at a possible interpretation of
$a_{1,d}$
for certain distinguished involutions d.
Remark 1.3. It is tempting to conjecture the following more precise version of Theorem 1.2, based on the factorization
$P_{\mathbf {M}_{\mathbf {P}}}(\mathbf {q})P_{\mathbf {G}/\mathbf {P}}(\mathbf {q})=P_{\mathbf {G}/\mathbf {B}}(\mathbf {q})$
: for every Levi subgroup
$\mathbf {M}_{\mathbf {P}}$
of
$\mathbf {G}$
and all
$\omega \in \mathcal {E}_2(M_P)$
, the formal degree
$d(\omega )$
is a rational function of q the denominator of which divides a power of
$P_{\mathbf {M}_{\mathbf {P}}}(q)$
. The integral over all induced twists
$\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\nu \otimes \omega )$
is a rational function of q with denominator dividing a power of the Poincaré polynomial of the partial flag variety
$(\mathbf {G}/\mathbf {P})(\mathbb {C})$
. For example, if
$G=\mathrm {GL}_6(F)$
and
$M=\mathrm {GL}_3(F)\times \mathrm {GL}_3(F)$
. In this case the integral itself (omitting the factor
$C_M$
in the notation of Section 2.5) is

and by [Reference Bott and Tu10] Proposition 23.1, (with
$\mathbf {q}=t^2$
) we have

In examples such as the above, this does indeed happen, but only after cancellation with some terms in the numerator. In general, we will not track numerators precisely enough to show this version of Theorem 1.2. We shall however see a limited demonstration of this behaviour in Corollary 3.3.
1.1.2 Denominators in the affine Hecke and the Kazhdan-Lusztig classification at roots of unity
The affine Hecke has a filtration by two-sided ideals

where a is Lusztig’s a-function. As such, for any
$q\in \mathbb {C}^\times $
and any simple
$H=\mathbf {H}|_{\mathbf {q}=q}$
-module M there is an integer
$a(M)$
such that
$H^{\geq i}M\neq 0$
but
$H^{\geq i+1}M= 0$
. Define
$a(M)=i$
to be this integer. One can also define
$a(E)=a(\mathbf {c}(E))$
where E is a simple J-module and
$J_{\mathbf {c}(E)}$
is the unique two-sided ideal not annihilating E.
The algebra J linearizes the above filtration into an honest direct sum and implements the almost-independence on
$q\in \mathbb {C}^\times $
of the representation theory of
$H=\mathbf {H}|_{\mathbf {q}=q}$
as follows.
Theorem 1.4 [Reference Xi52].
-
1. Suppose that q is not a root of the Poincaré polynomial of
$\mathbf {G}$ . Then for each simple J-module E, the H module
${}^{\phi _q} E$ has a unique simple quotient L such that
$a(E)=a(L)$ . For all other simple subquotients
$L'$ of E, we have
$a(L')<a(E)$ .
Equivalently, for all admissible triples
$(u,s,\rho )$ , the representation
$K(u,s,\rho , q)$ of H has a unique nonzero simple quotient
$L=L(u,s,\rho , q)$ such that
$a(L)=a(\mathbf {c}(u))$ . That is, the Deligne-Langlands conjecture is true for
$\mathbf {H}|_{\mathbf {q}=q}$ .
-
2. If q is a root of the Poincaré polynomial of
$\mathbf {G}$ , then the Deligne-Langlands conjecture is false for the lowest cell. That is, if
$u=\{1\}$ , then every simple subquotient
$L'$ of
$K(u,s,\rho ,q)$ has
$a(L')<a(\mathbf {c}_0)$ .
By Theorem 1.2, the coefficients
$a_{1,d}$
have poles at every root of
$P_W$
, for all distinguished involutions d in the lowest two-sided cell
$\mathbf {c}_0$
. On the other hand, as we show in Example 3.10, there do exist cells
$\mathbf {c}\neq \mathbf {c}_0$
such that the coefficients
$a_{x,w}$
are nonsingular at certain roots of
$P_W$
, for all
$w\in \mathbf {c}$
and
$x\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. We encode the hope that this is no accident as
Conjecture 1.5. Let
$\tilde {W}$
be an affine Weyl group, and let
$q\in \mathbb {C}^\times $
be a root of
$P_W$
. Let
$\mathbf {c}$
be a two-sided cell such that if
$w\in \mathbf {c}$
, then
$a_{x,w}$
does not have a pole at
$\mathbf {q}=q$
for any
$x\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. Let
$u=u(\mathbf {c})$
. Let
$K(u,s,\rho )$
be a standard module in the notation of [Reference Kazhdan and Lusztig25]. Then the module
${}^\dagger {}^*K(u,s,\rho ,q)$
(see Definition 1.6 (a), (b) and the discussion following Theorem 2.7) has a unique simple quotient
$L=L(u,s,\rho , q)$
such that
$a(L)=a(E)$
, where E is the simple J module corresponding via
$\phi $
to
$(u,s,\rho )$
under [Reference Lusztig17, Thm. 4.2]. Two such simple modules are isomorphic if and only if their corresponding triples are conjugate.
Note that in type
$\tilde {A}_n$
, the number of two-sided cells grows as
$e^{\sqrt {n}}$
, whereas the number of subsets of roots of
$P_W$
is
$2^{n(n+1)/2}$
. For example in type
$\tilde {A}_1$
, there is only one root of
$P_W=\mathbf {q}+1$
, but there are two two-sided cells (and both are singular at
$\mathbf {q}=-1$
.) However, already in type
$\tilde {A}_3$
, one can see from Theorem 3.2 that the two-sided cell corresponding to the partition
$4=2+2$
is not singular at two of the roots of
$P_{A_3}(\mathbf {q})=(1+\mathbf {q})(1+\mathbf {q}+\mathbf {q}^2)(1+\mathbf {q}+\mathbf {q}^2+\mathbf {q}^3)$
; see Example 3.10.
1.1.3 Application: representations with parahoric-fixed vectors
In Section 4, we use the existence of the action of the asymptotic Hecke algebra on tempered G-representations to give a simple criterion for the existence of vectors fixed under a parahoric subgroup of G:
Theorem 4.1. Let
$\pi =K(u,s,\rho )$
be a simple tempered I-spherical representation of G. Let
$\mathcal {P}$
be a parahoric subgroup of G and let
$w_{\mathcal {P}}$
be the longest element in the corresponding subgroup of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. Let
$\mathcal {B}_u^\vee $
be the Springer fibre for u.
-
1. If
$\ell (w_{\mathcal {P}})>\dim \mathcal {B}_u^\vee $ , then
$\pi ^{\mathcal {P}}=\{0\}$ .
-
2. Conversely, let
$u_{\mathcal {P}}$ be the unipotent conjugacy class corresponding to the two-sided cell containing
$w_{\mathcal {P}}$ . Then there exists a semisimple element
$s\in Z_{G^\vee }(u_{\mathcal {P}})$ , a Levi subgroup
$M^\vee $ of
$G^\vee $ minimal such that
$(u_{\mathcal {P}},s)\in M^\vee $ , and a discrete series representation
$\omega \in \mathcal {E}_2(M)$ such that
$$\begin{align*}\pi^{\mathcal{P}}=i_{P_M}^G(\omega\otimes\nu)^{\mathcal{P}}\neq \{0\} \end{align*}$$
$\nu $ non-strictly positive and the parameter of
$\pi $ is
$(u_{\mathcal {P}},s)$ .
Thus starting from the regular unipotent class,
$\pi (t_{w_{\mathcal {P}}})=0$
until reaching the unipotent attached to
$w_{\mathcal {P}}$
. At this unipotent,
$\mathcal {P}$
-fixed vectors are first encountered, and
$t_{w_{\mathcal {P}}}$
acts by a nonzero projector with image contained in
$\pi ^{\mathcal {P}}$
. For lower cells, it may still be the case that
$\pi ^{\mathcal {P}}\neq 0$
, but
$t_{w_{\mathcal {P}}}$
will act by zero on such representations, too. Therefore the nonzero action of
$t_{w_{\mathcal {P}}}$
detects precisely the ‘most regular’ unipotent attached to
$\mathcal {P}$
-spherical representations, in the sense that if a representation
$\pi $
such that
$\pi ^{\mathcal {P}}\neq 0$
has the unipotent part of its parameter equal to u, then
$a(u)\geq a(u_{\mathcal {P}})$
. In this way the distinguished involutions
$t_{w_{\mathcal {P}}}$
are more exact versions of the corresponding indicator functions
$1_{\mathcal {P}}$
, at the expense of being more complicated to understand.
Remark 1.6. Recall from Section 1.1.2 that for every simple H-module M there is a number
$a(M)$
such that
$H^{\geq i}M=0$
for all
$i>a(M)$
. However, if
$(u,s,\rho )$
is the
$KL$
-parameter of M, then without knowing that M extends to a simple J-module, it does not follow that
$a(M)=\dim \mathcal {B}_u^\vee $
.
Remark 1.7. By [Reference Lusztig17, Theorem 4.8(d)] and the proof of [Reference Lusztig17, Lemma 5.5], every two-sided cell contains a distinguished involution contained in a finite parabolic subgroup of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
, but not every distinguished involution of a finite Coxeter group is the longest word of a parabolic subgroup, i.e. is of the form
$w_{\mathcal {P}}$
; approximately half of two-sided cells of the finite Weyl group
$W\subset W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
do not contain any distinguished involutions contained in proper parabolic subgroups, because of the cell-preserving bijection
$w\mapsto w_0w$
. For example, this happens for the second-lowest cell for
$E_8$
.
The existence of parahoric-fixed vectors is a rigid question, in the sense of the rigid cocentre of Ciubotaru-He [Reference Ciubotaru and He13]. We investigate this connection further in forthcoming work.
Some time after completing the present paper, we became aware of [Reference Guilhot and Parkinson19], which also studies the connection between the asymptotic Hecke algebra and the Plancherel theorem in type
$\tilde {G}_2$
, for unequal parameters. In op. cit. the authors speculate that the ‘asymptotic Plancherel measure’ of op. cit. should be related to the perspective of [Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11] on J. We defer investigation of this to future work, but note that in light of both the classic work [Reference Morris35] of Morris, and recent work [Reference Solleveld47] of Solleveld, the unequal parameters case is relevant even to split p-adic groups. In particular, establishing results similar to those of the present paper for unequal parameters may provide an effective way to study the algebra
$\mathcal {J}$
of Braverman and Kazhdan given in Definition 1.9 of [Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11].
1.2 Outline of the argument
This paper is organized according to our strategy for proving Theorems 1.2, Theorem 3.21, and Corollary 3.20.
These results are each simple corollaries of computations with the Plancherel formula and some of Lusztig’s results on J. The remainder of this section will introduce
$\mathbf {H}$
and J precisely, and recall their basic representation theory. In Section 2, we introduce Harish-Chandra’s Plancherel formula in detail, along with all the numerical constants that appear in it. In Section 2.4, we recall the results of Braverman-Kazhdan from [Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11]. There is no original material in the first two sections. In Section 2.8, we prepare to apply the Plancherel formula by proving that, if
$f_w$
is the Schwartz function associated by Braverman-Kazhdan to
$t_w$
, and
$\pi $
is a tempered representation, then
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{f_w}\right )$
is sufficiently regular so as not to complicate the denominators of
$a_{x,w}$
. This section is also mostly a recollection of standard material, the only original result being Lemma 2.17.
In Section 3, we prove most of our main results. As we are able to be more precise in type
$\tilde {A}_n$
, we perform each step in parallel for type
$\tilde {A}_n$
and for other types: in Sections 3.1 and 3.2 we prove statements like those of Theorem 1.2 for the Schwartz functions
$f_w$
. In these sections
$\mathbf {q}$
is specialized to a prime power q. In Section 3.3 we relate the functions
$f_w$
to the basis elements
$t_w$
, turning statements that hold for all prime powers q into statements that hold for the formal variable
$\mathbf {q}$
. We are then able to prove our main results.
In Section 4, we state our application about the existence of parahoric-fixed vectors.
1.3 The affine Hecke algebra
Let F be a non-archimedean local field,
$\mathcal {O}$
its ring of integers and
$\varpi $
be a uniformizer. Let q be the cardinality of the residue field. Then
$q=p^r$
is a prime power. We write
$|\cdot |_F$
for the p-adic absolute value on F; when necessary,
$|\cdot |_\infty $
will denote the archimedean absolute value on
$\mathbb {C}$
.
Let
$\mathbf {G}$
be a connected reductive algebraic group defined and split over F,
$\mathbf {A}$
a maximal F-split torus of
$\mathbf {G}$
, and
$X_*=X_*(\mathbf {A})$
the cocharacter lattice of
$\mathbf {A}$
. Let
$\pi _1(G)=X_*/\mathbb {Z}\Phi ^\vee $
be the fundamental group, the quotient of the cocharacter lattice by the coroot lattice. Let
$\mathbf {N}$
be unipotent radical of a chosen Borel subgroup
$\mathbf {B}$
, so that
$\mathbf {B}=\mathbf {A}\mathbf {N}$
. Let W be the finite Weyl group of
$\mathbf {G}$
, and
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}=W\ltimes X_*(\mathbf {A})$
be the extended affine Weyl group. Write S for the set of simple reflections in
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. Let
$\mathbf {G}^\vee $
be the Langlands dual group of
$\mathbf {G}$
, taken over
$\mathbb {C}$
. We write
$G=\mathbf {G}(F)$
,
$A=\mathbf {A}(F)$
, etc. Where there is no danger of confusion, we also write
$G^\vee $
for
$\mathbf {G}^\vee (\mathbb {C})$
,
$M^\vee $
for
$\mathbf {M}^\vee (\mathbb {C})$
, etc. Let K be the maximal compact subgroup
$\mathbf {G}(\mathcal {O})$
. Also let I be the Iwahori subgroup of G that is the preimage of
$\mathbf {B}(\mathbb {F}_q)$
in K. We sometimes write
$P_{\mathbf {G}/\mathbf {B}}$
for
$P_W$
, as this polynomial is also the Poincaré polynomial of the flag variety
$(\mathbf {G}/\mathbf {B})(\mathbb {C})$
.
We write
$\mathbf {H}$
for the affine Hecke algebra of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. It is a unital associative algebra over the ring
$\mathcal {A}=\mathbb {C}[\mathbf {q}^{\frac {1}{2}},\mathbf {q}^{-\frac {1}{2}}]$
(in fact, it is defined over
$\mathbb {Z}[\mathbf {q}^{\frac {1}{2}},\mathbf {q}^{-\frac {1}{2}}]$
but we will work over
$\mathbb {C}$
to avoid having to introduce extra notation later), where
$\mathbf {q}^{\frac {1}{2}}$
is a formal variable. We will think of
$\mathbb {C}^\times $
as
$\operatorname {\mathrm {Spec}}\mathcal {A}$
. The algebra
$\mathbf {H}$
has the Coxeter presentation with standard basis
$\{T_w\}_{w\in \tilde {W}}$
with
$T_wT_{w'}=T_{ww'}$
if
$\ell (ww')=\ell (w)+\ell (w')$
and quadratic relation
$(T_s+1)(T_s-\mathbf {q})=0$
for
$s\in S$
. We write
$\theta _\lambda $
for the generators of the Bernstein subalgebra.
Recall from [Reference Kazhdan and Lusztig24] the two Kazhdan-Lusztig bases
$\{C_w\}_{w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}}$
and
$\{C^{\prime }_w\}_{w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}}$
of
$\mathbf {H}$
, where

for the Kazhdan-Lusztig polynomials
$P_{x,w}$
. Write
$C_xC_y=\sum _{z\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}}h_{x,y,z}C_z$
. The inverse Kazhdan-Lusztig polynomials
$Q_{y,x}$
are the unique family of polynomials satisfying

or equivalently, satisfying

along with some restrictions on their degrees. For example, we shall use in Section 3.3.2 that
$\deg Q_{y,x}\leq \frac {1}{2}(\ell (x)-\ell (y)-1)$
. See [Reference Bjorner and Brenti9] for further exposition.
If

is a Coxeter group automorphism of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
, then

is an algebra automorphism of
$\mathbf {H}$
commuting with the bar involution, and therefore given equivalently by

and

It is well-known that there is an isomorphism of associative
$\mathbb {C}$
-algebras

where
$\mathbf {q}$
acts on
$\mathbb {C}$
by multiplication by q.
1.4 The asymptotic Hecke algebra
Definition 1.1.
Lusztig’s a-function
$a\colon {W}_{\mathrm{aff}} \to \mathbb {Z}_{\geq 0}$
is defined such that
$a(w)$
is the minimal value such that
$\mathbf {q}^{\frac {a(w)}{2}}h_{x,y,w}\in \mathcal {A}^+=\mathbb {C}[\mathbf {q}^{1/2}]$
for all
$x,y\in \tilde {W}$
.
The a-function is constant on two-sided cells of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. Obviously,
$a(1)=0$
, and the a-function obtains its maximum, equal to the number of positive roots, on the two-sided cell containing the longest word
$w_0\in W$
. In general, under the bijection between two-sided cells
$\mathbf {c}$
of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
and unipotent conjugacy classes
$u=u(\mathbf {c})$
in
$G^\vee $
of [Reference Lusztig17], we have

where
$\mathcal {B}_u^\vee $
is the Springer fibre of u. We have
$a(w)\leq \ell (w)$
for all
$w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
.
In [Reference Lusztig28], Lusztig defined an associative algebra J over
$\mathbb {C}$
equipped with an injection
$\phi \colon \mathbf {H}\mathrel {\hookrightarrow } J\otimes _{\mathbb {C}}\mathcal {A}$
which becomes an isomorphism after taking a certain completion, to be recalled in Section 3.3.1, of both sides. As a
$\mathbb {C}$
-vector space, J has basis
$\{t_w\} _{w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}}$
. The structure constants of J are obtained from those of
$\mathbf {H}$
written in the
$\{C_w\}_{w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}}$
-basis under the following procedure: first, the integer
$\gamma _{x,y,z}$
is defined by the condition

