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1 vote
0 answers
130 views

A basis of the weight space in the semi-invariant ring corresponding to the weight $\langle(2,3,2),\cdot\rangle$

I'm trying to understand Example 10.11.1 on page 225 of the book "An introduction to quiver representations" by Harm Derksen and Jerzy Weyman (see the attached screenshot below) I want to ...
3 votes
0 answers
181 views

A conceptual explanation for the Kirchoff matrix theorem in terms of the quiver algebra

On the wikipedia page for the Kirchoff matrix theorem, they state a souped up version of the theorem: Let $G$ be a finite undirected loopless graph and let us form the square matrix $L$ indexed by the ...
2 votes
0 answers
71 views

Isomorphic quiver representations "after adding some zeros"

Let $Q$ be a quiver, with dimension vector $d$ and let $e$ be another dimension vector, such that $d_v\leq e_v$ for every vertex $v$ of $Q$. If $M$ is a $K$-representation of $Q$ of dimension vector $...
2 votes
1 answer
281 views

Indecomposable extensions of regular simple modules by preprojectives

Given four points in general position on $\mathbb{P}^2$ there exists a projection to $\mathbb{P}^1$ collapsing these four pairwise to two points. Its kernel is some fifth point on $\mathbb{P}^2$. In ...
12 votes
2 answers
828 views

Matrices into path algebras

I was thinking about quivers recently, and the following idea came to me. Let ei,j denote the matrix unit in Mn for 1 ≤ i,j ≤ n. Let Γ denote the complete quiver on vertices {1, …,...
5 votes
3 answers
781 views

Acyclic quivers differing only in arrow directions: functorial isomorphism of representation categories?

Let $Q$ and $R$ be two acyclic quivers which differ only in the directions of their arrows (i. e., the underlying undirected graphs are the same). 1. Does there exist an isomorphism of additive ...