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. 2024 Apr 25;405(5):110. doi: 10.1007/s00220-024-04973-0

A Q-Operator for Open Spin Chains II: Boundary Factorization

Alec Cooper 1, Bart Vlaar 1,2,3,, Robert Weston 1
PMCID: PMC11636733  PMID: 39669755

Abstract

One of the features of Baxter’s Q-operators for many closed spin chain models is that all transfer matrices arise as products of two Q-operators with shifts in the spectral parameter. In the representation-theoretical approach to Q-operators, underlying this is a factorization formula for L-operators (solutions of the Yang–Baxter equation associated to particular infinite-dimensional representations). To extend such a formalism to open spin chains, one needs a factorization identity for solutions of the reflection equation (boundary Yang–Baxter equation) associated to these representations. In the case of quantum affine sl2 and diagonal K-matrices, we derive such an identity using the recently formulated theory of universal K-matrices for quantum affine algebras.

Introduction

Background and overview

Baxter first introduced his Q-operator in [Ba72, Ba73] as an auxiliary tool in the derivation of Bethe Equations for the eigenvalues of the 8-vertex model transfer matrix. The key characters in the story are the transfer matrix T(z) and the Q-operator Q(z). A detailed description of the essential properties of T(z) and Q(z) can be found in [BLZ97] (also see [VW20] and references therein); the key relation that they satisfy that leads directly to the Bethe equations is of the form

T(z)Q(z)=α+(z)Q(qz)+α-(z)Q(q-1z), 1.1

where α±(z) are meromorphic functions and qC× is not a root of unity.

In the original papers of Baxter, the operator Q(z) was constructed by a brilliant but ad hoc argument; the representation-theoretic construction of Q(z) had to wait more than 20 years until the work of Bazhanov, Lukyanov and Zamolodchikov [BLZ96, BLZ97, BLZ99]. The main idea of the latter approach is to construct both T(z) and Q(z) as partial traces over different representations of the universal R-matrix R of Uq(sl^2). The operator T(z) is a twisted trace over a two-dimensional Uq(sl^2)-representation Πz, and Q(z) is a similarly twisted trace over an infinite-dimensional Uq(b^+)-representation ρz, where b^+ is the upper Borel subalgebra of sl^2 (the relevant representations are defined in Sect. 4.4 of the current paper). The relation (1.1) for closed spin chains then follows immediately by considering a short exact sequence (SES) of Uq(b^+)-representations with Πzρz as its ‘middle’ object (cf. [FR99, Lem. 2 (2)]). For an arbitrary untwisted affine Lie algebra g^ with upper Borel subalgebra b^+, the level-0 representation theory of Uq(b^+) was studied in [HJ12]; for the general connection with the theory of Baxter’s Q-operators see [FH15].

As well as this direct SES route to the equation, there is an alternative strategy which we refer to as the factorization approach; for closed chains see [BS90, De05, DKK06, De07, BJMST09, BLMS10]. In fact, this approach was the one taken by Bazhanov, Lukyanov and Zamolodchikov. The work that developed this formalism in language most similar to the current paper is [KT14].

In this approach, a second operator Q¯(z) with similar properties to Q(z) is introduced as a trace of R over another infinite-dimensional representation ϱ¯z of Uq(b^+). The affinized version υz of the Uq(sl2)-Verma module is also considered as well as another infinite-dimensional filtered Uq(b^+)-module ϕz; these two representations depend on a complex parameter μ. The key connection between all representations is given by Theorem 4.4, which expresses the fact that particular pairwise tensor products are isomorphic as Uq(b^+)-modules by means of an explicit intertwiner O (defined in Sect. 4.5 of the current paper). At the level of the L-operators this implies

O12Lϱ(q-μ/2z)13Lϱ¯(qμ/2z)23=Lυ(z)13Lϕ(z)23O12, 1.2

(see Theorem 5.2 of the current paper), which is referred to as factorization of the Verma module L-operator Lυ(z) in terms of the L-operators Lϱ(z) and Lϱ¯(z) which are used to define Q(z), Q¯(z) (the transfer matrix corresponding to the additional operator Lϕ(z) is trivial).

Defining Tμ(z) to be the transfer matrix that is the trace over the μ-dependent representation υz of R in the first space, Theorem 5.2 yields a relation of the following form:

Tμ(z)Q(zq-μ/2)Q¯(zqμ/2). 1.3

The SES associated with υz in the case μ is an integer then leads to the key relation (1.1).

Present work

In the current work we are interested in an analogue of (1.2) for open chains, setting out an approach to Q-operators which complements the SES approach of [VW20].

The problem of Q-operators for open XXZ chains with diagonal boundaries was discussed in [BT18] and in [Ts21]. The XXX version of this problem was solved already in [FS15]. Earlier, Baxter TQ-relations with more general boundary conditions were found in [YNZ06] (XXZ) and [YZ06] (XYZ) by spin-j transfer matrix asymptotics.