One then defines

Surprisingly, this defines a unital associative algebra with unit

where
$\mathcal {D}$
is the (finite) set of distinguished involutions [Reference Lusztig28]. The elements
$t_d$
are orthogonal idempotents in J, which decomposes as a direct sum indexed by the two-sided cells of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
in the sense of [Reference Lusztig27]. Each left cell, again in the sense of op. cit., contains a single distinguished involution which is the unit in the ring
$t_dJt_d$
. If
$\mathbf {c}$
is a two-sided cell, then
$J_{\mathbf {c}}$
is a is a unital ring with unit

Lusztig further defined a map of algebras

given by

Write
$\phi _q$
for the specialization of this map when
$\mathbf {q}=q$
. It is known [Reference Lusztig29, Proposition 1.7] that
$\phi _q$
is injective for all
$q\in \mathbb {C}^\times $
.
Lemma 1.8. Let

be a Coxeter group automorphism. Then
-
1. The map
$t_w\mapsto t_{\varphi (w)}$ defines a based ring automorphism of J, which we also denote
$\varphi $ .
-
2. The map
$\phi $ is
$\varphi $ -linear, in the sense that it commutes with the automorphism from the first statement and the automorphism (1.3).
Proof. The first statement is [Reference Lusztig and Xi32, 2.2(g)].
For the second statement, note that
$\varphi $
acts on
$\mathcal {D}$
and that

and

Now if
$z_1=\varphi (z_2)$
, then
$d_1=\varphi (d_2)$
, and

by (1.3).
1.4.1 Deformations of the group ring
Upon setting
$\mathbf {q}=1$
,
$\mathbf {H}|_{\mathbf {q}=1}$
is isomorphic to
$\mathbb {C}[{W}_{\mathrm{aff}}]$
, and so
$\mathbf {H}$
is a deformation of the group algebra of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
.
Let, temporarily, W be any finite Coxeter group. Then one can define its Hecke algebra
$\mathbf {H}$
, an algebra over
$\mathbb {Z}[\mathbf {q}^{\frac {1}{2}},\mathbf {q}^{-\frac {1}{2}}]$
which deforms the group ring
$\mathbb {Z}[W]$
. Let
$q\in \mathbb {C}^\times $
. For all but finitely many values of q, all roots of unity, the algebras
$\mathbf {H}_{\mathbf {q}=q}$
are trivial deformations of
$\mathbb {C}[W]$
, and hence are all isomorphic. However, this isomorphism requires choosing a square root of q. The affine Hecke algebra provides a canonical isomorphism: away from finitely many q, we have that
$\mathbf {H}|_{\mathbf {q}=q}$
is isomorphic to J, and J is defined over
$\mathbb {Z}$
(although, as stated above, we will view it as a
$\mathbb {C}$
- algebra to unburden notation), see [Reference Lusztig31, Section 20.1 (e)].
Example 1.9. Let
$W=\left \langle 1,s\,\middle |\,s^2=1\right \rangle $
be the Weyl group of type
$A_1$
. The Kazhdan-Lusztig
$C_w$
-basis elements are
$C_1=T_1$
and
$C_s=\mathbf {q}^{-\frac {1}{2}}T_s-\mathbf {q}^{\frac {1}{2}}T_1$
, and
$\mathcal {D}=W$
in this case. There are two two-sided cells in W, and one can easily check that

and

Specializing
$\mathbf {q}=q$
, we see that
$\phi $
becomes an isomorphism whenever
$\left (q^{\frac {1}{2}}+q^{-\frac {1}{2}}\right )\neq 0$
, that is, whenever
$q\neq -1$
.
1.5 Representation theory of
$\mathbf {H}$
and J
Recall the classification of finite-dimensional
$\mathbf {H}$
-modules given in [Reference Kazhdan and Lusztig25]. For an extended exposition with slightly different conventions, we refer the reader to [Reference Chriss and Ginzburg12]. The primary difference between the setup we require and that of [Reference Chriss and Ginzburg12] is that we must be able to defer specializing
$\mathbf {q}$
until the last possible moment, whereas specializing
$\mathbf {q}$
is the first step of the construction as given in [Reference Chriss and Ginzburg12]. In particular, let
$u\in \mathbf {G}^\vee (\mathbb {C})$
be a unipotent element, and
$s\in \mathbf {G}^\vee (\mathbb {C})$
be a semisimple element such that
$us=su$
. Let
$\rho $
be an irreducible representation of the simultaneous centralizer
$Z_{G^\vee }(s,u)$
. The standard H-module
$K(s,u,\rho )$
is a certain, and in general reducible, H-module defined using the geometry of the flag variety of the Langlands dual group. It may be the zero module; we say that
$(u,s,\rho )$
is admissible when this does not happen. Having fixed s and u, we say that
$\rho $
is admissible if
$(u,s,\rho )$
is.
We now recall an algebraic version of the Langlands classification. As we do not have access to the notion of absolute value of
$\mathbf {q}$
, the classical definitions of tempered and discrete-series representations of the corresponding p-adic group G are not available to us. However, Kazhdan-Lusztig provide the following algebraic generalization. Let
$\mathcal {K}=\mathbb {C}(\mathbf {q}^{-\frac {1}{2}})$
and
$\bar {\mathcal {K}}$
be the algebraic closure of
$\mathcal {K}$
. We write
$\mathbf {H}_{\bar {\mathcal {K}}}$
for
$\mathbf {H}\otimes _{\mathcal {A}}\bar {\mathcal {K}}$
and recall another definition of Lusztig’s from [Reference Lusztig17].
Definition 1.2. Let M be a
$H_{\bar {\mathcal {K}}}$
-module finite-dimensional over
$\bar {\mathcal {K}}$
. Say that
$m\in M$
is an eigenvector if
$\theta _x\cdot m=\chi _m(x)m$
for all dominant x in
$X_*$
. As
$\chi _m$
is a character of the coweight lattice, it corresponds to an element
$\sigma _m\in \mathbf {A}^\vee (\bar {\mathcal {K}})$
in the sense that, for all cocharacters x of A, we have

where x is viewed as a character of
$\mathbf {A}^\vee $
. Then M is of constant type if there is a semisimple element
$s'\in \mathbf {G}^\vee (\mathbb {C})$
and a morphism of algebraic groups

such that for all eigenvectors m of M, the element
$\sigma _m$
is
$\mathbf {G}^\vee (\bar {\mathcal {K}})$
-conjugate to

where by abuse of notation we have written
$\phi '$
again for the base-change to
$\bar {\mathcal {K}}$
.
The idea of the name of the definition is that
$s'\in \mathbf {G}^\vee (\mathbb {C})$
is a ‘constant element’ not depending on
$\mathbf {q}$
.
Next is a generalization of Casselman’s criterion, which as such, requires a choice of dominant weights. Following [Reference Kazhdan and Lusztig25] (see the proof of Prop. 1.6 of loc. cit.) and [Reference Lusztig17, Section 1.6], we choose the positive roots to be those occurring in
$\mathfrak {g}/\mathfrak {b}$
.
Following [Reference Lusztig17], we choose a morphism of groups
$V\colon \bar {\mathcal {K}}^\times \to \mathbb {R}$
such that
$V(\mathbf {q}^{\frac {1}{2}})=1$
and
$V(a\mathbf {q}^{\frac {1}{2}}+b)=0$
for all
$a\in \mathbb {C}$
,
$b\in \mathbb {C}^\times $
.
Definition 1.3 [Reference Lusztig17], c.f. [Reference Kazhdan and Lusztig25].
Let M be any finite-dimensional
$\mathbf {H}_{\bar {\mathcal {K}}}$
-module. We say that M is V-tempered if all eigenvalues
$\nu $
of
$\theta _\lambda $
for all dominant
$\lambda \in X_*(\mathbf {A})$
satisfy
$V(\nu )\leq 0$
.
The representation theory of J is very well understood. We shall recall some notation and then state some major classification results of Lusztig, which relate the representation theory of J to certain
$\mathbf {H}$
-modules defined by Kazhdan-Lusztig.
Definition 1.4. Let E be a J-module. Then
$E\otimes _{\mathbb {C}}\mathcal {K}$
is a
$J\otimes _{\mathbb {C}}\mathcal {K}$
-module. Hence
$\mathbf {H}_{\mathcal {K}}$
acts on E via
$\phi $
. Denote the resulting
$\mathbf {H}_{\mathcal {K}}$
module by
${}^\phi E$
.
1.5.1 Involutions on
$\mathbf {H}$
For
$x\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
, let
$\omega (x)\in \pi _1(G)$
label the
$W\ltimes \mathbb {Z}\Phi ^\vee $
-coset of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
containing x, and write
$\omega (x)=\omega (x)_f\omega (x)_t\in W\ltimes X_*$
. Then every
$y\leq x$
is also in the coset of
$\omega (x)$
.
Definition 1.5. Let
$j\colon \mathbf {H}\to \mathbf {H}$
be the ring (and not
$\mathcal {A}$
-algebra) involution of
$\mathbf {H}$
defined by
$j(\sum _wa_wT_w)=\sum _w\bar {a}_w(-1)^{\ell (w)}\mathbf {q}^{-\ell (w)}T_w$
.
The j-involution exchanges the
$\{C_w\}$
and
$\{C_w'\}$
-bases [Reference Kazhdan and Lusztig24].
The reason for our choice of conventions, which differ slightly from those of [Reference Lusztig29] and [Reference Lusztig17], is the presence of the involution
$\dagger $
and its exchange of temperedness and anti-temperedness in the relationship between H-modules and J-modules; see Theorem 1.13 and Lemma 1.10 below.
Definition 1.6.
-
(a) Define the
$\mathcal {A}$ -algebra involution
${}^\dagger (-)$ of
$\mathbf {H}$ by setting
$$\begin{align*}{}^\dagger T_w=(-1)^{\ell(w_f)}\mathbf{q}^{\ell(w)}T_{w^{-1}}^{-1},~~~w=w_f\lambda\in W_{\mathrm{aff}}. \end{align*}$$
$w_f$ .
-
(b) Let
$h\mapsto {}^*h$ be the
$\mathcal {A}$ -involution defined in terms of the Bernstein presentation of
$\mathbf {H}$ : by
$$\begin{align*}{}^*T_w=(-1)^{\ell(w)}\mathbf{q}^{\ell(w)}T_{w^{-1}}^{-1},~~~ w\in W \end{align*}$$
$$\begin{align*}{}^*\theta_\lambda=\theta_{\lambda}^{-1},~~~\lambda\in X_*. \end{align*}$$
-
(c) ([Reference Prasad40, Section 5.a].) Let
$\bar {\kappa }$ be the
$\mathcal {A}$ -linear involution defined by
$$\begin{align*}\bar{\kappa}(T_w)=T_{\bar{\kappa}(w)} \end{align*}$$
$\bar {\kappa }(s)=w_0sw_0$ for
$s\in S\setminus \left \{s_0\right \}$ and
$\bar {\kappa }(s_0)=s_0$ , so that
$\bar {\kappa }(\lambda )=-w_0(\lambda )$ for
$\lambda \in X_*$ ; equivalently
$$\begin{align*}\bar{\kappa}(T_w)=T_{w_0ww_0^{-1}},~~~ w\in W,~~~ \bar{\kappa}(\theta_\lambda)=\theta_{-w_0(\lambda)},~~~\lambda\in X_*. \end{align*}$$
-
(d) ([Reference Barbasch and Moy5, Section 5].) Let
$h\mapsto {}^\bullet h$ be the
$\mathcal {A}$ -linear anti-involution defined by
$$\begin{align*}{}^\bullet T_w=T_{w^{-1}},~~~w\in W ,~~~ {}^\bullet\theta_\lambda=\theta_\lambda,~~\lambda\in X_*. \end{align*}$$
-
(e) ([Reference Barbasch and Moy5, Section 5].) Let
$h\mapsto {}^\star h$ be the
$\mathcal {A}$ -linear anti-involution defined by
$$\begin{align*}{}^\star T_w=T_{w^{-1}},~~~w\in W ,~~~ {}^\star\theta_\lambda=T_{w_0}\theta_{\bar{\kappa}(\lambda)}T_{w_0}^{-1},~~\lambda\in X_*. \end{align*}$$
By [Reference Opdam38, Prop. 2.9],
${}^\star T_w=T_{w^{-1}}$
for
$w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. When G is simply connected, the involution
$\dagger $
agrees with the Goldman involution of
$\mathbf {H}$
. Now we have
Lemma 1.10. We have
-
(a) We have
${}^\dagger C_x=(-1)^{\ell (\omega (x)_f)}j(C_w)=(-1)^{\ell (x)+\ell (\omega (x)_f)}C^{\prime }_x$ for all
$x\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$ .
-
(b) We have
${}^\dagger \theta _\lambda = T_{w_0}\theta _{-\bar {\kappa }(\lambda )}T_{w_0}^{-1}=T_{w_0}\theta _{\bar {\kappa }(\lambda )}^{-1}T_{w_0}^{-1}$ .
-
(c) We have
${}^\bullet {}^\star {}^\dagger (-)={}^*(-)$ as involutions on
$\mathbf {H}$ .
-
(d) We have
${}^\bullet (-) \circ {}^\star (-)=T_{w_0}^{-1}\bar {\kappa }(-)T_{w_0}$ as automorphisms of
$\mathbf {H}$ .
-
(e) We have the commutative diagram
Proof. By definition, if
$x=\omega x'$
for
$x'\in W\ltimes \mathbb {Z}\Phi ^\vee $
and
$\omega \in \pi _1(G)$
, then
$C^{\prime }_x=T_\omega C^{\prime }_{x'}$
and
$C_x=T_\omega C_{x'}$
. Further, if
$\omega =\omega _f\omega _t\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
has
$\ell (\omega )=0$
, then
${}^\dagger T_\omega =(-1)^{\ell (\omega _f)}T_\omega $
. Therefore it suffices to show that

as
$\mathcal {A}$
-antilinear automorphisms of
$\mathbf {H}$
for G simply connected. In this case,
$\ell (\lambda )\in 2\mathbb {Z}$
for any dominant
$\lambda \in X_*$
, whence
${}^\dagger (-)$
agrees with the involution
$T_w\mapsto (-1)^{\ell (w)}\mathbf {q}^{\ell (w)}T_{w^{-1}}^{-1}$
,
$w\in W\ltimes \mathbb {Z}\Phi ^\vee $
. Therefore we compute

whereas

Thus we have
$\overline {^\dagger C_w}=(-1)^{\ell (w)}C^{\prime }_w$
for G simply connected, whence (a).
It suffices to prove (b) for
$\lambda $
dominant, in which case

where we used the equivalence of the definitions in Definition 1.6 (e). This shows (b).
For (c), we again compute, for
$\lambda $
dominant, that

Agreement on
$T_w$
for
$w\in W$
follows from the fact that
${}^{\bullet \star }(-)$
is the identity on the finite Hecke algebra. This shows (c).
On the Bernstein subalgebra, part (d) follows from the definitions. On the finite Hecke algebra, we must show that the right hand side is the identity automorphism. For s a finite reflection, write
$w_0sw_0=\bar {\kappa }(s)$
, again a finite reflection, so that
$\bar {\kappa }(s)w_0s=w_0$
, and

