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  q-deformation of the unitary group integral

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There is a well-known orthogonality property of $U(N)$ group characters

$$ \int d U \chi_{\mu}(U)\chi_\lambda(U^\dagger V)=\delta_{\mu\lambda}\frac{\chi_\mu(V)}{\dim_\mu} $$

where the integral is over unitary group, $\chi_\lambda$ is a character, labeled by the partition $\lambda$ and $\dim_\mu$ is the dimension of the correspondent representation, namely $\dim_\lambda=\chi_\lambda(\bf{1})$, the value of the character on the trivial group element.

In mathematical physics, in particular in topological strings (for example topological vertex) there appears the q-deformation of the dimension, namely $\dim^q_\lambda=\chi_\lambda(\rho)$ where $\rho$ is the diagonal matrix with the entries $1,q,q^2,\ldots$. The question:

is there any natural deformation of the unitary integral, which gives q-deformed dimensions in the r.g.s.?

$$ \left[\int d U \right]^q \chi_{\mu}(U)\chi_\lambda(U^\dagger V)=\delta_{\mu\lambda}\frac{\chi_\mu(V)}{\dim^q_\mu} $$

This post imported from StackExchange MathOverflow at 2014-07-28 11:17 (UCT), posted by SE-user Sasha
asked Oct 13, 2010 in Theoretical Physics by Sasha (110 points) [ no revision ]
One natural candidate to do everything with the Hopf algebra which gives the usual $q$-variant of $\mathrm{SU}_2(n)$.

This post imported from StackExchange MathOverflow at 2014-07-28 11:17 (UCT), posted by SE-user Mariano Suárez-Alvarez

Bump !

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