Our main result is the following analogue of Theorem 5.2, which we call the boundary factorization identity. Its existence answers in the positive a question raised in [BT18, Sec. 5]:

Kυ(z)1Rυϕ(z2)Kϕ(z)2O=OKϱ(q-μ/2z)1Rϱϱ¯(z2)Kϱ¯(qμ/2z)2 1.4

where z is a formal parameter (which can be specialized to generic complex numbers). The precise statement is given in Theorem 8.1. This formula involves the actions of the universal R-matrix of Uq(sl^2) in tensor products of the various infinite-dimensional representations introduced. In addition, the various K-operators are diagonal solutions of reflection equations (boundary Yang–Baxter equations) [Ch84, Sk88]. They arise as actions of the universal K-matrix associated to the augmented q-Onsager algebra, a particular coideal subalgebra of Uq(sl^2), which featured also in e.g. [BB13, RSV15, BT18, VW20]. More precisely, diagonal solutions of the reflection equation with a free parameter, considered by Sklyanin in his 2-boundary version of the algebraic Bethe ansatz in [Sk88], are intertwiners for this algebra.

Equation (1.4) has a natural diagrammatic formulation, see Sect. 8. In a subsequent paper the authors will explain how (1.4) yields relations analogous to (1.3) and hence (1.1) for open chains.

The proof of (1.4) and of the well-definedness of the various K-operators is an application of the universal K-matrix formalism developed in [AV22a, AV22b] which is built on the earlier works [BW18, BK19]. More precisely, it relies on an extension of the theory of K-matrices for finite-dimensional representations of quantum affine algebras in [AV22b] to level-0 representations of Uq(b^+), which we discuss in Sect. 3. The key point is that, for the special case of the augmented q-Onsager algebra, there exists a universal element K, centralizing the augmented q-Onsager algebra up to a twist, with three desirable properties.

  • (i)

    The element K lies in (a completion of) the Borel subalgebra Uq(b^+), so that the resulting family of linear maps is itself compatible with Uq(b^+)-intertwiners (which play an essential role in the algebraic theory of Baxter Q-operators).

  • (ii)

    The coproduct of K is of a particularly simple form, which is relevant for the proof of the boundary factorization identity.

  • (iii)

    The linear operators accomplishing the action of K in level-0 representations satisfy the untwisted reflection equation.

Thus we obtain the factorization identity (1.4) as a natural consequence of the representation theory of Uq(sl^2). The main benefit of this universal approach is that laborious linear-algebraic computations are avoided; in particular, we not even need explicit expressions for the various factors. Nevertheless, we do provide these explicit expressions, as we expect them to be useful in further work in this direction. We also give an alternative computational proof of (1.4), to illustrate the power of the universal approach.

This is a ‘boundary counterpart’ to the level-0 theory of the universal R-matrix, which we also include for reference. We do this in Sect. 2, staying close to the original work by Drinfeld and Jimbo [Dr85, Dr86, Ji86a, Ji86b]. In particular, Theorem 2.4 states that the grading-shifted universal R-matrix has a well-defined action as a linear-operator-valued formal power series on any tensor product of level-0 representations of Uq(b^+) and Uq(b^-) (including finite-dimensional representations). Often this well-definedness is tacitly assumed, see e.g. [VW20, Sec. 2.3]. Alternatively, it follows from the Khoroshkin-Tolstoy factorization [KT92] of the universal R-matrix, see also [BGKNR10, BGKNR13, BGKNR14]; however we are unaware of such a factorization for the universal K-matrix.

Outline

In Sect. 2 we study the action of the universal R-matrix of quantum affine sl2 on tensor products of level-0 representations of Borel subalgebras. Section 3 is a ‘boundary counterpart’ to Sect. 2, where we consider the augmented q-Onsager algebra. We show that its (semi-)standard universal K-matrix, see [AV22a, AV22b], has a well-defined action on level-0 representations of Uq(b^+), see Theorem 3.6, and, with a simple correction, satisfies the above three desirable properties.

In Sect. 4 we discuss the relevant representations of Uq(b^+) in terms of (an extension of) the q-oscillator algebra, as well as the Uq(b^+)-intertwiner O. Various solutions of Yang–Baxter equations are obtained in Sect. 5 as actions of the universal R-matrix in tensor products of Borel representations. Similarly, in Sect. 6 we introduce solutions of the reflection equation as actions of the universal K-matrix in Borel representations.

We revisit the SES approach to Baxter’s Q-operators for the open XXZ spin chain in light of the universal K-matrix formalism in Sect. 7. Next, in Sect. 8 we give a diagrammatic motivation of the boundary factorization identity (1.4) for the open XXZ spin chain, and provide a short proof using the level-0 theory developed in Sect. 3. Finally, in Sect. 9 we summarize the main results and point out future work.

Some supplementary material is given in appendices. Namely, Appendix A provides some background material on deformed Pochhammer symbols and exponentials. Moreover, Appendix B contains derivations of the explicit expressions of the two R-operators appearing in (1.4). In Appendix C we provide a computational alternative proof of the boundary factorization identity (1.4), relying on the explicit expressions of all involved factors. The key tool of this proof is provided by Lemma C.1, which consists in two product formulas involving deformed Pochhammer symbols and exponentials. We emphasize that the main text and its results do not rely on Appendices B and C.