Therefore on the finite Hecke algebra,
$\bar {\kappa }$
is given by conjugation by
$T_{w_0}$
.
Commutativity of the right square in (e) follows from Lemma 1.8, and commutativity of the left square follows from (c) and (d).
Given an
$\mathbf {H}$
(or
$\mathbf {H}_{\mathcal {K}}$
)-module M, define
${}^\dagger M$
to be the same vector space with the
$\mathbf {H}$
-action twisted by this involution, and likewise for other automorphisms.
Corollary 1.11. Twisting by
${}^\dagger (-)$
exchanges tempered and anti-tempered H-modules.
Proof. Immediate from Lemma 1.10 (b).
In fact, more is true: by [Reference Kato23, Thm. 2],
${}^\dagger M$
is the Aubert-Zelevinski dual of M.
Remark 1.12. There is another natural auto-equivalence of the category of admissible representations of G which exchanges tempered and anti-tempered representations, namely Bernstein’s cohomological duality. This functor differs from Aubert-Zelevinski duality by the contragredient [Reference Schneider and Stuhler43] (c.f. [Reference Nori and Prasad37]). On semisimple H-modules
$\pi $
, we have
${}^{\bar {\kappa }}\pi =\tilde {\pi }$
, by [Reference Prasad40, Prop. 6.3]. Therefore twist by the involution
${}^*(-)$
, which manifestly exchanges tempered and anti-tempered representations, induces on semisimple modules the cohomological duality. However, it does not do so in general, because
$\bar {\kappa }$
does not induce the contragredient in general. Indeed, for
$G=\mathrm {SL}_2(F)$
,
$\bar {\kappa }=\mathrm {id}$
but not all non-unitary principal series of G are self-dual. Therefore the operation
${}^*(-)$
is less natural than
${}^\dagger (-)$
; this is perhaps reflected by the fact that the formulas in Theorem 1.2 are nicer than those for
$(\phi \circ {}^*(-))^{-1}(t_w)$
, which are related to those of the Theorem by Lemma 1.10 (e).
We now summarize the relationship between representations of
$\mathbf {H}$
and of J.
Theorem 1.13 ([Reference Lusztig17], Prop. 2.11, Thm. 4.2, Prop. 4.4).
There are bijections of sets

where
$K(u,s,\rho )$
is a standard module as in [Reference Kazhdan and Lusztig25]. Moreover, for a simple J-module E,
-
1. E is finite-dimensional over
$\mathbb {C}$ ;
-
2. There is a unique two-sided cell
$\mathbf {c}=\mathbf {c}(E)$ of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$ such that
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({E}\,,{t_w}\right )\neq 0$ implies
$w\in \mathbf {c}$ .
-
3.
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({E}\,,{t_w}\right )$ is the constant term of the polynomial
$$\begin{align*}(-\mathbf{q}^{1/2})^{a(\mathbf{c}(E))}\mathrm{trace}\left({M}\,,{C_w}\right)\in\mathbb{C}[\mathbf{q}^{\frac{1}{2}}] \end{align*}$$
$M\simeq {}^\phi E$ .
In particular,
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({E}\,,{t_w}\right )$
is independent of
$\mathbf {q}$
, and upon specializing
$\mathbf {q}=q$
a prime power, will be a regular function in the twisting character in the setting of the Paley-Wiener theorem for the Iwahori-Hecke algebra of the p-adic group G, as we will explain in greater detail below.
We will comment even further in Section 2.4 on the necessity of twisting by some
$\mathbf {H}$
-involution exchanging tempered and anti-tempered modules, and how it is sufficient to twist
$\phi $
by either
${}^*(-)$
or
${}^\dagger(-)$
, respectively but that the latter twist leads to nicer formulas.
2 Harish-Chandra’s Plancherel formula
We recall the notation and classical results we will need about the Plancherel formula. For Iwahori-biinvariant Schwartz functions, the Plancherel formula is known explicitly for all connected reductive groups, and is due to Opdam in [Reference Opdam38]. In the case of
$G=\mathrm {GL}_n(F)$
, we shall refer instead to [Reference Aubert and Plymen4] (where in fact the Plancherel formula is computed explicitly in its entirety for
$\mathrm {GL}_n$
). In the case
$\mathbf {G}=\mathrm {Sp}_4$
, we shall refer to the unpublished work [Reference Aubert and Kim3] of Aubert and Kim. For
$\mathbf {G}=G_2$
, we will refer to Parkinson [Reference Parkinson39].
In this section q is a prime power (or at least a real number of absolute value strictly greater than
$1$
). The formal variable
$\mathbf {q}$
will not appear in this section.
2.1 Tempered and discrete series representations
We take our definitions of discrete series and tempered representations from [Reference Waldspurger48, III.1] and [Reference Waldspurger48, III.2] respectively. By parabolic induction we always understand normalized induction.
Definition 2.1. A smooth admissible representation
$\omega $
of G belongs to the discrete series if
$\omega $
admits a unitary central character and all matrix coefficients of
$\omega $
are square-integrable modulo
$Z(G)$
. We write
$\mathcal {E}_2(G)$
for the space of irreducible discrete series, and
$\mathcal {E}_2(G)^I$
for the space of irreducible discrete series with nontrivial Iwahori-fixed vectors.
Let v be the K-fixed vector in the self-contragredient representation
$\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_{B}^G(\mathrm {triv})^K$
such that
$v(1)=1$
. Define
$\Xi (g)=\left \langle \pi (g)v , v\right \rangle $
to be the corresponding matrix coefficient.
Definition 2.2. A smooth function f on G is tempered if there is
$C>0$
and
$r\in \mathbb {R}$
such that

where
$\left \| g \right \|\geq 1$
is defined as in [Reference Waldspurger48, p.242].
Definition 2.3. A smooth admissible representation
$\pi $
of G is tempered if all its matrix coefficients are tempered functions in the sense above.
We write
$\mathcal {M}_t(G)$
for the category of tempered representations of G. If a tempered representation admits a central character, the central character takes values in the circle group
$\mathbb {T}\subset \mathbb {C}^\times $
.
The tempered representations are built from the discrete series according to the following theorem of Harish-Chandra, as related in [Reference Waldspurger48, Prop. III.4.1].
Theorem 2.1 (Harish-Chandra).
Let P be a parabolic subgroup of G with Levi subgroup M, and let
$\omega \in \mathcal {E}_2(M)$
. Let
$\nu $
be a unitary character of M. Then
$\pi =\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\omega \otimes \nu )$
is a tempered representation. Every simple tempered representation is a direct summand of a representation of this form.
2.1.1 Formal degrees of discrete series representations
We will soon study the Plancherel decomposition
$f=\sum _{M}f_M$
of the Schwartz function f determined by an element of J as explained in Section 2.4. As will be explained below, each function
$f_M$
is given by an integral formula that involves several constants that depend on the Levi subgroup M, or are functions on the discrete series of M. These constants are rational functions of q, the most sensitive of which is the formal degree
$d(\omega )$
of
$\omega \in \mathcal {E}_2(M)^I$
. Much is known about formal degrees for I-spherical
$\omega $
; the most general current result seems to be
Theorem 2.2 ([Reference Solleveld46], [Reference Feng, Opdam and Solleveld16], Theorem 5.1 (b), [Reference Gross and Reeder18] Proposition 4.1).
Let
$\mathbf {G}$
be connected reductive over F. Let
$\omega $
be any unipotent – in particular, any Iwahori-spherical – discrete series representation of
$G=\mathbf {G}(F)$
. Then
$d(\omega )$
is a rational function of q, the numerator and denominator of which are products of factors of the form
$q^{m/2}$
with
$m\in \mathbb {Z}$
and
$(q^n-1)$
with
$n\in \mathbb {N}$
. Moreover, there is a polynomial
$\Delta _G$
depending only on G and F such that
$\Delta _Gd(\omega )$
is a polynomial in q.
This result is proven by first proving that the Hiraga-Ichino-Ikeda conjecture [Reference Hiraga, Ichino and Ikeda22] holds for unipotent discrete series representations. Note that [Reference Solleveld46], [Reference Feng, Opdam and Solleveld16] and [Reference Hiraga, Ichino and Ikeda22] all use the normalization of the Haar measure on G defined in [Reference Hiraga, Ichino and Ikeda22]. This normalization gives in our setting
$\mu _{\mathrm {HII}}(K)=q^{\dim \mathbf {G}}\#\mathbf {G}(\mathbb {F}_q)$
. Hence, noting that
$\#\mathbf {G}(\mathbb {F}_q)=P_{\mathbf {G}/\mathbf {B}}(q)\cdot \#\mathbf {B}(\mathbb {F}_q)$
and that, as
$\mathbb {F}_q$
is perfect,
$\#B(\mathbb {F}_q)$
is a polynomial in q, we have

and so this question of normalization cannot affect the denominators of
$d(\omega )$
, for any Levi subgroup.
In the Iwahori-spherical case, Opdam showed the above result in [Reference Opdam38, Proposition 3.27 (v)], although with less control over the possible factors appearing in the numerator and denominator of
$d(\omega )$
. We emphasize that op. cit. does not make the splitness assumption we allow ourselves.
Remark 2.3. Proposition 4.1 of [Reference Gross and Reeder18] studies not the
$\gamma $
-factor we are interested in, but rather its quotient by the
$\gamma $
-factor for the Steinberg representation. However, accounting for the use of the Euler-Poincaré measure
$\mu _{\mathrm {HII}}$
on G, and known formula for the formal degree of the Steinberg representation, one may recover our desired statement about formal degrees from the main theorem and equation (61) of [Reference Gross and Reeder18].
2.2 Harish-Chandra’s canonical measure
In this section, we recall the standard coordinates used in [Reference Aubert and Plymen4], and [Reference Waldspurger48]. We follow both references closely. These conventions differ slightly from the original [Reference Harish-Chandra21]. Everything in this section is standard, but we include details because we do require explicit measures with which to compute. We state the below for general
$\mathbf {G}$
, for application to each standard Levi subgroup of
$\mathbf {G}$
.
2.2.1 Unramified characters
Let
$X^*(\mathbf {G})=\mathrm {Hom}(\mathbf {G}, {\mathbb {G}_{\mathrm {m}}})$
denote the rational characters of
$\mathbf {G}$
defined over F. Let
$\mathfrak {a}_G:=(X^*(\mathbf {A})\otimes _{\mathbb {Z}}\mathbb {R})^*=(X^*(\mathbf {G})\otimes _{\mathbb {Z}}\mathbb {R})^*$
be the real Lie algebra of the maximal split central torus
$\mathbf {A}=\mathbf {A}_G$
of
$\mathbf {G}$
and let
${\mathfrak {a}_G}_{\mathbb {C}}$
be its complexification. We have a map

given by
$\chi \mapsto |\chi |_F$
, where
$|\chi |_F(g)=|\chi (g)|_F$
and
$G^1=\bigcap _{\chi \in X^*(\mathbf {G})}\ker |\chi |_F$
. This gives the unramified characters
$\mathcal {X}(G)$
a complex manifold structure under which
$\mathcal {X}(G)\simeq (\mathbb {C}^\times )^{\dim _{\mathbb {R}}\mathfrak {a}_G}$
. For indeed, we have

given by

The kernel is spanned by all
$\chi \otimes s$
such that
$s{\mathrm {val}}(\chi (g))\in \frac {2\pi i}{\log q}\mathbb {Z}$
for all
$g\in G$
. Hence the kernel is
$\frac {2\pi i}{\log q}R$
, where
$R\subset X^*(\mathbf {A})\otimes _{\mathbb {Z}}\mathbb {Q}$
is a lattice. In this way the quotient
$\mathcal {X}(G)$
is a complex manifold.
2.2.2 Unitary unramified characters
Denote by
$\mathrm {Im}\,\mathcal {X}(G)$
the set of unitary unramified characters taking values in the unit circle
$\mathbb {T}\subset \mathbb {C}^\times $
. This notation is justified, as if
$|\chi |_F=|\chi '|_F$
, then
$\mathrm {Re}(\chi )=\mathrm {Re}(\chi ')\in \mathfrak {a}_G^*$
. Hence we can define
$\mathrm {Im}\,\mathcal {X}(G)$
to be the unramified characters coming from pure imaginary elements of
${\mathfrak {a}_G}_{\mathbb {C}}^*$
.
The surjection
$\mathrm {Im}\,\mathcal {X}(G)\to \mathrm {Im}\,\mathcal {X}(A)$
has finite kernel, and
$\mathrm {Im}\,\mathcal {X}(A)$
is compact. We choose the Haar measure on it with volume one.
2.2.3 Action by twisting and the canonical measure
The group
$\mathcal {X}(G)$
acts on admissible representations of G by twisting:
$\omega \mapsto \omega \otimes \nu $
for
$\nu \in \mathcal {X}(G)$
. This restricts to an action of
$\mathrm {Im}\,\mathcal {X}(G)$
on
$\mathcal {E}_2(G)$
.
Pulling this action back to
$i\mathfrak {a}_G^*$
, and given a representation
$\omega $
, let
$L^*$
be its stabilizer in
$i\mathfrak {a}_G^*$
, so that the orbit
$\mathfrak {o}$
of
$\omega $
is identified as
$i{\mathfrak {a}_G}^*/L^*$
. This gives
$\mathfrak {o}=\mathrm {Im}\,\mathcal {X}(G)\cdot \omega $
the structure of a real submanifold of the larger orbit
$\mathfrak {o}_{\mathbb {C}}={\mathfrak {a}_G}^*_{\mathbb {C}}/L^*=\mathcal {X}(G)\cdot \omega $
.
Definition 2.4. Given an orbit
$\mathfrak {o}\subset \mathcal {E}_2(G)$
, the Harish-Chandra canonical measure on
$\mathfrak {o}$
is the Euclidean measure on
$\mathfrak {o}$
whose pullback to
$\mathrm {Im}\,\mathcal {X}(G)$
agrees with the pullback of the Haar measure on
$\mathrm {Im}\,\mathcal {X}(A)$
.
Hence even though the construction of the canonical measure is slightly involved, in practice it will be easy to recognize as being essentially the Haar measure on the compact torus
$\mathrm {Im}\,\mathcal {X}(A)$
.
Example 2.4. If
$G=\mathrm {SL}_2(F)$
and
$M=A$
is the diagonal torus, we have
$\mathfrak {a}_G^*\simeq \mathbb {R}$
and
$R=\mathbb {Z}$
so that a fundamental domain for
$\mathfrak {a}_G^*/\frac {2\pi }{\log q}R$
is
$\left [-\frac {\pi }{\log q},\frac {\pi }{\log q}\right )$
and the canonical measure
$d\nu =\frac {\log q}{2\pi } \mathrm {d}x$
, where
$\mathrm {d}x$
is the Lebesgue measure. To obtain quasicharacters of G, we associate to
$\nu \in {\mathfrak {a}_G}^*_{\mathbb {C}}$
the quasicharacter
$\chi _\nu (g)=q^{\left \langle \nu , H_G(g)\right \rangle }=|\nu (g)|_F$
, where the second equality defines
$H_G\colon G\to \mathfrak {a}_G$
.
Therefore to compute the integral of a function f on
$\mathcal {E}_2(G)$
supported on the unramified unitary characters of A, we compute

if
$t\mapsto e^{it\log q}=q^s=:z$
(here
$s=it$
) parameterizes the unit circle
$\mathbb {T}$
.
In general,
$\mathcal {E}_2(M_P)$
is a disjoint union of compact tori, and the Plancherel density descends to the quotients of these compact tori by certain finite groups, namely, the Weyl groups of
$(P,A_P)$
. The set
$\mathcal {E}_2(M_P)^I$
is finite up to twists by unramified characters, by a result of Harish-Chandra [Reference Waldspurger48].
2.3 The Harish-Chandra Schwartz algebra
Let
$\mathcal {C}=\mathcal {C}(G)$
be the Harish-Chandra Schwartz algebra of G; see [Reference Harish-Chandra20], [Reference Waldspurger48], or [Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11] for the definition and associated notation. In particular, we will record for future comparison with the argument in the proof of Proposition 3.13 that