Quantum Affine sl2 and its Universal R-Matrix

In this section we study the action of the universal R-matrix of the quasitriangular Hopf algebra quantum affine sl2 on tensor products of level-0 representations (including infinite-dimensional representations) of the Borel subalgebras. We give a basic survey of the algebras involved, the representations and the quasitriangular structure and show that the universal R-matrix has a well-defined action on tensor products of all level-0 representations of the Borel subalgebras.

General overview of finite-dimensional R-matrix theory

To formulate a quantum integrable system in terms of a transfer matrix built out of R-matrices, one needs finite-dimensional representations of a suitable quasitriangular Hopf algebra. To get trigonometric R-matrices, one can proceed as follows.

Let g be a finite-dimensional simple Lie algebra and note that the untwisted loop algebra Lg=gC[t,t-1] has a central extension g^=LgCc. In turn, this can be extended to g~=g^Cd where d satisfies [d,·]=tddt. For a fixed Cartan subalgebra hg we define

h^:=hCc,h~:=h^Cd.

The Lie algebra g~ is a Kac–Moody algebra and hence has a non-degenerate bilinear form (·,·), which restricts to a non-degenerate bilinear form on h~. See e.g. [Ka90] for more detail.

The universal enveloping algebras U(g^) and U(g~) can be q-deformed, yielding non-cocommutative Hopf algebras (Drinfeld-Jimbo quantum groups) Uq(g^) and Uq(g~), see e.g. [Dr85, Dr86, Ji86a, KT92, Lu94]. The nondegenerate bilinear form (·,·) lifts to Uq(g~) inducing a pairing between the q-deformed Borel subalgebras and hence a quasitriangular structure. On the other hand, the subalgebra Uq(g^) has a rich finite-dimensional representation theory, see e.g. [CP94, CP95, Ch02, HJ12]. The grading-shifted universal R-matrix has a well-defined action on tensor products of finite-dimensional representations of Uq(g^) as a formal power series, see e.g. [Dr86, FR92, KS95, EM03, He19]). We now discuss the natural extension of this theory to level-0 representations of Borel subalgebras, including various infinite-dimensional representations. We will restrict to the case g=sl2 (but the theory generalizes to any quantum untwisted affine algebra).

Quantum affine sl2

Denoting the canonical Cartan generator of sl2 by h1, h^ is spanned by h0=c-h1 and h1. The bilinear form on h~ is defined by

(h0,h0)=(h1,h1)=-(h0,h1)=2,(h0,d)=1,(h1,d)=(d,d)=0.

Fix ϵC such that q=exp(ϵ) is not a root of unity. For all μC we will denote exp(ϵμ) by qμ. First, we define Uq(g) as the algebra generated over C by e, f and invertible k subject to the relations

ke=q2ek,kf=q-2fk,[e,f]=k-k-1q-q-1. 2.1

The following assignments determine a coproduct Δ:Uq(g)Uq(g)Uq(g):

Δ(e)=e1+ke,Δ(f)=fk-1+1f,Δ(k±1)=k±1k±1. 2.2

It uniquely extends to a Hopf algebra structure on Uq(g). Now the main algebra of interest, Uq(g^), arises as follows.

Definition 2.1

(Quantum affine sl2 ). We denote by Uq(g^) the Hopf algebra generated by two triples {ei,fi,ki} (i{0,1}), such that:

  • (i)
    the following assignments for i{0,1} define Hopf algebra embeddings from Uq(g) to Uq(g^):
    eei,ffi,kki; 2.3
  • (ii)
    the following cross relations are satisfied:
    kikj=kjki,kiej=q-2ejki,kifj=q2fjki,[ei,fj]=0, 2.4
    [ei,[ei,[ei,ej]q2]1]q-2=[fi,[fi,[fi,fj]q2]1]q-2=0, 2.5
    for ij, where we have introduced the notation [x,y]p:=xy-pyx.Inline graphic

Consider the affine Cartan subalgebra h^=Ch0Ch1. Note that its q-deformation Uq(h^)=k0±1,k1±1 is isomorphic to the group algebra of the affine co-root lattice

Q^=Zh0+Zh1h^. 2.6

The nontrivial diagram automorphism Φ of the affine Dynkin diagram, i.e. the nontrivial permutation of the index set {0,1}, lifts to a linear automorphism Φ of h^ which preserves the lattice Q^. Accordingly, it also lifts to an involutive Hopf algebra automorphism of Uq(g^), also denoted Φ, via the assignments

Φ(ei)=eΦ(i),Φ(fi)=fΦ(i),Φ(ki±1)=kΦ(i)1fori{0,1}. 2.7

Quantized Kac–Moody algebra

To define the quantized Kac–Moody algebra Uq(g~), one chooses an extension Q~ of Q^ (a lattice of rank 3 contained in h~) preserved by Φ.

Remark 2.2

The standard extension of the affine co-root lattice Zh0+Zh1+Zd is not so convenient for us, mainly in view of the construction of the universal K-matrix in Sect. 3.3. Namely, extensions of Φ to h~ which are compatible with the bilinear form on h~ do not preserve this lattice, see also [Ko14, Sec. 2.6] and [AV22a, Sec. 3.14]. Inline graphic

The most convenient choice is to use the principal grading and set

dpr:=-18h0+38h1+2dh, 2.8

so that

(dpr,h0)=(dpr,h1)=1,(dpr,dpr)=0.

Now we set Φ(dpr)=dpr and obtain a linear automorphism Φ of h~ preserving the lattice

Q~:=Zh0+Zh1+Zdpr.

The corresponding dual map on h~, also denoted by Φ, preserves the extended affine weight lattice

P~={λh~|λ(Q~)Z}. 2.9

Accordingly, we define Uq(g~) as the Hopf algebra obtained by extending Uq(g^) by a group-like element1g satisfying

gei=qeig,gfi=q-1fig,gki=kig. 2.10

Hence, the assignment Φ(g)=g together with (2.7) defines an involutive Hopf algebra automorphism of Uq(g~).

Co-opposite Hopf algebra structure

For any C-algebra A, denote by σ the algebra automorphism of AA which sends aa to aa for all a,aA. If XAA we will also write X21 for σ(X).

If A is a bialgebra with coproduct Δ, the co-opposite bialgebra, denoted Acop, is the bialgebra with the same underlying algebra structure and counit as A but with Δ replaced by

Δop:=σΔ 2.11

(if A is a Hopf algebra with invertible antipode S, then Acop is also a Hopf algebra with antipode S-1). The assignments

ω(ei)=fi,ω(fi)=ei,ω(ki±1)=ki1fori{0,1},ω(g)=g-1 2.12

define a bialgebra isomorphism from Uq(g~) to Uq(g~)cop (in particular, (ωω)Δ=Δopω) which commutes with Φ.

Weight modules

We review some basic representation-theoretic notions for Uq(g~) by means of which its universal R-matrix can be described. Consider the commutative subalgebra

Uq(h~)=k0±1,k1±1,g±1Uq(g~). 2.13

Call a Uq(g~)-module M a Uq(h~)-weight module if

M=λP~Mλ,Mλ={mM|ki·m=qλ(hi)mfori{0,1},g·m=qλ(dpr)m}.

Elements of Mλ are said to have weight λ. The adjoint action of Uq(h~) (with its generators acting by conjugation) endows Uq(g~) itself with a Uq(h~)-weight module structure, with elements of Uq(h~) of weight 0. More precisely, the weights of Uq(g~) are given by the affine root lattice

Q^:=Zα0+Zα1P~

(ei has weight αi, fi has weight -αi). The adjoint action of Uq(h~) preserves the subalgebras

Uq(n^+)=e0,e1,Uq(n^-)=f0,f1 2.14

and the corresponding weights are given by the monoids ±Q^+ respectively, where Q^+:=Z0α0+Z0α1.

Quasitriangularity

The universal R-matrix for Uq(g~) is an element of a completion of Uq(g~)Uq(g~) satisfying

RΔ(u)=Δop(u)RforalluUq(g~), 2.15
(Δid)(R)=R13R23,(idΔ)(R)=R13R12 2.16

and hence

R12R13R23=R23R13R12. 2.17

Consider the quantum analogues of the Borel subalgebras, which are the Hopf subalgebras

Uq(b~±)=Uq(h~),Uq(n^±).

The element R arises as the canonical element of the bialgebra pairing between Uq(b~+) and the algebra Uq(b~-)op (the bialgebra isomorphic as a coalgebra to Uq(b~-) but with the opposite multiplication), see [Dr85, Lu94]. In particular, R lies in a completion of Uq(b~+)Uq(b~-). Further, invariance properties of the bialgebra pairing imply

(ωω)(R)=R21, 2.18
(ΦΦ)(R)=R. 2.19

Also, this pairing has a non-degenerate restriction to Uq(n^+)λ×Uq(n^-)-λ for all λQ^+; denote the canonical element of this restricted pairing by Θλ. With our choice of the coproduct we have

R=Θ-1·κ-1,Θ=λQ^+Θλ, 2.20

A priori, Θ acts naturally on Uq(g~)-modules with a locally finite action of Uq(n^+) or Uq(n^-). We briefly explain one possible definition2 of the element κ. The non-degenerate bilinear form (·,·) on h~ induces one on h~, which we denote by the same symbol. If M,M are Uq(h~)-weight modules we define a linear map κM:MMMM by stipulating that it acts on MλM (λ,λP~) as multiplication by q(λ,λ). The family of these maps κM, where M runs through all Uq(h~)-weight modules, is compatible with Uq(h~)-intertwiners. Hence it gives rise to a well-defined weight-0 element κ of the corresponding completion of Uq(g~)Uq(g~) which we call here weight completion. Similarly, we will define weight-0 elements of the weight completion of Uq(g~) itself using functions from P~ to C. See also [AV22a, Sec. 4.8] for more detail.