Let
$\mathcal {C}^{I\times I}$
be the subalgebra of Iwahori-biinvariant functions. As explained in [Reference Waldspurger48], the Fourier transform
$f\mapsto \pi (f)$
defines an endomorphism of
$\pi $
for every
$f\in \mathcal {C}$
and every tempered representation
$\pi $
.
The Plancherel theorem is the statement (see [Reference Waldspurger48, Thm. VIII.1.1]) that this assignment defines an isomorphism of rings

where
$\mathcal {E}_t(G)$
is the subring of the endomorphism ring of the forgetful functor
$\mathcal {M}_t(G)\to \mathbf {Vect}_{\mathbb {C}}$
defined by the following conditions:
-
1. For all
$\pi =\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\nu \otimes \omega )$ , the endomorphism
$\eta _\pi =\eta _{\nu ,\omega }$ is a smooth function of the unramified unitary character
$\nu $ and
$\omega \in \mathcal {E}_2(M_P)$ ;
-
2. The endomorphism
$\eta _{\pi }$ is biinvariant with respect to some open compact subgroup of G.
We have the obvious inclusion
$\iota \colon H\mathrel {\hookrightarrow }\mathcal {C}^{I\times I}$
.
Define the subring
$\mathcal {E}(G)$
of the endomorphism ring of the forgetful functor
$\mathcal {M}(G)\to \mathbf {Vect}_{\mathbb {C}}$
from the category of all smooth representations, by replacing, in (1) above, unitary characters with all unramified characters, and ‘smooth’ with ‘algebraic’, and adding
-
3. The endomorphisms
$\eta _\pi $ are compatible with supercuspidal support, i.e. if
$(M_1, \sigma _1)$ is the supercuspidal support of
$\pi $ , so that
$$\begin{align*}\pi=i_P^G(\omega\otimes\nu)\mathrel{\hookrightarrow}\pi_1=i_{P_1}^G(\sigma_1\otimes\nu_1), \end{align*}$$
$\eta _{\pi _1}$ preserves
$\pi $ and
$\eta _{\pi _1}|_{\pi }=\eta _{\pi }$ .
The matrix Paley-Wiener theorem of Bernstein [Reference Bernstein6] says that
$f\mapsto \pi (f)$
is an isomorphism from the full Hecke algebra of G onto
$\mathcal {E}(G)$
. Denote by
$\mathcal {E}^I$
and
$\mathcal {E}_t$
the subrings of I-invariant endomorphisms.
Remark 2.5. Property 3 means that unlike Schwartz functions, the Fourier transform of a compactly supported function may be freely specified only on inductions of supercuspidal representations. In particular, an algebraic family of endomorphisms defined for all unramified characters may fail to come from a compactly supported function. An example of a non-compactly supported function with regular Fourier transform is the element of J given in Corollary 3.19, because
$\pi (t_1)=0$
except if
$\pi $
is the Steinberg representation of G.
For computational purposes such as ours, we require that these isomorphisms be explicit. In the Iwahori-spherical case, harmonic analysis on
$\mathcal {C}^{I\times I}$
can be phrased internally to H and various completions of H. In this setting Opdam gave an explicit Plancherel formula in [Reference Opdam38]. In more general settings there are explicit formulas for
$\mathrm {GL}_n(F)$
,
$\mathrm {Sp}_4(F)$
, and
$G_2(F)$
, which we will also make use of.
2.4 The algebra J as a subalgebra of the Schwartz algebra
In [Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11], Braverman and Kazhdan constructed a map of
$\mathbb {C}$
-algebras
$J\to \mathcal {C}^{I\times I}$
. We shall review this construction now.
Definition 2.5 ([Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11], Section 1.7).
Let
$P=M_PN_P$
. A character
$\chi \colon M_P\to \mathbb {C}^\times $
of
$M_P$
is non-strictly positive if for all root subgroups
$U_\alpha \subset N_P$
, we have
$|\chi (\alpha ^\vee (x))|_\infty \geq 1$
for
$|x|_F\geq 1$
.
We say a non-strictly positive character
$\chi $
is strictly positive if for all root subgroups
$U_\alpha \subset N_P$
, we have
$|\chi (\alpha ^\vee (x))|_\infty>1$
for
$|x|_F> 1$
.
Of course, it suffices to test this for
$x=\varpi ^{-1}$
.
Example 2.6. For
$\mathbf {G}=\mathrm {SL}_2$
, in the conventions fixed in Example 2.4, an unramified character
$\chi $
of A is non-strictly positive if it corresponds to z such that
$|z|\geq 1$
.
If
$\mathbf {G}=\mathrm {GL}_n$
and
$\nu $
corresponds to the vector
$(z_1,\dots , z_n)\in \mathbb {C}^n$
, then the condition that
$\nu $
is non-strictly positive translates to
$|z_1|\geq |z_{2}|\geq \cdots \geq |z_n|$
. Such conditions divide
$\mathbb {C}^n$
into chambers, on which the Weyl group
$\mathfrak {S}_n$
clearly acts simply transitively. Interior points correspond to strictly positive
$\nu $
.
Following op. cit., let
$\mathcal {E}^I_J(G)$
denote the subring of
$\mathcal {E}_t(G)$
defined by the following conditions on the endomorphisms
$\eta _{\pi }$
:
-
1. For all
$\pi =\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\nu \otimes \omega )$ , the endomorphism
$\eta _\pi =\eta _{\nu ,\omega }$ is a rational function of
$\nu $ , regular on the set of non-strictly positive
$\nu $ .
-
2. The endomorphism
$\eta _\pi $ is
$I\times I$ -biinvariant.
Theorem 2.7 ([Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11], Theorem 1.8).
Let
$\mathbf {G}$
be a connected reductive group defined and split over F. Then the following statements hold:
-
1. Let
$\pi $ be a tempered representation of G. Then the action of H on
$\pi ^I$ extends uniquely to J via
$\phi \circ {}^\dagger (-)$ .
-
2. Let
$P=MN$ be a parabolic subgroup of G with Levi subgroup M and let
$\omega $ be an irreducible tempered representation of M. Let
$\nu $ be a non-strictly positive character of M and let
$\pi =\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\omega \otimes \nu )$ . Then the action of
$H(G,I)$ on
$\pi ^I$ extends uniquely to an action of J.
-
3. The action of J on the representations
$\pi ^I$ in (2) extends rationally in
$\nu $ to define a homomorphism
$$\begin{align*}\eta\colon J\to\mathcal{E}_J^I(G). \end{align*}$$
$$\begin{align*}t_w\mapsto (\eta_\pi(w))_{\pi\in\mathcal{M}_t(G)}. \end{align*}$$
The proof of Theorem 2.7 (1) and (2) in [Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11] uses Theorem 1.13 and [Reference Xi52], to show that, in the notation of Section 1.5.1,

where the restriction is via
$\phi $
, and hence that

where the restriction is now via
$\phi \circ {}^*(-)$
.
By Lemma 1.8, the map
$\phi $
is
$\bar {\kappa }$
-linear, where
$\bar {\kappa }$
is as in Definition 1.6. Of course,
$\phi $
also intertwines conjugation by
$T_{w_0}$
and
$\phi (T_{w_0})$
.
As noted in Section 1.5.1, if
$\pi =K(u,s,\rho )$
is simple tempered (or more generally, is any semisimple module), then by [Reference Prasad40, Prop. 6.3],

is simple tempered. Moreover, by Lemma 1.10 (e) and (2.1), we have, if
$\Psi _{w_0}(h)=T_{w_0}hT_{w_0}^{-1}$
, that

for any standard H-module
$K(u,s,\rho )$
. Therefore any standard H-module extends to a simple J-module via
$\phi \circ {}^\dagger (-)$
.
Composing the morphism
$\eta $
with the inverse Fourier transform, Braverman and Kazhdan define an algebra map

sending

where
$A_{x,w}=f_w(IxI)$
. By definition,
$\eta _\pi (w)=\pi (f_w)$
as endomorphisms of
$\pi $
. We will show later that
$\tilde {\phi }$
is essentially the map
$\phi ^{-1}$
.
Remark 2.8. There are gaps in the proofs of injectivity and, as pointed out to us by R. Bezrukavnikov and I. Karpov after an early version of the present paper was completed, of surjectivity of the map
$\eta $
in [Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11]. In the present paper we prove injectivity by proving injectivity of
$\tilde {\phi }$
in Corollary 3.20. We prove surjectivity in [Reference Dawydiak15] for all but a small number of cells for exceptional groups; [Reference Bezrukavnikov, Karpov and Krylov8] proves that
$\eta $
is an isomorphism for all two-sided cells.
Implicit in [Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11] is
Lemma 2.9. We have the commutative diagram (1.2).
Proof. Let
$\pi $
be a tempered representation of G. By Theorem 2.7 and (2.1), the H-action on it extends to a J-action via
$\phi \circ ^{\dagger }(-)$
, such that

in
$\mathcal {E}_t^I$
for any
$f\in H$
. Therefore
$\tilde {\phi }\circ \phi _q({}^\dagger f)=f$
by the Plancherel theorem.
2.5 The Plancherel formula for
$\mathrm {GL}_n$
For
$G=\mathrm {GL}_n(F)$
, we have access to an explicit Plancherel measure and its Bernstein decomposition, thanks to [Reference Aubert and Plymen4].
Recall that for
$G=\mathrm {GL}_n(F)$
, we have bijections



where (2.2)
$\leftrightarrow $
(2.3) sends a unipotent conjugacy class u to the standard Levi M such that a member of u is distinguished in
$M^\vee $
, and (2.3)
$\leftrightarrow $
(2.4) is Lusztig’s bijection from [Reference Lusztig17].
Definition 2.6. Let u be a unipotent element of a semisimple group S over the complex numbers. Then u is distinguished in S if
$Z_S(u)$
contains no nontrivial torus.
Let
$P=M_PN_P$
be a parabolic subgroup of G and let
$\mathfrak {o}$
be an orbit in
$\mathcal {E}_2(M_P)$
under the action of the unitary unramified characters of
$M_P$
as explained in Section 2.2. Write
$W_{M_P}\subset W$
for the finite Weyl group of
$(M_P,A_P)$
. Let
$\mathrm {Stab}_{W_M}(\mathfrak {o})$
be the stabilizer of
$\mathfrak {o}$
. Recall that a parabolic subgroup of G is said to be semistandard if it contains A. Then the Plancherel decomposition reads

where
$f\in \mathcal {C}(G)$
, the sum is taken over semistandard parabolic subgroups P up to association, and

where
$R_gf(x)=f(xg)$
is the right translation of f and
$\pi =\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\nu \otimes \omega )$
is the normalized parabolic induction of the twist of
$\omega $
by a unitary unramified character
$\nu $
of M. In [Reference Aubert and Plymen4], each term above is explicitly calculated as a rational function of q.
Lemma 2.10. There is a finite set
$S=\left \{(M,\omega )\,\middle |\,\omega \in \mathcal {E}_2(M)^I\right \}$
such that
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\omega \otimes \nu )}\,,{f}\right )$
is nonzero only for
$\omega \in S$
, for all I-biinvaraiant Schwartz functions f.
Proof. This is entirely standard. As
$\mathcal {E}_2(M)^{I_M}$
is finite for every M, and there are finitely many standard parabolics of G, we need only show that
$\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\omega \otimes \nu )^I\neq 0$
only if
$\omega ^{I_M}\neq 0$
, where
$I_M$
is the Iwahori subgroup of the reductive group M relative to the Borel subgroup
$M(\mathbb {F}_q)\cap B(\mathbb {F}_q)$
of
$M(\mathbb {F}_q)$
. Note that
$I_M$
is naturally a subgroup of I. For any representation
$\sigma $
of M, if
$f\in \operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\sigma )$
is I-fixed, then for
$i_M\in I_M$
, we have

As
$\delta _P=1$
on every compact subgroup of P, we have
$\delta ^{\frac {1}{2}}_P(i_M)=1$
, and
$f(1)\in \sigma ^{I_M}$
.
Let
$\pi =\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\omega \otimes \nu )$
be a tempered representation and let
$(u,s)$
be the KL-parameter of its discrete support. Then by [Reference Kazhdan and Lusztig25, Theorem 8.3],
$\mathbf {M}_{\mathbf {P}}^\vee $
is minimal such that
$(u,s)\in M_P^\vee $
. By op. cit., this condition is equivalent to
$Z_M(s)$
being semisimple and u being distinguished in
$Z_{M}(s)$
.
Proposition 2.11 (c.f. [Reference Opdam38] Proposition 8.3).
The Plancherel decomposition is compatible with the decomposition
$J=\bigoplus _{\mathbf {c}} J_{\mathbf {c}}$
in the sense that if
$w\in \mathbf {c}$
,
$f=f_w$
and
$u=u(\mathbf {c})$
under Lusztig’s bijection, then
$f_M\neq 0$
only for those M such that there exists
$s\in M^\vee (\mathbb {C})$
such that
$Z_{M^\vee }(s)$
is semisimple and
$Z_{M^\vee }(s)\cap Z_{M^\vee }(u)$
contains no nontrivial torus.
Proof. Let
$\pi :=\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\nu \otimes \omega )$
be a tempered irreducible representation of G induced as usual from a standard parabolic subgroup P with Levi subgroup M. Then
$\pi ^I$
is a tempered irreducible H-module, and is of the form
$K(u,s,\rho ,q)$
for
$u,s\in \mathbf {G}^\vee (\mathbb {C})$
and
$\rho $
a representation of
$\pi _0(Z_{G^\vee }(u,s))$
with s compact. By Theorem 2.7,
$K(u,s,\rho ,q)$
extends to a J-module. By definition of Lusztig’s bijection,
$\pi (f_w)\neq 0$
only if w is in the two-sided cell
$\mathbf {c}=\mathbf {c}(u)$
of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
corresponding to u. On the other hand,
$K(u,s,\rho ,q)$
is induced from a square-integrable standard module
$K_M(u,s,\tilde {\rho },q)$
of
$H(M,I_M)$
. But now [Reference Kazhdan and Lusztig25, Theorem 8.3] says that
$(u,s)$
must be precisely as in the statement of the proposition. Thus only such summands
$(f_w)_{M}$
in the Plancherel decomposition of
$f_w$
are nonzero.
Of course, when
$\mathbf {G}=\mathrm {GL}_n$
, the bijections (2.2), (2.3), and (2.4), imply that there is a unique nonzero summand
$(f_w)_{M}$
for each w.
2.6 Plancherel measure for
$\mathrm {GL}_n$
We refer to [Reference Aubert and Plymen4, Section 5], for a summary of the Bernstein decomposition of the tempered irreducible representations of
$\mathrm {GL}_n$
, in particular we use the description in loc. cit. of the Bernstein component parameterizing the I-spherical representations of G.
As we shall be applying the Plancherel formula only to Iwahori-biinvariant functions, it suffices to consider only irreducible tempered representations with Iwahori-fixed vectors. For
$\mathrm {GL}_n$
, the only such representations are of the form

where
$\mathrm {St}_i$
is the Steinberg representation of
$\mathrm {GL}_i$
, and
$P\supset M=\mathrm {GL}_{l_1}\times \cdots \times \mathrm {GL}_{l_k}$
.
These representations are parameterized as follows. Let M be a Levi subgroup corresponding to the partition
$l_1+\cdots +l_k=n$
, and recall that we write
$\mathbb {T}$
for the circle group. Define
$\gamma \in \mathfrak {S}_n$
by
$\gamma =(1\dots l_1)(1\dots l_2)\cdots (1\dots l_k)$
, so that the fixed-point set
$(\mathbb {T}^n)^\gamma =\{(z_1,\dots , z_1,\dots ,z_k,\dots , z_k)\}\simeq \mathbb {T}^k$
. Then the irreducible tempered representations with Iwahori-fixed vectors induced from M are parameterized by the compact orbifold
$(\mathbb {T}^n)^\gamma /Z_{\mathfrak {S}_n}(\gamma )$
.
Theorem 2.12 ([Reference Aubert and Plymen4], Remark 5.6).
Let
$G=\mathrm {GL}_n$
and
$M=\mathrm {GL}_{l_1}\times \cdots \times \mathrm {GL}_{l_k}$
be a Levi subgroup. Then the Plancherel measure of H on
$(\mathbb {T}^n)^\gamma /Z_{\mathfrak {S}_n}(\gamma )$
is

where the tuples
$(i,j,g)\in \mathbb {Z}\times \mathbb {Z}\times \frac {1}{2}\mathbb {Z}$
are tuples such that
$1\leq i<j\leq k$
and
$|g_i-g_j|\leq g\leq g_i+g_j$
, where
$g_i=\frac {l_i-1}{2}$
.
This is the measure that we will integrate against, by successively applying the residue theorem. When carrying out explicit calculations, we will usually elide the constant

as it depends only on M. We shall abbreviate

and recall that, as noted in the proof of Theorem 5.1 in [Reference Aubert and Plymen4], the function
$(z_1,\dots ,z_k)\mapsto \prod _{(i,j,g)}\Gamma _{i,j,g}$
is
$Z_{\mathfrak {S}_n}(\gamma )$
-invariant. Hence for the purposes of integration, we may allow ourselves to integrate simply over
$\mathbb {T}^k$
. Moreover, there are many cancellations between the
$\Gamma _{i,j,g}$
for a fixed pair
$i<j$
as g varies. Indeed, putting
$q_{ij}=q^{|g_i-g_j|}$
,
$q^{ij}=q^{ g_i+g_j+1}$
, and

we have

where the product is taken over all integers g appearing in triples
$(i,j,g)$
for
$i<j$
fixed. We set

where the first product is taken over
$(i,j,g)$
such that
$1\leq i<j\leq k$
and
$|g_i-g_j|\leq g\leq g_i+g_j$
.
2.7 Beyond type A: the Plancherel formula following Opdam
Beyond type A, we still have available Opdam’s explicit Plancherel formula for the Iwahori-Hecke algebra [Reference Opdam38]. Let
$\mathbf {G}$
be a connected reductive algebraic group defined and split over F, of Dynkin type other than type A (to avoid redundancy). Let f be an Iwahori-biinvariant Schwartz function on G and let M be a Levi subgroup of G. Given a parabolic subgroup
$\mathbf {P}$
of
$\mathbf {G}$
, let
$R_{1,+}$
and
$R_{P,1,+}$
be defined as in [Reference Opdam38], Section 2.3. Recall that the group of unramified characters of a Levi subgroup M has the structure of a complex torus, and is in fact a maximal torus of
$\mathbf {M}^\vee (\mathbb {C})$
. In particular, if P is a parabolic subgroup and
$\alpha $
is a root of
$(M_P,A_P)$
, then it makes sense to write
$\alpha (\nu )$
for any unramified character
$\nu $
of M. Then, altering Opdam’s notation to match our own from Section 2.5, the Plancherel formula reads
Theorem 2.13. ([Reference Opdam38] Thm. 4.43).