Level-0 representations

Consider the following subalgebras of Uq(g^):

Uq(b^±)=Uq(h^),Uq(n^±)=Uq(b~±)Uq(g^). 2.21

Then Uq(b^+) is isomorphic to the algebra with generators ei, ki (i{0,1}) subject to those relations in Definition 2.1 which do not involve the fi (the proof of e.g. [Ja96, Thm. 4.21] applies). We say that a Uq(b^+)-module V is level-0 if it decomposes as

V=cC×V(c),V(c)={vV|k0·v=c-1v,k1·v=cv} 2.22

with each weight subspace V(c) finite-dimensional. Note that the class of finitely generated level-0 modules is closed under tensor products. By the Uq(g^)-relations we have e0·V(c)V(q-2c), e1·V(c)V(q2c). It is convenient to call the subset {cC×|dim(V(c))0} the support of V. If V is a finite-dimensional Uq(g^)-module then it is level-0 with support contained in ±qZ, see e.g. [CP95, Prop. 12.2.3].

Remark 2.3

The Uq(g^)-action on a nontrivial finite-dimensional module does not extend to a Uq(g~)-action. By [HJ12, Prop. 3.5], this is a special case of the following observation. If V is an irreducible level-0 Uq(b^+)-module with dim(V)>1, then the Uq(b^+)-action does not extend to a Uq(b~+)-action. To see this, choose distinct c,cC× in the support of V. By irreducibility, for any nonzero vV(c), vV(c) there exist x,xUq(b^+) such that x·v=v, x·v=v. Without loss of generality, we may assume both x and x have no term in Uq(h^). Hence xx is not a scalar. For any nonzero vV(c), since the action of g preserves V(c), applying g to (xx)·v=v now yields a contradiction with (2.10). Inline graphic

Analogous definitions and comments can be made for Uq(b^-)-modules.

The action of R on tensor products of level-0 modules

We wish to connect the quasitriangular structure of Uq(g~) with the level-0 representation theory of Uq(g^), i.e. let the universal R-matrix of Uq(g~) act on tensor products of level-0 modules. To do this, we follow the ideas from [Dr86, Sec. 13] (also see [FR92, Sec. 4], [He19, Sec. 1]). If we write the action of k1 on an arbitrary level-0 module V as exp(ϵHV), then note that the factor κ naturally acts on tensor products VV of level-0 modules as exp(ϵHVHV/2).

To let Θ act on such tensor products, we extend the field of scalars C to the Laurent polynomial ring C[z,z-1], where z is a formal parameter. The action of Θ is particularly well-behaved if we use the principal grading. That is, we define a Hopf algebra automorphism Σz of Uq(g~)[z,z-1] such that

Σz(ei)=zei,Σz(fi)=z-1fi,Σz|Uq(h~)=id. 2.23

Straightforwardly one sees that

ωΣz=Σz-1ω, 2.24
ΦΣz=ΣzΦ. 2.25

Let the height function ht:Q^Z be defined by ht(m0α0+m1α1)=m0+m1 for all m0,m1Z and note that the number of elements of Q^+ of given height is finite. The key observation is that

(Σzid)(Θ)=(idΣz-1)(Θ)=r0zrλQ^+,ht(λ)=rΘλ, 2.26

is a formal power series in z whose coefficients are finite sums and hence lie in Uq(n^+)Uq(n^-). Hence (Σzid)(Θ)=(idΣz-1)(Θ) has a well-defined action as a linear-operator-valued formal power series on a tensor product of any Uq(n^+)-representation with any Uq(n^-)-representation. Consider now the grading-shifted universal R-matrix:

R(z):=(Σzid)(R)=(idΣz-1)(R). 2.27

Note that by applying Σzid to (2.15) we deduce that R(z) commutes with Δ(k1)=Δop(k1)=k1k1. We collect the results obtained thus far, writing

M[[z]]=MC[[z]]

for any complex vector space M (in particular, any complex unital associative algebra).

Theorem 2.4

Consider a pair of level-0 representations π±:Uq(b^±)End(V±). Then3

Rπ+π-(z):=(π+π-)(R(z))End(V+V-)[[z]] 2.28

is well-defined and commutes with (π+π-)(Δ(k1))=π+(k1)π-(k1).

From now on we will use the standard convention that if π is any level-0 representation then the corresponding grading-shifted representation is denoted by a subscript z:

πz:=πΣz. 2.29

Hence we may write

Rπ+π-(z)=(πz+π-)(R)=(π+π1/z-)(R).

Consider two indeterminates z1,z2. Applying, say, Σz1idΣ1/z2, to (2.17), we obtain a C[[z1,z2]]-version of the universal Yang–Baxter equation which can be evaluated on suitable triple tensor products.