where
$\pi =\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\omega \otimes \nu )$
,
$P\supset M$
, and where
$q_\alpha $
and
$q_{2\alpha }$
are powers of q, and
$w^P$
is the longest element in the complement
$W^P$
to the parabolic subgroup
$W_P$
of W.
Note that whenever
$q_{2\alpha }=1$
, which holds whenever
$\alpha ^\vee \not \in 2X_*$
, the factor for
$\alpha $
reduces to

In types A (as we have used above) and D, this simplification always occurs. In types B and C, it happens for all roots except
$\alpha =2\varepsilon _i\in R_{1,+}(B_n)$
and
$\alpha =4\varepsilon _i\in R_{1,+}(C_n)$
, where
$\varepsilon _i$
is the character
$\mathrm {diag}(a,\dots , a_n)\mapsto a_i$
.
For explicit evaluation we rewrite (2.5) in coordinates as follows. Recalling the setup of Section 2.2.1, a chosen basis
$\{\beta _i^\vee \}$
of the coweight lattice of
$\mathbf {G}$
. Then we obtain coordinates
$z_i$
, such that if
$\alpha ^\vee =\sum _{i}e_i\beta _i^\vee $
, then the factor in (2.5) labelled by
$\alpha ^\vee $
is

When integrating, the coordinates
$z_i$
are restricted to the residual coset corresponding to
$\mathfrak {o}$
, in the sense of [Reference Opdam38]. For
$\mathbf {G}=\mathrm {GL}_n$
, we used the basis afforded by the characters
$\varepsilon _i$
.
2.8 Regularity of the trace
In order to extract information about the expansion of the elements
$t_w$
in terms of the
$T_x$
-basis via the Plancherel formula, we must establish a regularity property of
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{f_w}\right )$
where
$\pi $
is an irreducible tempered representation of G. The needed property follows trivially from Theorem 2.7.
2.8.1 Intertwining operators
The goal is to use the property that elements of
$\mathcal {E}^I_J(G)$
commute with all intertwining operators in
$\mathcal {M}_t(G)$
, and regularity of the trace for unitary and non-strictly positive characters of M to deduce regularity of the trace at all characters of M.
Let
$\omega $
be a discrete series representation of a Levi subgroup M of G, and let
$\nu $
be any unramified character of M, not necessarily unitary. Then we may form the representation
$\pi =\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^B(\nu \otimes \omega )$
of G, where P is a parabolic with Levi factor M. We will now recall some well-known facts about the action of the Weyl group of M on such representations
$\pi $
. Let
$\theta $
and
$\theta '$
be two subsets of
$\Delta $
corresponding to Levi subgroups M and
$M'$
. Let
$w\in W$
be such that
$w\theta =\theta '$
. Then there is an intertwining operator

for each
$w\in W(\theta ,\theta ')=\left \{w\in W\,\middle |\,w(\theta )=\theta '\right \}$
. For
$\mathbf {G}=\mathrm {GL}_n$
, this set is nonempty only if

and
$\{l_1,\dots , l_N\}=\{l_1'\,\dots , l^{\prime }_N\}$
are equal multisets. In this case,
$W(\theta ,\theta ')\simeq \mathfrak {S}_N$
can be viewed as acting by permuting the blocks of M. It is well-known that
$J_{P|P'}(\omega , \nu )$
is a meromorphic function of
$\nu $
with simple poles. The poles of these operators have been studied by Shahidi in [Reference Shahidi44], and in the language of modules over the full Hecke algebra by Arthur in [Reference Arthur1]. The results will be stated for certain renormalizations
$A(\nu , \omega , w)$
of the operators
$J_{P|P'}(\omega , \nu )$
as explained in equation (2.2.1) of [Reference Shahidi44].
2.8.2 Conventions on parabolic subgroups
We now recall the notation of Shahidi [Reference Shahidi44]. Given a subset
$\theta $
, we set
$\Sigma _\theta =\operatorname {\mathrm {span}}_{\mathbb {R}}\theta $
, and
$\Sigma _\theta ^+=\Psi ^+\cap \Sigma _\theta $
and likewise define
$\Sigma _\theta ^-$
. Let
$\Sigma (\theta )$
be the roots of
$(P,A_P)$
. Define the positive roots
$\Sigma ^+(\theta )$
to be the roots obtained by restriction of an element of
$\Psi ^+\setminus \Sigma _\theta ^-$
.
Given two subsets
$\theta ,\theta '\subset \Delta $
, following [Reference Shahidi44] we set

and then for
$w\in W(\theta ,\theta ')$
, we define

and then

Remark 2.14. In [Reference Shahidi44] additional care about the relative case is taken in the notation. In our simple case this is of course unnecessary, and we omit it.
In the case
$\mathbf {G}=\mathrm {GL}_n$
, this specializes as follows. Let
$\alpha _{ij}\colon \mathrm {diag}(t_i)\mapsto t_it_j^{-1}$
be characters of T. The
$\alpha _{ij}$
for
$j>i$
are the positive roots of
$(\mathbf {B},\mathbf {A})$
and
$\beta _i:=\alpha _{ii+1}$
are our chosen simple roots. If P corresponds to the partition
$n_1+\cdots +n_p$
of n and subset
$\theta \subset \Delta $
, then

where we view
$\beta _i$
as restricted to
$\mathfrak {a}_P\mathrel {\hookrightarrow }\mathfrak {a}_G$
. Note that all the positive roots
$\Sigma ^+(\theta )$
of
$(P_\theta , N_\theta )$
are in
$N_P$
. Denoting by
$[\alpha ]$
the coset representing a root
$\alpha $
of G restricted to P, the positive roots in
$N_P$
are the
$\alpha _{ij}$
such that
$[\alpha _{ij}]=[\beta _{n_1+\cdots +n_k}]$
.
Example 2.15. If
$\mathbf {G}=\mathrm {GL}_6$
and P be the parabolic subgroup of block upper-triangular matrices corresponding to the partition
$6=2+2+1+1$
and
$\theta =\{\alpha _{12}, \alpha _{34}\}$
, then we have

The positive simple roots are
$\Sigma ^+(\theta )=\{[\beta _2], [\beta _4],[\beta _5]\}$
. The Weyl group
$W(A_P)\simeq \mathfrak {S}_2\times \mathfrak {S}_2$
acts by permuting the blocks. Note that the simple reflection sending
$\beta _4\mapsto -\beta _4$
does not arise by permuting the blocks (i.e.
$\begin {pmatrix} 4 & 5 \end {pmatrix}$
does not send blocks to blocks), hence
$w_{[\beta _4]}\not \in W(A_P)$
. Hence for any
$w\in W(\theta ,\theta ')$
we have
$\Sigma ^\circ (\theta ,\theta ',w)\subseteq \left \{[\beta _2],[\beta _5]\right \}$
.
2.8.3 Regularity of the trace
We have the following information about the poles of intertwining operators, due, according to [Reference Shahidi44], to Harish-Chandra:
Theorem 2.16 ([Reference Shahidi44], Theorem 2.2.1).
Let
$\omega $
be an irreducible unitary representation of M. Say that
$\omega $
is a subrepresentation of
$\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_{P_*}^M(\omega _*)$
for a parabolic subgroup
$P_*=M_*N_*$
and
$\omega _*$
is an irreducible supercuspidal representation of
$M_*$
. Let
$\theta _*\subset \Delta $
be such that
$P_*=P_{\theta _*}$
as parabolic subgroups of
$M_*$
.
Then the operator

is holomorphic on
$\mathfrak {a}_{\theta \mathbb {C}^*}$
. Here
$\chi _{\omega ,\nu }$
is the central character of the twisted representation
$\omega \otimes q^{\left \langle \nu , H_\theta (-)\right \rangle }$
.
In particular for the purposes of the Plancherel formula, the only relevant
$\omega $
are unitary, hence have unitary central characters. Therefore
$A(\nu ,\omega , w)$
is holomorphic at
$\nu $
if
$|q^{\left \langle \nu , H_\theta (-)\right \rangle }|\neq 1$
, or equivalently if

In particular, there is a finite union of hyperplanes away from which each operator
$A(\nu ,\pi ,w)$
is holomorphic, for any
$w\in W$
.
Lemma 2.17. Let M be a Levi subgroup of
$G=\mathbf {G}(F)$
and let
$\omega $
be a discrete series representation of M. Let
$P=M_PA_PN_P$
be the standard parabolic subgroup containing
$M=M_P$
and let
$k=\operatorname {\mathrm {rk}} A_P$
. Let
$z_1,\dots , z_k\in (\mathbb {C}^\times )^k= X^*(A_P)\otimes _{\mathbb {Z}}\mathbb {C}$
define an unramified quasicharacter
$\nu =\nu (z_1,\dots , z_k)$
of
$A_P$
as in Section 2.2. Let
$\pi =\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\omega \otimes \nu )$
. Let
$f\in J$
. Then

That is, the trace is a regular function on
$(\mathbb {C}^\times )^k$
.
Proof. We know a priori that

is a rational function of
$\nu $
, as the operator
$\pi (f)$
itself depends rationally on the variables
$z_i$
by Theorem 2.7. Therefore

By Theorem 2.16 and the discussion following it, there is an open subset U of the unitary characters, such that for all
$\nu \in U$
, and all
$w\in W$
we have

Holding
$z_2,\dots , z_n$
constant and in U, (2.8) becomes an equality of meromorphic functions of
$z_1$
that holds on a set with an accumulation point, and hence (2.8) holds for all
$z_1\in \mathbb {C}^\times $
. Now holding
$z_1\in \mathbb {C}^\times $
constant and arbitrary, and
$z_3,\dots , z_k$
constant and in U, we see that (2.8) holds also for all
$z_2\in \mathbb {C}^\times $
. Therefore (2.8) actually holds for all
$\nu $
, i.e.
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{f}\right )$
is a W-invariant rational function of
$\nu $
.
When
$\nu $
is non-strictly positive with respect to M, by Theorem 2.7,
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{f}\right )$
has poles only of the form
$z_i^{n_i}=0$
. The claim now follows from the W-invariance, and thus
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{f}\right )$
is a regular function on
$(\mathbb {C}^\times )^k$
.
We will therefore allow ourselves to write
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{f}\right )$
for functions
$f\in J$
even for
$\nu $
such that the operator
$\pi (f)$
itself is not defined.
Lemma 2.18. Let
$d\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
be a distinguished involution and
$\pi $
be a tempered representation induced from one of the Levi subgroups attached to the two-sided cell containing d in the sense of Proposition 2.11. Then
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{f_d}\right )$
is constant and a natural number. In fact, the same is true for any idempotent in J.
Proof. Let j be an idempotent in J. We have
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{f_j}\right )=\operatorname {\mathrm {rank}}(\pi (f_j))$
. The trace is continuous in
$\nu $
by Lemma 2.17, and the present lemma follows as
$\mathbb {T}$
is connected.
3 Proof of Theorem 1.2 for general
$\mathbf {G}$
and the case of
$\mathrm {GL}_n$
3.1 The functions
$f_w$
for
$\mathrm {GL}_n$
In this section,
$q>1$
.
To compute with the Plancherel formula, we will need to apply the residue theorem successively in each variable
$z_i$
, and in doing so will we will need to sum over a certain tree that will track, for each variable, at which residues we evaluated. Upon integrating with respect to each variable
$z_i$
, we will have poles of the form
$z_i=0$
or
$z_i=(q^{ij})^{-1}z_j$
. For example, if we have
$4$
variables
$z_1,z_2,z_3,z_4$
corresponding to a Levi subgroup
$\mathrm {GL}_{l_1}\times \mathrm {GL}_{l_2}\times \mathrm {GL}_{l_3}\times \mathrm {GL}_{l_4}$
, then some of the summands obtained by successively applying the residue theorem are labelled by paths on the tree

Of course, to evaluate the entire integral for M, we would also need to consider trees whose roots are decorated with
$z_1=(q^{12})^{-1}z_2$
, and so on, for a total of four trees.
Definition 3.1. Given a Levi subgroup M with
$N+1$
blocks, a bookkeeping tree T for M is a rooted tree with N levels such that the vertices on the i-th level below the root each have
$N-i$
child vertices, and each vertex is decorated with an equation of the form
$z_i=0$
or
$z_i=(q^{ij})^{-1}z_j$
, where the index j does not appear along the path from the vertex to the root, and the parent root is decorated with an equation
$z_{k}=(q^{ki})^{-1}z_i$
for some k. Moreover, we require that the root be decorated with an equation of the form
$z_i=0$
or
$z_i=(q^{ij})^{-1}z_j$
for i minimal. A branch of T is a simple path in T from the root to one of the leaves.
Definition 3.2. Given a branch B of a bookkeeping tree, a clump in B is an ordered subset of indices i appearing in the decorations of successive parent-child vertices, such that no decoration of the form
$z_i=0$
occurs along the path from the closest index to the root to the farthest index from the root. We write
$C\prec B$
if C is a clump of B.
Example 3.1. The sets of indices
$\{3,4\}$
,
$\{2,3,4\}$
,
$\{2,3\}$
,
$\{2,4\}$
, and
$\{2,4,3\}$
(note the ordering) are all the clumps of the above tree. The sets
$\{1,2,3\}$
and
$\{1,2,4\}$
are not clumps.
Theorem 3.2. Let
$G=\mathrm {GL}_n(F)$
and let d be a distinguished involution such that the two-sided cell containing d corresponds to the Levi subgroup M. Let
$N+1$
be the number of blocks in M such that the i-th block has size
$l_i$
. Let
$m_{j}$
be the number
$l_i$
that are equal to j. Define for
$r\leq k$

in the notation of 2.6. Then if
$f_d$
is as in Section 2.4,

where

Corollary 3.3. The denominator of
$f_d(1)$
divides a power of the Poincaré polynomial
$P_{\mathbf {G}/\mathbf {B}}(q)=P_{\mathfrak {S}_{n}}(q)$
of
$\mathbf {G}$
. Moreover, when d is in the lowest two-sided cell, corresponding to
$M=T$
,
$f_d(1)=\operatorname {\mathrm {rank}}(\pi (f_d))/P_{\mathbf {G}/\mathbf {B}}(q)$
exactly.
Proof of Corollary 3.3.
We will show that each of the three forms of denominators that appear in the conclusion of Theorem 3.2 divide
$P_{\mathbf {G}/\mathbf {B}}(q)$
, and thus that their product divides a power of
$P_{\mathbf {G}/\mathbf {B}}(q)$
. The denominators of
$c_M$
are all of the form
$1+q+\cdots +q^{l_{i}-1}$
, and so divide
$P_{\mathbf {G}/\mathbf {B}}(q)$
as
$l_i\leq n$
for all i. Note that as
$l_{i_k}+l_{i_{k+1}}\leq n$
, the leftmost denominators in (3.1) satisfy the conclusion of the corollary also. Finally,
$Q_{rk}q^{i_ri_{k+1}}=q^{l_{i_{k+1}}+l_{i_k}+\cdots + l_{i_r}}$
, and
$R_{rk}$
is likewise always a polynomial in q (as opposed to
$q^{-1}$
) divisible by
$1-q$
. Again using that
$l_{i_{k+1}}+l_{i_k}+\cdots + l_{i_r}\leq n$
, we are done with the first statement.
We now take up the second statement, the proofFootnote
2
of which does not require any computations at all and which holds for any
$w\in \mathbf {c}_0$
. Recalling that the only K-spherical tempered representations of G are principal series representations [Reference Macdonald, Balachandran, Rajagopal and Rangachari33], let
$\mu _K$
be the Haar measure on G such that
$\mu _K(K)=1$
,
$\mu _I$
be the Haar measure such that
$\mu _I(I)=1$
, and denote temporarily
$\mathrm {d}\pi _{\mu }$
the Plancherel measure normalized according to a chosen Haar measure
$\mu $
on G. Likewise write
$\pi _K(f)$
for the Fourier transform with respect to
$\mu _K$
and
$\pi _I(f)$
for the Fourier transform with respect to
$\mu _I$
.
As we have

and formal degrees scale inversely to the Haar measure, we have

for tempered principal series. Now let
$w\in \mathbf {c}_0$
and consider
$f_w=\tilde {\phi }(t_w)$
. By Lemma 2.17 and the Satake isomorphism, there is a function
$h_w$
in the spherical Hecke algebra such that for all principal series
$\pi $
,

as regular Weyl-invariant functions of the Satake parameter. By the Plancherel formula and (3.2),