Proposition 2.5

If π+:Uq(b^+)End(V+), π:Uq(g^)End(V) and π-:Uq(b^-)End(V-) are level-0 representations, then we have the following identity of linear-operator-valued formal power series in two indeterminates:

Rπ+π(z1)12Rπ+π-(z1z2)13Rππ-(z2)23=Rππ-(z2)23Rπ+π-(z1z2)13Rπ+π(z1)12. 2.30

Given a pair of level-0 representations π±:Uq(b^±)End(V±) it is often convenient to have an explicit expression of Rπ+π-(z) which does not rely on computing the coefficients of the series R(z). Essentially following Jimbo’s approach from [Ji86b], we may try to solve a linear equation for Rπ+π-(z). To derive such a linear equation, it is convenient to assume that, say, π+ extends to a representation of Uq(g^). In this case4, one directly obtains the following result.

Proposition 2.6

If π+ is a level-0 Uq(g^)-representation and π- a level-0 Uq(b^-)-representation, then for all uUq(b^-) we have

Rπ+π-(z)·(πz+π-)(Δ(u))=(πz+π-)(Δop(u))·Rπ+π-(z). 2.31

Obviously there is a counterpart of Proposition 2.6 with the role of Uq(b^-) replaced by Uq(b^+).

Remark 2.7

If the solution space of the linear equation (2.31) is 1-dimensional, Proposition 2.6 implies that any solution must be a scalar multiple of Rπ+π-(z) and hence satisfy the Yang–Baxter equation. This is well-known if both V± extend to finite-dimensional Uq(g^)-modules. In this case the existence of the universal R-matrix implies the existence of a solution of the intertwining condition (2.31) depending rationally on z. If π+ and π- are also both irreducible then it is known, see e.g. [KS95, Sec. 4.2] and [Ch02, Thm. 3], that V+((z))V- is irreducible as a representation of Uq(g^)((z)) (extension of scalars to formal Laurent series); hence an application of Schur’s lemma yields the 1-dimensionality of the solution space of (2.31). In this case, the rational intertwiner is called trigonometric R-matrix. For more background and detail, see e.g. [He19] and [AV22b, Secs. 2.6 & 2.7].

In the absence of a linear relation such as (2.31), one can use the Yang–Baxter equation (2.30) to determine an explicit expression for one of Rπ+π(z), Rπ+π-(z), or Rππ-(z), provided the other two are known. Inline graphic

Adjusting the grading

In this approach the use of the principal grading in Theorem 2.4 avoids further constraints on the representations (e.g. local finiteness conditions). For completeness we briefly explain how to extend the results of Sect. 2.8 to arbitrary grading. For nonnegative integers s0,s1 such that s0+s1 is nonzero, define a more general Hopf algebra automorphism Σzs0,s1 of Uq(g~)[z,z-1] by

Σzs0,s1(ei)=zsiei,Σzs0,s1(fi)=z-sifi,Σzs0,s1|Uq(h~)=id 2.32

(note that the choice s0=0, s1=1 is used in in [KT14, Eq. (2.11)]).

Rather than giving generalized versions of the main results above and of various statements in the remainder of this work, we make an observation which will allow the reader to generate these statements, as required. Recalling the decomposition (2.22) and the associated terminology, suppose the level-0 Uq(b^+)-module V is generated by a nonzero element of V(c0) for some c0C× (which includes all modules considered in this paper and all irreducible finite-dimensional Uq(g^)-modules). Then the support of V, see Sect. 2.7, is contained in q2Zc0. Now for any indeterminate y and any integer m, let ymD denote the linear map on V which acts on V(q-2mc0)[y,y-1] as scalar multiplication by ym.

Writing the corresponding representation as π:Uq(b^+)End(V), the more general grading-shifted representation πzs0,s1:=πΣzs0,s1 can be related to the representation shifted by the principal grading as follows. Adjoining to the ring C[z,z-1] a square root Z of z, we have

πzs0,s1=Ad(Z(s0-s1)D)πZs0+s1, 2.33

where on the right-hand side Ad stands for ‘conjugation by’. See [AV22b, Sec. 5.2] for essentially the same point in the context of irreducible finite-dimensional Uq(g^)-representations.

The Augmented q-Onsager Algebra, its Twist and its Universal K-Matrix

In parallel with the previous section, we consider a particular subalgebra of Uq(g^) and extend some recent results on universal K-matrices [AV22a, AV22b] in the context of (possibly infinite-dimensional) level-0 representations of Borel subalgebras of quantum affine sl2. For a related approach tailored to evaluation representations involving essentially the same subalgebra, see [BT18].

The twist map ψ

We consider the following algebra automorphism and coalgebra antiautomorphism of Uq(g~):

ψ:=ωΦ. 3.1

From (2.182.19) and (2.242.25), respectively, we immediately deduce

(ψψ)(R)=R21, 3.2
ψΣz=Σz-1ψ. 3.3

By the following result, P-symmetric R-matrices (R(z)21=R(z)) naturally arise in tensor products of representations of the upper and lower Borel subalgebras on the same vector space, provided they are related through ψ and the principal grading is used in the definition of grading-shifted universal R-matrix R(z), see (2.27).

Lemma 3.1

Consider two pairs of level-0 representations π±,ϱ±:Uq(b^±)End(V) such that

ϱ=π±ψ. 3.4

Then Rπ+π-(z)21=Rϱ+ϱ-(z).