In particular, if
$w=d$
is a distinguished involution in the lowest two-sided cell, then

and (3.3) becomes

Here the rank is given by [Reference Xi49], Proposition 5.5. (In op. cit. there is the assumption of simple-connectedness, but it is easy to see that the distinguished involutions for the extended affine Weyl group
${W}_{\mathrm{aff}}(\tilde {\mathbf {G}}(F))$
of the universal cover
$\tilde {\mathbf {G}}$
are distinguished involutions for
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
using the definition in [Reference Lusztig28] and uniqueness of the
$\{C_w\}$
-basis, and that the lowest cell is just the lowest cell of
${W}_{\mathrm{aff}}(\tilde {\mathbf {G}}(F))$
intersected with
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
.)
Once we have established injectivity of
$\tilde {\phi }$
, we will show by a counting argument that
$\operatorname {\mathrm {rank}}\left (\pi (t_d)\right )=1$
for any distinguished involution d, in the case
$G=\mathrm {GL}_n$
, see Theorem 3.21. Note that (3.4) is an example of the behaviour conjectured in Remark 1.3.
Remark 3.4. It would be interesting to find I-biinvariant Schwartz functions h playing the role of
$h_w$
for the other two-sided cells, namely such that
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{h}\right )$
was regular, nonzero only for a single pair
$(M,\omega )$
, and the value
$h(1)$
was known as a function of
$q^{1/2}$
.
Remark 3.5. If
$\mathcal {P}$
is a maximal parahoric subgroup of G, then the longest word
$w_{\mathcal {P}}$
is a distinguished involution in the lowest two-sided cell. As above, and as we will explain again in Section 4,
$\pi (f_{w_{\mathcal {P}}})$
is nonzero only for the principal series representations, and its image is contained in
$\pi ^{\mathcal {P}}$
. Thus after we will have shown injectivity, [Reference Keys26] gives another proof that
$\operatorname {\mathrm {rank}}(\pi (f_{w_{\mathcal {P}}}))=1$
, and more generally that
$\pi (t_d)$
has rank 1 on the principal series for any distinguished involution
$d\in \mathbf {c}_0$
.
Lemma 3.6. Let
$e_0,\dots , e_n\in \mathbb {Z}$
. Then

unless
$e_0+\cdots +e_N=-N$
.
Although we do not use the Lemma in the sequel, we include it because it illustrates an efficient way to compute the functions
$f_w$
in practice, as we explain after its proof.
Corollary 3.7. Let
$w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. Then
$f_w(1)$
is a rational function of q with denominator dividing a power of the Poincaré polynomial of
$\mathbf {G}$
. The numerator is a Laurent polynomial
$p_1(q^{1/2})+p_2(q^{-1/2})$
in
$q^{1/2}$
, where the degree of
$p_1$
is bounded uniformly in terms of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. The denominator of
$f_w(1)$
depends only on the two-sided cell containing w.
Remark 3.8. In light of Lemma 2.17, Lemma 3.6 and Corollary 3.7 have the following interpretation. Let
$\Gamma $
be a left cell in a two-sided cell
$\mathbf {c}$
. Then in [Reference Xi51], Xi shows that all the rings
$J_{\Gamma \cap \Gamma ^{-1}}$
are isomorphic to the representation ring of the associated Levi subgroup
$M_{\mathbf {c}}$
, and
$J_{\mathbf {c}}$
is a matrix algebra over
$J_{\Gamma \cap \Gamma ^{-1}}$
. Therefore
$w\in \Gamma \cap \Gamma ^{-1}$
are labelled by dominant weights of
$M_{\mathbf {c}}$
, and if
$t_\lambda $
is such an element, Xi’s results show that if
$\mathbf {q}=q$
and
$\pi =\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_B^G(\nu )$
is an irreducible representation of
$J_{\mathbf {c}}$
, then

where we view
$\nu $
as a semisimple conjugacy class in
$M_{\mathbf {c}}$
, and
$V(\lambda )$
is the irreducible representation of
$M_{\mathbf {c}}$
of highest weight
$\lambda $
. Then we have that
$f_\lambda (1)\neq 0$
only if
$\lambda $
is of height
$0$
with respect to the basis
$\varepsilon _i\colon \mathrm {diag}(a_1,\dots , a_n)\mapsto a_i$
.
The proofs of Lemma 3.6 and Corollary 3.7 will use the notation of the proof of Theorem 3.2, and we defer them until after the proof of the theorem.
3.1.1 Example computations and a less singular cell
In this section we provide two example computations to elucidate the coming proof of Theorem 3.2.
Example 3.9. Let
$G=\mathrm {GL}_2$
and
$M=A$
. Then
$l_1=l_2=1$
and
$g_1=g_2=0$
. Let
$d=s_0$
or
$s_1$
. Then

The factor
$\frac {1}{2}$
reflects the fact that we integrate with the respect to the pushforward of the above
$\mathfrak {S}_2$
-invariant measure to the quotient
$\mathbb {T}\times \mathbb {T}/\mathfrak {S}_2$
.
This agrees with the theorem, which instructs us to calculate
$f_d(1)$
as follows: There are two trees, each of which has one vertex and no edges. The trees are
$z_1=0$
and
$z_1=q^{-1}z_2$
. Each has one branch. The first has no clumps, so the entire product is empty. The second tree has one clump
$C=\{1,2\}$
for which
$t=1$
, and we obtain

Now we give an example of a less singular cell.
Example 3.10. Let
$G=\mathrm {GL}_4$
, and let
$\mathbf {c}$
be the two-sided cell corresponding to the partition
$4=2+2$
. Then
$P_W(\mathbf {q})=(1+\mathbf {q})(1+\mathbf {q}+\mathbf {q}^2)(1+\mathbf {q}+\mathbf {q}^2+\mathbf {q}^3)$
has five distinct roots
$\mathbf {q}=-1,\pm i, \zeta _1,\zeta _2$
, where
$\zeta _i$
are primitive third roots of unity. We compute
$P_{\mathbf {c}}$
using the Plancherel formula. We have
We have
$l_1=l_2=2$
,
$q_{12}=1$
,
$q^{12}=q^2$
,

and

Accounting for
$c_M$
, we see that
$J_{\mathbf {c}}$
is regular at
$\mathbf {q}=\zeta _1, \zeta _2$
.
3.1.2 Proofs of Theorem 3.2, Lemma 3.6, and Corollary 3.7
Proof of Theorem 3.2.
Let
$n=l_0+\cdots +l_N$
. We may assume that
$l_0\leq l_2\leq \cdots \leq l_N$
. It suffices to evaluate the integral

We claim that the value of this integral is

where the sum over trees is taken over all bookkeeping trees for the integral. When
$k=0$
, we interpret the product over r as being empty.
First we explain how (3.6) simplifies to (3.1). All cancellations will take place within the same clump C of some branch B, which we now fix. We have

which is one of the factors in the product
$(1-Q_{r,k-1}q_{i_ri_k})(Q_{r,k-1}(q_{i_ri_k})^{-1})$
. The surviving factor in the numerator at index
$(k-1,r)$
is then equal to
$(1-Q_{r,k-1}q^{g_{i_r}-g_{i_k}})$
. In short, the above factors in the denominator cancel with a numerator occurring with the same r-index but k-index one lower. Such a factor occurs whenever
$r<k-1$
(note that this inequality does not hold when
$k=1$
and
$r=0$
). When
$r=k-1$
, we have

which is one of the factors in
$(1-q^{i_{k+1}i_k}q_{i_ki_{k+1}})(1-q^{i_ki_{k+1}}(q_{i_{k}}i_{k+1})^{-1})$
. The cancellation leaves behind the factor
$1-q^{l_{i_{k+1}}}$
in the numerator, except for
$k=0$
; this term keeps both its denominators. At this point we have shown that the factor corresponding to C in (3.6) simplifies to

where

This means that (3.6) simplifies to (3.1).
To prove (3.6), we will use the residue theorem for each variable consecutively, keeping track of the constant expressions in q that we extract after integrating with respect to each variable
$z_i$
. More precisely, we will track what happens in a single summand corresponding to some set of successive choices of poles to take residues at. Note that all the rational functions that will appear, namely the
$\Gamma ^{ij}$
or the rational functions that result from substitutions into the
$\Gamma ^{ij}$
, become equal to
$1$
once
$z_i$
or
$z_j$
is set to zero. Therefore poles at
$z_i=0$
serve simply to remove all factors involving
$z_i$
from inside the integrand (we will see what these rational functions are below). It follows that the summand whose branch we are computing is a product over clumps in the corresponding branch, so it suffices to compute the value of a given clump for some ordered subsets
$\{i_0,i_1,\dots , i_l\}$
of the indices
$\{0,\dots , N\}$
. As we are inside a clump, we will consider only poles occurring at nonzero complex numbers. Thus we are left only to determine what happens within a single clump.
We first integrate with respect to the variable
$z_{i_0}$
. The residue theorem gives

As noted above, the second integral belongs to a different branch (in fact, in the case of
$i_0$
, to a different tree); our procedure will deal with it separately, and we will now consider what happens with the first integral.
For the first integral, consider one of the summands corresponding to
$z_{i_0}=(q^{i_0i_1})^{-1}z_{i_1}$
for some
$i_1$
. We have

Recall that, if
$i_1>2$
, even though formally we have defined the symbols
$q_{ij}$
and
$q^{ij}$
only for
$i<j$
, the symmetry of the factors allows us to write
$q_{ij}$
even if
$i>j$
, thanks to the factor with
$(q_{ij})^{-1}$
also present in the numerator.
Now we integrate with respect to
$z_{i_1}$
. Observe that the leftmost product over
$j\neq i_1, i_0$
does not contribute poles. Indeed, the first factor in each denominator does not have its zero contained in
$\mathbb {T}$
, and the second factor in each denominator has its zero at
$z_{i_1}=q^{i_0i_1}(q^{i_0i_2})^{-1}z_{i_2}$
. The power of q appearing is

and so
$q^{i_0i_1}(q^{i_0i_2})^{-1}$
is equal to
$q_{i_1i_2}$
or
$(q_{i_2i_1})^{-1}$
, whichever is defined. Thus this zero cancels with a zero in the numerator of
$\Gamma ^{i_1i_2}$
or
$\Gamma ^{i_2i_1}$
, whichever is defined. Therefore we need only consider the simple poles at
$z_{i_1}=(q^{i_1i_2})^{-1}z_{i_2}$
for
$i_1<i_2$
and
$z_{i_1}=(q^{i_2i_1})^{-1}z_{i_2}$
for
$i_2<i_1$
. Observe that the residues will be the same for either inequality. In the case
$i_2<i_1$
, for example,
$\Gamma ^{i_2i_1}$
needs to be rewritten so that its simple pole inside
$\mathbb {T}$
is in the correct format to calculate the residue by substitution:

Therefore after integrating within the clump at hand with respect to
$z_{i_0}$
and then
$z_{i_1}$
, we have the expression

Now we integrate with respect to
$z_{i_2}$
. Again, only poles from the product of
$\Gamma ^{ij}$
’s occur with nonzero residues: in total we have simple poles contained in
$\mathbb {T}$
possibly at
$z_{i_2}=q^{i_1i_2}q^{i_0i_1}(q^{i_0j})^{-1}z_j$
, at
$z_{i_2}=q^{i_1i_2}(q^{i_1j})^{-1}z_j$
and at
$z_{i_2}=(q^{i_2,j})^{-1}z_j$
for
$j\neq i_0, i_1, i_2$
. It may happen that these poles are not all distinct, but all zeros in the denominator of the former two types are in fact cancelled by zeros of denominator anyway. The necessary factors occur in the product immediately adjacent on the right. Indeed, we have

and so either
$q^{i_1i_2}q^{i_0i_1}(q_{i_0j})^{-1}=q^{i_1i_2}q_{i_1j}$
or
$q^{i_1i_2}q^{i_0i_1}(q_{i_0j})^{-1}=q^{i_1i_2}(q_{i_1j})^{-1}$
(or
$q_{ji_1}$
or
$(q_{ji_1})^{-1}$
).
Likewise we have

as happened when we integrated with respect to
$z_{i_0}$
.
Now we see the following pattern: At each stage, we integrate with respect to the variable we took a residue at in the previous step. When integrating with respect to
$z_{i_r}$
, there will be
$r+1$
products of rational functions, and each rational function in the leftmost r products will contribute a pole, in addition to the pole contributed by
$\Gamma ^{i_ri_{r+1}}$
or
$\Gamma ^{i_{r+1}i_r}$
, whichever is defined. However, each is nullified by having zero residue thanks to a denominator in the product immediately to the right. Integrating with respect to
$z_{i_r}$
will result in extracting
$r+1$
new rational factors, each of the form claimed in the theorem. When it comes to integrating with respect to
$z_{i_l}$
, all variables
$z_{i_l}$
will cancel from the remains of the Gamma functions by homogeneity, and the factor
$\frac {1}{z_{i_l}}$
will result in the final integral contributing just the remaining
$l+1$
rational factors.
Lemma 3.6 is a porism of the preceding proof.
Proof of Lemma 3.6.
We will evaluate the integral (3.5) by applying the residue theorem successively for each variable as in the proof of Theorem 3.2. Note that as functions of any variable
$z_k$
, the functions
$\prod _{i<j}\Gamma ^{ij}$
and all the other products, for example those appearing in (3.7), have numerator and denominator with equal degrees. Thus the overall sum of powers of all
$z_i$
in the integrand of (3.5) is
$e_0+\cdots +e_N$
, and in general, the sum of powers of all
$z_i$
in the integrand of an expression like (3.7) is the sum of the degrees of the monomial
$z_{i_j}$
terms.
When evaluating (3.5) along a single branch, we find again that the only poles that appear are of the form
$z_i=(q^{ij})^{-1}z_j$
, or
$z_i^{e_i}=0$
for
$e_i<0$
. We will track the effect that evaluating each successive residue has on the total degree of the integrand, and then conclude using the fact that
$\int _{\mathbb {T}} z^r\,\mathrm {d}z=2\pi i\delta _{r,-1}$
. First, observe that evaluating a residue of the form
$z_i=(q^{ij})^{-1}z_j$
increases the sum of all powers by
$1$
; a factor
$z_j$
is contributed to the resulting integrand. The sum of all powers is likewise increased by
$1$
when evaluating the residue at a simple pole of
$z_i^{-1}$
at
$0$
. To compute the residue at a pole of
$z_i^{-e_i}$
at
$0$
for
$e_i>1$
, consider the Taylor expansion at
$0$
of
$\Gamma ^{ij}$
. We have

and

Multiplying these series and further multiplying by the denominator
$z_i^2-(q_{ij}+q_{ij}^{-1})z_iz_j+z_j$
, it follows that the Taylor expansion of
$\Gamma ^{ij}$
is