Proof

Unpacking the definitions (2.28) and (2.27), we have

Rπ+π-(z)21=(((π+π-)(Σzid))(R))21=((π-π+)(idΣz))(R21).

Now using (3.23.3) we deduce

Rπ+π-(z)21=((π-π+)(ψψ)(idΣz-1))(R).

Applying (3.4) and using (2.28) and (2.27) once again, we obtain Rϱ+ϱ-(z) as required. 

The augmented q-Onsager algebra

The map ψ plays an important role in the theory of diagonal matrix solutions with a free parameter of the reflection equation in Uq(g^)-modules. Namely, fix a parameter ξC× and consider the following subalgebra of Uq(g^), also called the (embedded) augmented q-Onsager algebra:

Uq(k):=Ce0-q-1ξ-1k0f1,e1-q-1ξk1f0,k0k1-1,k0-1k1. 3.5

This is a left coideal:

Δ(Uq(k))Uq(g^)Uq(k). 3.6

The automorphism ψ is the trivial q-deformation of a Lie algebra automorphism of g^, also denoted ψ, and Uq(k) is the (ξ-dependent) coideal q-deformation of the universal enveloping algebra of the fixed-point subalgebra k=g^ψ, in the style of [Ko14] but with opposite conventions.

Remark 3.2

See [VW20, Rmk. 2.3] for more background on this subalgebra. Note that the definition of Uq(k) in loc. cit. has a misprint: ξ should be replaced by ξ-1. Inline graphic

To connect with the universal K-matrix formalism of [AV22a, AV22b], let S~ be the bialgebra isomorphism5 from Uq(g~) to Uq(g~)op,cop (also known as the unitary antipode) defined by the assignments

S~(ei)=-qki-1ei,S~(fi)=-q-1fiki,S~(ki±1)=ki1,S~(g±1)=g1. 3.7

Note that S~2=id. Now consider6 the right coideal subalgebra

Uq(k)=S~(Uq(k))=Cf0-qξ-1e1k0-1,f1-qξe0k1-1,k0k1-1,k0-1k1

which is the subalgebra considered in [AV22a, Sec. 9.7], forming part of a more general family of right coideal subalgebras (quantum symmetric pair subalgebras) of quantum affine algebras as considered in [Ko14, AV22a, AV22b].

Universal K-matrix

By [AV22a, Thm. 8.5], Uq(g~) is endowed with a so-called standard universal K-matrix, which is an invertible element in a completion of Uq(b~+) satisfying a twisted Uq(k)-intertwining property and a twisted coproduct formula involving the universal R-matrix7

R=R21-1. 3.8

There is an action of invertible elements of a completion of Uq(g~), gauge-transforming the universal K-matrix and the twisting operator simultaneously, see [AV22b, Sec. 3.6]. For the case under consideration, there exists a gauge transformation (a ‘Cartan correction’, see [AV22a, Sec. 8.8]) that brings both the intertwining property and the coproduct formula for the universal K-matrix into a particularly nice form. Moreover, the gauge-transformed universal K-matrix still resides in a completion of Uq(b~+) and, when shifted by the principal grading, acts as a linear-operator-valued formal power series for all level-0 Uq(b^+)-modules.

To make this more precise, let Ω:P~C× be any group homomorphism such that Ω(α0)=-ξ and Ω(α1)=-ξ-1. Now define a function G:P~C× by

G(λ)=Ω(λ)q-(Φ(λ),λ)/2. 3.9

Note that this is not a group homomorphism. Define the corresponding linear operator acting on Uq(h~)-weight modules as follows:

G·v=G(λ)v,vVλ,λP~. 3.10

Analogously to our definition of the factor κ of the universal R-matrix, we thus obtain an invertible element G of the weight completion of Uq(g~). Finally, let δ=α0+α1 be the basic imaginary root of g^. Then the following result is a special case of [AV22a, Sec. 9.7], with the coproduct formula a direct consequence of [AV22a, (8.21)].

Proposition 3.3

There exists an invertible element

Υ=λZ0δΥλ,ΥλUq(n^+)λ, 3.11

such that the invertible element

K:=G·Υ 3.12

satisfies

K·u=ψ(u)·Kfor alluUq(k), 3.13
Δ(K)=(1K)·(ψid)(R)·(K1). 3.14

Remark 3.4

In general, a universal K-matrix K satisfying the simple 3-factor coproduct formula (3.14) is called semi-standard, see [AV22a, Sec. 8.10] and cf. [AV22b, Ex. 3.6.3 (2)]. It corresponds to a particular choice of a twist pair (ψ,J) where ψ is a bialgebra isomorphism from Uq(g~) to Uq(g~)cop (essentially the composition of ω with a diagram automorphism determined by the coideal subalgebra) and J is the trivial Drinfeld twist 11, see [AV22a, Sec. 2.4 and 2.5]. The semi-standard K-matrix is always available; what is rather special in the case of the augmented q-Onsager algebra is that the semi-standard K-matrix coincides with the standard K-matrix (and hence lies in a completion of Uq(b~+)). Inline graphic