It is clear that the salient point of (3.8), that
$z_i^n$
appears with a coefficient proportional to
$z_j^{-n}$
, holds also for the all the products like those in (3.7). Thus computing a residue at the pole of
$z_i^{-e_i}$
at
$0$
will result in a new integrand, the total degree of which has increased by
$e_i-e_i+1=1$
. It now follows that after integrating with respect to
$N-1$
variables, the final integral to be computed will be a constant times
$(2\pi i)^{-1}\int _{\mathbb {T}} z_N^{e_0+\cdots +e_N+N-1}\mathrm {d}z_N$
. This is nonzero if and only if
$e_0+\cdots +e_N=-N$
. Summing over all branches of a bookkeeping tree, we see that (3.5) is nonzero only if
$e_0+\cdots +e_N=-N$
.
The lemma is helpful for computing explicit examples, as it points out that one can always avoid dealing with higher-order poles. Indeed, given an integral of the form (3.5), we may assume by Lemma 3.6 that
$e_0+\cdots +e_N=-N$
. If
$e_i=-1$
for all i then the integral (3.5) is just the integral from Theorem 3.2. Otherwise there is some
$e_{i_0}\geq 0$
. We may assume that
$i_0=0$
. Then the only poles in
$z_0$
are of the form
$z_0=(q^{0i_1})^{-1}z_{i_1}$
for indices
$i_1>0$
. Therefore we compute that (3.5) is equal to a sum of terms of the form

The total degree of the integrand is now
$e_0+\cdots +e_N+1=-(N-1)$
. Therefore either
$e_{i_0}+e_{i_1}+1=e_{i_2}=\cdots =e_{-N}=-1$
, or we may again assume without loss of generality that the exponent of some
$z_{i_j}$
is nonnegative, and proceed with evaluating (3.9) by integrating with respect to
$z_{i_j}$
. We may continue in this way, never having to deal with more than a simple pole at
$0$
. (Of course, the resulting order of integration need not be the same as the order used in the proofs of Theorem 3.2 and Corollary 3.7.)
We can now prove Corollary 3.7.
Proof of Corollary 3.7.
In light of Lemma 2.17, it is enough to prove that the conclusions of the present corollary hold for integrals of the form (3.5). We again follow the algorithm from the proof of Theorem 3.2, so it is sufficient to consider a single branch, and for this it suffices to observe that, given, for example, a variant

of (3.7) in which
$e_{i_2}<-1$
, the quotient rule gives that the residue at
$z_{i_2}=0$
is equal to a linear combination over
$\mathbb {Q}[q^{\frac {1}{2}}, q^{-\frac {1}{2}}]$
of integrals of the form

for new exponents
$e^{\prime }_{i_k}$
. This and the calculations in the proof of Theorem 3.2 make clear that the only positive powers of
$q^{1/2}$
that appear in the any denominator are those that appeared as in Theorem 3.2. These are controlled by the possible block sizes of M, and hence are bounded in terms of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. Throughout this procedure, the denominator has been contributed to only by the Plancherel density itself, which depends only on M. The last claim of the corollary now follows from Proposition 2.11.
3.2 The functions
$f_w$
for general
$\mathbf {G}$
For general
$\mathbf {G}$
, we will follow the same plan as for
$\mathbf {G}=\mathrm {GL}_n$
. The only difference is that we have less control over which denominators can appear. Indeed, this is true even for formal degrees, but complications are also introduced by residual coset we integrate over, or equivalently, by lack of explicit control of the Satake parameter of
$\pi =i_P^G(\omega \otimes \nu )$
for arbitrary discrete series representations
$\omega \in \mathcal {E}_2^I(M)$
.
Theorem 3.11. Let
$w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. Then
$f_w(1)$
is a rational function of q with poles drawn from a finite set of roots of unity depending only on
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. The numerator is a Laurent polynomial in
$q^{1/2}$
. The denominator depends only on the two-sided cell containing w. If w is in the lowest two-sided cell, then the denominator divides the Poincaré polynomial of
$\mathbf {G}$
.
In the proof, we do not attempt to record any information about degrees of the numerators. It will therefore be necessary to control the possible numerators of
$f_w(1)$
in a different manner than for
$\mathbf {G}=\mathrm {GL}_n$
in order to prove Proposition 3.13 below.
Proof of Theorem 3.11.
First, we note that the reasoning for the lowest cell used in the proof of Corollary 3.3 holds for arbitrary G. Therefore (3.3) proves the last claim just as for
$\mathrm {GL}_n$
.
More generally, let
$w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
and
$M_P$
be a Levi subgroup corresponding to the two-sided cell containing w. Let
$N=\operatorname {\mathrm {rk}} A_P$
. Given a coroot
$\alpha ^\vee $
and a basis of the cocharacter lattice as explained in Section 2.7, we write
$\alpha ^\vee =z_1^{e_1}\cdots z_n^{e_n}$
for integers
$e_i=e_i(\alpha )$
.
By Lemma 2.17 and Theorem 2.2, it suffices to show the conclusions of the theorem hold for integrals of the form

where
$f_i\in \mathbb {Z}$
and
$q_\omega =q_{\omega ,\alpha }$
is the value of
$\alpha ^\vee $
on the Satake parameter of
$\omega $
– this is a positive power of
$q^{1/2}$
(of q if
$\alpha ^\vee /2$
is a coroot) by Sections 7 and 8 of [Reference Opdam38]. We have
$q_{2\alpha }=1$
and the resulting simplification (2.6) whenever
$\alpha ^\vee /2$
is not a coroot.
With notation fixed, the theorem is essentially an observation. Indeed, suppose that we integrate with respect to
$z_1$
, and wish to compute the contribution to the residue at a pole

arising from the factor

where
$\xi $
and the
$\zeta $
are primitive
$e_1$
-st roots of unity. The contribution is then

which simplifies to

We have used no special properties of the integers
$e_i$
or
$f_j$
, and thus after integrating with respect to
$z_1$
, (3.10) is equal to a sum of integrals with respect to
$z_2,\dots , z_n$
again of the form (3.10), except the factors in the denominator will now involve powers
$q_\omega (\alpha )q_{\omega }(\alpha ')^{1/2}$
and
$q_\omega (\alpha )q_\omega (\alpha ')^{-1/2}$
, as for
$\mathbf {G}=\mathrm {GL}_n$
. The coefficients of this sum are the form

where Q is a Laurent polynomial in
$q^{\frac {1}{2}}$
,
$r_i\in \frac {1}{2}\mathbb {N}$
with, a priori, complex coefficients, and
$c_i\in \mathbb {N}$
. Indeed, as we never required any cancellations with the numerator to extract rational functions of q of the required form, it is clear that the simplification of (3.11) to (3.12) works essentially the same way for any higher order poles that appear – again thanks to the quotient rule – and that when integrating with respect to subsequent variables, the additional rational functions of q appearing have the same shape as in the proof of Theorem 3.2. It is also clear that the factors corresponding to non-reduced roots behave similarly.
Therefore (3.10) has poles in q only at a finite number of roots of unity. Again by the quotient rule, exponents
$r_i$
and
$c_i$
depend only on M. Clearly there are only finitely many exponents
$r_i$
that appear for any M. The theorem now follows.
3.3 Relating
$t_w$
and
$f_w$
We will now relate the Schwartz functions
$f_w$
on G to the elements
$\phi ^{-1}(t_w)$
of a completion
of
$\mathbf {H}$
, whose definition we will now recall. In this section
$\mathbf {G}$
is general.
3.3.1 Completions of
$\mathbf {H}$
and
$J\otimes _{\mathbb {C}}\mathcal {A}$
Let
$\hat {\mathcal {A}}=\mathbb {C}((\mathbf {q}^{-1/2}))$
and
$\hat {\mathcal {A}}^-=\mathbb {C}[[\mathbf {q}^{-1/2}]]$
. Write
for the
$\hat {\mathcal {A}}$
-algebra

where we say that
$b_x\to 0$
as
$\ell (x)\to \infty $
if for all
$N>0$
,
$b_x\in (\mathbf {q}^{-1/2})^N\hat {\mathcal {A}}^-$
for all x sufficiently long.
Consider also the completions

and

of
$\mathbf {H}$
(note the difference between
$C^{\prime }_x$
and
$C_x$
), as well as the completion

of
$J\otimes _{\mathbb {C}}\mathcal {A}$
.
In [Reference Lusztig28], Lusztig shows that
$\phi $
extends to an isomorphism of
$\hat {\mathcal {A}}$
-algebras
. In this way the elements
may be identified with elements of
via
$\phi $
.
Lemma 3.12. We have . The inclusion is continuous.
Proof. Given an infinite sum
$\sum _{x}b_xC^{\prime }_x$
, upon rewriting this sum in the standard basis, the coefficient of some
$T_y$
is

As
$\deg P_{y,x}\leq \frac {1}{2}(\ell (x)-\ell (y)-1)$
, we have that
$\mathbf {q}^{-\frac {\ell (x)}{2}}P_{y,x}(\mathbf {q})$
is a polynomial in
$\mathbf {q}^{-1/2}$
. Therefore the above sum defines a formal Laurent series. Moreover, as
$\ell (y)\to \infty $
, it is clear that
$a_y\to 0$
. Continuity of the inclusion is clear from the formula for
$a_y$
.
3.3.2 The functions
$f_w$
and the basis elements
$t_w$
We shall now explain how the map
$\tilde {\phi }\colon J\to \mathcal {C}(G)^I$
induces a map of
$\mathcal {A}$
-algebras
.
Proposition 3.13. There is a map of
$\mathcal {A}$
-algebras
such that if
$\hat {\phi }(t_w)=\sum _{x}a_{x,w}T_x$
, then
$a_{x,w}(q)=f_w(x)$
. Moreover, there is a constant N depending only on
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
such that
$a_{x,w}\in (\mathbf {q}^{1/2})^N\hat {\mathcal {A}}^-$
for all
$x,w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
.
The most difficult part of the proof of the proposition is showing that
$a_{x,w}\to 0$
as
$\ell (x)\to \infty $
. To this end we have
Lemma 3.14. Let
$w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. Then the degree in q of the numerator of
$f_w(1)$
is bounded uniformly in w by some N depending only on
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
, and hence in the notation of Proposition 3.13 above, we have
$a_{1,w}\in (\mathbf {q}^{1/2})^N\hat {\mathcal {A}}^-$
for all
$w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
.
Remark 3.15. In type A, the Lemma follows immediately from the order of integration given after the proof of Lemma 3.6.
Proof of Lemma 3.14.
Let
$\pi _\omega =\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\nu \otimes \omega )$
be a tempered I-spherical representation of G arising by induction from a parabolic P such that
$\operatorname {\mathrm {rank}} A_P=k$
. Let
$\mathbb {T}_\omega ^k$
be the compact torus parametrizing twists of
$\omega $
, and let
$t_w$
be given. By Lemma 2.17,
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{f_w}\right )$
is a regular function on
$\mathbb {T}^k$
, i.e. a Laurent polynomial in the coordinates
$z_1,\dots , z_k$
on
$\mathbb {T}^k$
. The coefficients of this Laurent polynomial are independent of q, as J and its representation theory are independent of q. As we have

for all
$z_i\in \mathbb {T}$
and r, we may bound, for large q, the absolute value
$|\mu _{M_P}(z)|$
of the Plancherel density for
$M_P$
by a rational function
$U_{M_P,\omega }(q)$
. By Theorem 2.2, we may do the same for formal degrees
$d(\omega )$
, bounding
$|d(\omega )|$
by a rational function
$D_\omega (q)$
. Thus we define a rational function of q by

where
$h_1,k_1\in \mathbb {C}[q]$
and
$h_2,k_2\in q^{-1}\mathbb {C}[q^{-1}]$
, and the sum is over the finitely many, up to unitary twist, pairs
$(M,\omega )$
, for
$\omega \in \mathcal {E}_2(M)$
, such that
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi _\omega }\,,{f_w}\right )\neq 0$
.
Fix
$w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. Then

Crucially, this expression holds for all
$q\gg 1$
.
On the other hand, by Corollary 3.7 and Theorem 3.11,
$f_w(1)$
is a rational function of q, and for q sufficiently large, we may write

where
$f_1,d_1\in \mathbb {C}[q]$
and
$f_2,d_2\in q^{-1}\mathbb {C}[q^{-1}]$
. Therefore for all
$q\gg 1$
we have

We claim that this implies

for q sufficiently large. Indeed, let
$\epsilon>0$
be given and choose
$q\gg 1$
such that

and

and (3.13) holds. Then we have

which proves (3.14).
Therefore

Now, the denominator of
$f_w(1)$
, and hence
$\deg d_1$
, depends only on the two-sided cell containing w, again by Corollary 3.7 and Theorem 3.11. We can also bound
$\deg h_1$
uniformly in terms of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
, as it depends only on the Plancherel measure and the finitely many possible formal degrees appearing in the parametrization of the I-spherical part of the tempered dual of G. This proves the lemma.
If
$t_w\in t_dJt_{d'}$
for
$d\neq d'$
, then
$t_w$
is a commutator. We record this observation as
Lemma 3.16. We have that
$f_w(1)=0$
unless
$f_d\star f_w\star f_d\neq 0$
for some distinguished involution d.
Now we can prove the proposition.
Proof of Proposition 3.13.
Let
$w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. Write
$\tilde {\phi }(t_w)=f_w=\sum _{x}A_{x,w}T_x$
as Schwartz functions on G so that
$A_{x,w}=f_w(x)$
. We must show that there is a unique element
$a_{x,w}\in \hat {\mathcal {A}}$
such that
$a_{x,w}(q)=A_{x,w}$
as complex numbers. We will then check that
$a_{x,w}\to 0$
rapidly enough as
$\ell (x)\to \infty $
for
$\sum _{x}a_{x,w}T_x$
to define an element of
.
By Corollary 3.7 and Theorem 3.11, there is a formal power series in
$\hat {\mathcal {A}}^-$
with constant term equal to
$1$
that specializes to the denominator of
$A_{1,w}$
when
$\mathbf {q}=q$
. Moreover, there is a unique formal Laurent series
$a_{1,w}\in \hat {\mathcal {A}}$
such that
$a_{1,w}(q)=A_{1,w}$
for all prime powers. Indeed,
$a_{1,w}$
is convergent for
$\mathbf {q}=q$
, and the difference of any two such series defines a meromorphic function of
$\mathbf {q}^{-1/2}$
outside the unit disk with zeros at
$q=p^r$
for every
$r\in \mathbb {N}$
. As these prime powers accumulate at
$\infty $
, such a meromorphic function must be identically zero.
If
$f\in \mathcal {C}^{I\times I}$
is a Harish-Chandra Schwartz function, then

By definition,
$f_w(x)=A_{x,w}$
.
On the other hand, according to Lemma 2.9, we have, for
$\omega (x^{-1})_f$
as defined above Lemma 1.10,




where
$d_w$
is the unique distinguished involution in the right cell containing w.
In line (3.15), we rewrote
$T_{x^{-1}}$
in terms of the
$C'$
-basis of H, using the inverse Kazhdan-Lusztig polynomials
$Q_{y,x^{-1}}$
. In line (3.16), we applied the involution
${}^\dagger (-)$
(see Lemma 1.10). In line (3.17) we applied Lusztig’s map
$\phi _q$
, and then in line (3.18), we applied the map
$\tilde {\phi }$
. Also in line (3.18), we used that left (respectively right) cells give left (respectively right) ideals of J, and so
$t_wt_r$
is an integral linear combination of
$t_{z^{-1}}$
, with
${d\sim _L z^{-1}\sim _R d_w}$
. By lemma 3.16,
$f_{z^{-1}}(1)\neq 0$
only if
$d=d_w$
, that is,
$z^{-1}\sim _L d_w$
.
We use (3.18) to define
$a_{x,w}\in \hat {\mathcal {A}}$
. By the same arguments as above,
$a_{x,w}$
is unique and defines a meromorphic function of
$\mathbf {q}^{-1/2}$
. It remains to show that as
$\ell (x)\to \infty $
,
$a_{x,w}\to 0$
in the
$(\mathbf {q}^{-1/2})$
-adic topology. This follows in fact from (3.18). Indeed, the product
$f_w\star f_r$
is an
$\mathbb {N}$
-linear combination of functions
$f_z$
, and the values
$f_z(1)$
are rational functions of q, the numerators of which have uniformly bounded degree in q by Lemma 3.14. The polynomials
$h_{y,d_w,r}$
have bounded degree in q (for example in terms of the a-function). Finally, the degree in q of

is at most

as
$\ell (x)\to \infty $
. This completes the definition of
$\hat {\phi }$
as a map of
$\mathcal {A}$
-modules.
It is easy to see that
$\hat {\phi }$
is a morphism of rings, essentially because
$\tilde {\phi }$
is. Indeed, we have

while on the other hand

and when
$\mathbf {q}=q$
, we have that (3.21) becomes by definition

Hence for infinitely many prime powers we have that the specializations of (3.20) agrees with those of (3.21), and hence (3.20) is equal to (3.21) in . A similar argument shows that
$\hat {\phi }$
preserves units.
Remark 3.17. The proof, specifically (3.19), gives a necessary condition for an element of to belong to the image of
$\hat {\phi }$
: the coefficients must decay asymptotically at least as fast as
$\mathbf {q}^{-\frac {\ell (x)}{2}}$
.
Proposition 3.18. There is a commutative diagram

and we have
$\hat {\phi }={}^\dagger (-)\circ \phi ^{-1}$
as morphisms of
$\mathcal {A}$
-algebras
. In particular,
$a_{x,w}$
has integer coefficients for all
$x,w\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
.
Proof. The second claim follows from the first if we show that
$\hat {\phi }$
extends to a continuous morphism
, by density of
$\phi (\mathbf {H})$
in
, and the third claim follows from the second and the fact that the completions we consider are actually defined over
$\mathbb {Z}$
[Reference Lusztig28, Thm. 2.8].
Note that as
$\tilde {\phi }\circ \phi _q={}^\dagger (-)$
on H for all q, we have that
$\hat {\phi }={}^\dagger (-)\circ \phi ^{-1}$
on
$\phi (\mathbf {H})$
. This says that the diagram commutes.
We now show that
$\hat {\phi }$
extends to a continuous map
. Let
$\sum _{w}b_wt_w$
define an element of
and define

where

We must first show that this infinite sum of elements of
$\hat {\mathcal {A}}$
is well-defined. By Lemma 3.14 and (3.18), we have that there is
$M\in \mathbb {N}$
such that
$a_{y,w}\in (\mathbf {q}^{1/2})^M\hat {\mathcal {A}}^-$
for all
$y,w$
. Therefore
$b^{\prime }_y$
is well-defined, and as
$a_{y,w}\to 0$
as
$\ell (y)\to \infty $
, we have
$b^{\prime }_y\to 0$
as
$\ell (y)\to \infty $
. Therefore
$\hat {\phi }$
extends to
.
To show continuity, it suffices to show that if
$\{\sum _{w}b_{w,n}t_{w}\}_n$
is a sequence of elements of
tending to
$0$
as
$n\to \infty $
, then

as
$n\to \infty $
in
, where
$b^{\prime }_{y,n}=\sum _{w}b_{w,n}a_{y,w}$
. For all
$R>0$
, there is
$N>0$
such that
$n>N$
implies
$b_{x,n}\in (\mathbf {q}^{-1/2})^R\hat {\mathcal {A}}^-$
for all x. We have seen that there is M depending only on
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
such that
$a_{y,w}\in (\mathbf {q}^{1/2})^M\hat {\mathcal {A}}^-$
for all
$w,y$
. Therefore
$b^{\prime }_{y,n}\to 0$
as
$n\to \infty $
, because
$b_{w,n}\to 0$
as
$n\to \infty $
.
Note that Proposition 3.18 means in particular that .
Corollary 3.19. We have

Proof. If
$w=1$
, everything in (3.18) reduces to
$r=d_w=y=1$
, and we need only recall that
$Q_{1,x}(\mathbf {q})=1$
for any
$x\in W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
. This follows from unicity of the inverse Kazhdan-Lusztig polynomials and the identity
$\sum _{x\leq w}(-1)^{\ell (x)}P_{x,w}(\mathbf {q})=0$
for
$w\neq 1$
[Reference Bjorner and Brenti9, Exercise 5.17].
Corollary 3.20. The map
$\tilde {\phi }$
defined in [Reference Braverman and Kazhdan11] and recalled in diagram (1.2) is injective.
Proof. Let
$q>1$
and let
$j\neq 0$
be an element of J. We must show that
$\tilde {\phi }(j)\neq 0$
. By injectivity of
$\hat {\phi }$
, we have
$\hat {\phi }(j)\neq 0$
. By definition of the map
$\hat {\phi }$
, this means that there exists
$q_0>1$
,
$u,s\in G^\vee $
such that
$us=su$
with s compact, and a representation
$\rho $
of
$\pi _0(Z_{G^\vee }(u,s))$
such that
$jK(u,s,\rho , q_0)\neq 0$
. But then
$jK(u,s,\rho , q)\neq 0$
,
$K(u,s,\rho ,q)$
being a different specialization of the restriction of the same J-module
$E(u,s,\rho )$
as for
$K(u,s,\rho , q_0)$
, and
$K(u,s,\rho , q)$
is also tempered. It follows that
$\tilde {\phi }(j)\neq 0$
.
3.4 The case of
$\mathrm {GL}_n$
Theorem 3.21. Let
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
be of type
$\tilde {A}_n$
. Then statements 1 and 2 in the statement of Theorem 1.2 are true, together with a stronger version of statement 3: Let
$u=(r_1,\dots , r_k)$
be a unipotent conjugacy class in
$\mathrm {GL}_n(\mathbb {C})$
. Let d be a distinguished involution in the two-sided cell
$\mathbf {c}(u)\subset W_{\mathrm {aff}}(\mathrm {GL}_n)$
corresponding to u. Let
$\pi $
be the unique family of parabolic inductions that
$t_d$
does not annihilate. Then
$\operatorname {\mathrm {rank}}\pi (t_d)=1$
.
Proof. By Corollary 3.7 and Propositions 3.13 and 3.18,
$a_{1,x}$
is a rational function of
$\mathbf {q}$
for all w. Then equation (3.18) implies that
$a_{x,w}$
, being a sum of rational functions with Laurent polynomial coefficients, is a rational function of
$\mathbf {q}$
for all x. The same equation, together with the fact that
$J_{\mathbf {c}}$
is a two-sided ideal for each cell
$\mathbf {c}$
shows that the denominator of
$a_{x,w}$
depends only on the two-sided cell containing w. This proves the first claim. The second claim now follows from the first claim and the first statement of Corollary 3.7 and the fact that
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
has finitely many two-sided cells.
Finally, let
$u=(r_1,\dots , r_k)$
. We have
$\pi =\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\mathrm {St}_{M_P}\otimes \nu )$
, for the unique Levi
$M_P$
such that u is distinguished in
$M_P^\vee $
, and as
$\dim \mathrm {St}_{M_P}^I=1$
, clearly we have

This is also the number of distinguished involutions in
$\mathbf {c}(u)$
, by [Reference Shi45]. The claim follows from Corollary 3.20.
3.5 Proof of Theorem 1.2
Proof of Theorem 1.2.
Theorem 3.11 together with Propositions 3.13 and 3.18 show that
$a_{1,w}$
is a rational function of
$\mathbf {q}$
with denominator depending only on the two-sided cell containing w. Equation (3.18) again shows that
$a_{x,w}$
is a rational function of
$\mathbf {q}$
with denominator depending only on the two-sided cell containing w; up to twists the set
$\mathcal {E}_2(M)^I$
is finite for every Levi subgroup M, so we may multiply through to include the denominators of all required formal degrees, which are in fact rational of the correct form by Theorem 2.2. Therefore there is a polynomial
$P_{\mathbf {G}}^{1}(\mathbf {q})$
that clears denominators of all
$a_{x,w}$
. This proves the first statement of the Theorem.
Now, by Proposition 9 and Remark 2 of [Reference Bezrukavnikov, Dawydiak and Dobrovolska7],
$\phi $
induces a surjection

Therefore for every
$j\in J$
, there is
$N=N(j)\in \mathbb {N}$
and
$h\in \mathbf {H}$
such that

in
$J/[J,J]\otimes \mathcal {A}$
. Considering traces and invoking Proposition 3.18, we see that the denominator of every
$a_{x,w}$
divides a power of
$P_{W}(\mathbf {q})$
. Therefore there is
$N=N_{W_{\mathrm {aff}}}$
depending only
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
such that we can take
$P^1_{\mathbf {G}}(\mathbf {q})=P_W(\mathbf {q})^N$
. This proves the second statement of the Theorem. The third statement was proven in Corollary 3.3.
4 Representations with fixed vectors under parahoric subgroups
In this section we will give an application of the J-action on the tempered H-modules. The first statement is an immediate corollary of the existence of this action, but the second statement relies on Corollary 3.20.
Theorem 4.1. Let
$\mathcal {P}$
be a parahoric subgroup of G. Let
$\pi $
be a simple tempered representation of G with I-fixed vectors with Kazhdan-Lusztig parameter
$(u,s,\rho )$
. Let
$w_{\mathcal {P}}$
be the longest element in the parabolic subgroup of
$W_{\mathrm {aff}}$
defined by
$\mathcal {P}$
and
$\mathcal {B}_u^\vee $
be the Springer fibre for u.
-
1. If
$$\begin{align*}\ell(w_{\mathcal{P}})> a(u)=\dim_{\mathbb{C}}\mathcal{B}_u^\vee, \end{align*}$$
$$\begin{align*}\pi^{\mathcal{P}}=\{0\}. \end{align*}$$
-
2. Conversely, let
$u_{\mathcal {P}}$ be the unipotent conjugacy class corresponding to the two-sided cell containing
$w_{\mathcal {P}}$ . Then there exists
$s\in Z_{G^\vee }(u_{\mathcal {P}})$ , a Levi subgroup
$M^\vee $ of
$G^\vee $ minimal such that
$(u_{\mathcal {P}},s)\in M^\vee $ , and a discrete series representation
$\omega \in \mathcal {E}_2(M)$ such that
$$\begin{align*}\pi^{\mathcal{P}}=i_{P_M}^G(\omega\otimes\nu)^{\mathcal{P}}\neq \{0\} \end{align*}$$
$\nu $ non-strictly positive and the parameter of
$\pi $ is
$(u_{\mathcal {P}},s)$ .
Proof. Let
$\mathcal {P}$
and
$w_{\mathcal {P}}$
be as in the statement. Then
$C^{\prime }_{w_{\mathcal {P}}}$
is proportional by a power of q to the indicator function
$1_{\mathcal {P}}$
in H. Moreover,
$w_{\mathcal {P}}$
is a distinguished involution, with
$a(w_{\mathcal {P}})=\ell (w_{\mathcal {P}})$
. By Proposition 3.18 and the fact that
$\phi $
is ‘upper-triangular’ with respect to the a-function, we have
$(\phi \circ {}^\dagger(-) )(C^{\prime }_{w_{\mathcal {P}}})J_{\mathbf {c}}=0$
for
$\mathbf {c}$
corresponding to u if
$a(w_{\mathcal {P}})>a(u)$
.
For the second statement, by Corollary 3.20, there is a tempered representation
$\pi =\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\omega \otimes \nu )$
with
$\pi (t_{w_{\mathcal {P}}})\neq 0$
; the unipotent part of its parameter is
$u_{\mathcal {P}}$
. In particular, there is a vector
$v\in \pi $
such that
$\pi (t_{w_{\mathcal {P}}})v=v$
. We have

as
$t_zt_{w_{\mathcal {P}}}\neq 0$
only if
$z\sim _Lw_{\mathcal {P}}$
, and
$C_{w_{\mathcal {P}}}C_{w_{\mathcal {P}}}=(-1)^{\ell (w_{\mathcal {P}})}\operatorname {\mathrm {vol}}(\mathcal {P})C_{w_{\mathcal {P}}}$
. Thus
$v\in \pi ^{\mathcal {P}}$
. As
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{t_d}\right )$
is constant with respect to
$\nu $
, the last part of the claim follows.
A version of this statement for enhanced parameters in the case
$\mathcal {P}=G(\mathcal {O})$
appears in [Reference Aubert, Baum, Plymen and Solleveld2, Prop. 10.1].
Table 1 Tempered Iwahori-spherical representation of
$G=\mathrm {SO}_5(F)=\mathrm {PGSp}_4(F)$
.

Table 2 Parahoric fixed vectors for
$G=\mathrm {SO}_5(F)=\mathrm {PGSp}_4(F)$
.

Example 4.2. The principal series representations have
$u=\{1\}$
, maximal a-value, and fixed vectors under every maximal compact subgroup of G. On the other extreme, the Steinberg representation has u regular, and does not have fixed vectors under any proper parahoric.
In addition to the interpretation given in Section 1.1.3, in the examples below, the J-action also detects which direct summands of a reducible
$\mathcal {P}$
-spherical tempered representation are themselves
$\mathcal {P}$
-spherical.
Example 4.3. Let
$G=\mathrm {SL}_2(F)$
. As remarked in [Reference Dawydiak14], the distinguished involutions in the lowest two-sided cell are the simple reflections
$s_0$
and
$s_1$
, and each
$t_{s_i}$
is invariant under one of the two conjugacy classes of maximal parahoric subgroup of G. For unitary principal series representations
$\pi $
, one has
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{t_{s_0}}\right )=\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{t_{s_1}}\right )=1$
. At the quadratic character, the corresponding principal series representation is reducible, and each summand contains fixed vectors under precisely one of the maximal parahorics. Indeed, in [Reference Dawydiak14] this computation is carried out at the level of the Schwartz space of the basic affine space.
Example 4.4. Let
$G=\mathrm {SO}_5(F)=\mathrm {PGSp}_4(F)$
, with affine Dynkin diagram labelled as

There are five conjugacy classes of parahoric subgroups, each obtained by projection from
$\mathrm {GSp}_4(F)$
: the maximal parahoric
$\mathrm {PGSp}_4(\mathcal {O})$
, the image of the paramodular group
$\mathsf {K}$
corresponding to
$\{0,2\}$
, the image of the Siegel parahoric subgroup
$\mathsf {Si}$
corresponding to
$\{1\}$
, the image of the Klingen parahoric
$\mathsf {Kl}$
corresponding to
$\{0\}$
, and the Iwahori subgroup.
The columns of table 1 give all the I-spherical tempered representations of G by denoting the representation
$\operatorname {\mathrm {Ind}}_P^G(\omega )$
by
$\omega $
. We recall the few cases of reducibility of these inductions immediately below. The rows list unipotent conjugacy classes in
$G^\vee =\mathrm {Sp}_4(\mathbb {C})$
such that all tempered standard modules
$K(u,s,\rho )$
are in row u. That is, the rows record which summand of J acts on each representation.
The discrete series are as in [Reference Reeder41]. The only reducibility, by [Reference Matić34, Prop. 3.3], is the reducibility

for
$\xi ^2=1$
.
We can now compute the traces of some elements
$t_d$
using the description of the simple J-modules given in [Reference Xi50]. For the cells
$(1,\dots , 1)$
,
$(2,1,1)$
, and
$(4)$
, we have
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{t_d}\right )=1$
for all
$\pi $
. We have

In table 2,
$\mathrm {trace}\left ({\pi }\,,{t_d}\right )$
is recorded in bold face, whereas the dimension of
$\pi ^{\mathcal {P}}$
, taken from [Reference Roberts and Schmidt42, Table A.15], is recorded in normal face. Representations attached to the same cell but belonging to different packets are separated with a dotted line.
Acknowledgements
The author thanks Alexander Braverman for introducing him to this material and the problem, for suggesting the use of the Plancherel formula, and for helpful conversations. The author also thanks Itai Bar-Natan, Roman Bezrukavnikov, Gurbir Dhillon, Malors Espinosa-Lara, Julia Gordon, George Lusztig, and Matthew Sunohara for helpful conversations. The author thanks Maarten Solleveld for explaining the generalization in [Reference Solleveld46] of the results of [Reference Feng, Opdam and Solleveld16], suggesting the reference [Reference Aubert, Baum, Plymen and Solleveld2], and for careful reading of an early version of this manuscript. The author owes a great debt to the anonymous referee for careful reading resulting in many corrections and improvements both mathematical and expositional.
Some of this work was completed at the Max Planck Institute in Mathematics for Bonn, the directors and staff of which the author thanks for their hospitality. This research was supported by NSERC.
Competing interests
The author declares none.
Data availability statement
There is no data associated with this research.