Now we transform this formalism [AV22a] for the right coideal subalgebra Uq(k), expressed in terms of the universal R-matrix R, to a formalism for the left coideal subalgebra Uq(k)=S~(Uq(k)), expressed in terms of the universal R-matrix R as used in this paper. To do this, note that, when going from a Uq(g~)-weight module to its dual, weights transform as λ-λ. This defines the extension of S and S~ to a map on the weight completion of Uq(g~). Therefore S~(Ω)=Ω-1 but the non-group-like factor of G is fixed by S~. We define G:P~C× by

G(λ):=Ω(λ)q(Φ(λ),λ)/2 3.15

so that G=S~(G)-1. Also, we set

Υ:=S~(Υ)-1=λZ0δΥλ,ΥλS~(Uq(n^+)λ)Uq(h^)·Uq(n^+)λ. 3.16

Proposition 3.5

The element

K:=S~(K)-1=G·Υ 3.17

satisfies

K·u=ψ(u)·Kfor alluUq(k), 3.18
Δ(K)=(K1)·(idψ)(R)·(1K). 3.19

Proof

This follows straightforwardly from Proposition 3.3. Namely, we apply S~ to (3.13) and (S~S~)σ to (3.14), and use the fact that S~ψ=ψS~ and (S~S~)(R)=R

Note that Uq(b^+) is a bialgebra and, as expected, the right-hand side of (3.19) lies in a completion of Uq(b^+)Uq(b^+), since ψ interchanges the two Borel subalgebras Uq(b^±). The reflection equation satisfied by the universal element K is as follows:

R·(K1)·(idψ)(R)·(1K)=(1K)·(idψ)(R)·(K1)·R. 3.20

This is a consequence of the linear relation (2.15) for R and the coproduct formula (3.19) for K, alongside (3.2) and ψ2=id.

The action of the universal K-matrix on level-0 representations

To deduce that K has a well-defined action on level-0 representations of, say, Uq(b^+), we can proceed in a similar way to the case of the R-matrix. This builds on the finite-dimensional theory for more general quantum symmetric pair subalgebras in [AV22b, Sec. 4].

First note that if π is a level-0 representation, π and the twisted representation πψ coincide on Uq(h^). Now let z once again be a formal variable. Note that by (3.15) the function G sends the basic imaginary root δ to 1. Hence the proof of [AV22b, Prop. 4.3.1 (3)] implies that the corresponding factor G of the universal K-matrix descends to level-0 modules. Furthermore, the argument that shows Σz(Θ) is a Uq(n^+)Uq(n^-)-valued formal power series can be easily adapted to Υ; it yields a formal power series with coefficients in S~(Uq(n^+))Uq(b^+):

Σz(Υ)=r0zrλZ0δ,ht(λ)=rΥλ.

Now consider the grading-shifted universal K-matrix:

K(z)=Σz(K). 3.21

Noting that the form of Υ implies that K commutes with k1, we arrive at the following main result, which is a boundary analogue of Theorem 2.4.

Theorem 3.6

Consider a level-0 representation π:Uq(b^+)End(V). Then8

Kπ(z):=π(K(z))End(V)[[z]] 3.22

is well-defined and commutes with π(k1).

We will also need boundary counterparts of Propositions 2.5 and 2.6. Consider two indeterminates z1,z2. Applying Σz1Σz2 to (3.20) and using (3.3), we obtain the following reflection equation for the grading-shifted universal operators:

R(z1/z2)·(K(z1)1)·(idψ)(R(z1z2))·(1K(z2))==(1K(z2))·(idψ)(R(z1z2))·(K(z1)1)·R(z1/z2). 3.23

Recalling that the universal R-matrix R lies in a completion of Uq(b^+)Uq(b^-) and applying a tensor product of suitable representations to (3.23), one obtains the right reflection equation with multiplicative spectral parameters for P-symmetric R-matrices, as we now state precisely.

Proposition 3.7

Consider level-0 representations π+:Uq(b^+)End(V+) and π:Uq(g^)End(V) such that πψ=π. Then

Rπ+π(z1/z2)(Kπ+(z1)IdV)Rπ+π(z1z2)(IdV+Kπ(z2))==(IdV+Kπ(z2))Rπ+π(z1z2)(Kπ+(z1)IdV)Rπ+π(z1/z2). 3.24

The use of linear relations to find explicit solutions of reflection equations was proposed in [MN98, DG02, DM03]. As before, we assume that π extends to a Uq(g^)-representation,9 in which case it restricts to a Uq(k)-representation and we obtain the following result as a consequence of (3.3).

Proposition 3.8

If π:Uq(g^)End(V) is a level-0 representation such that πψ=π, then

Kπ(z)·πz(u)=π1/z(u)·Kπ(z)for alluUq(k). 3.25

We close this section with some comments parallel to Remark 2.7.

Remark 3.9

If the solution space of (3.25) is 1-dimensional, Proposition 3.8 implies that any solution must be a scalar multiple of K(z) and hence automatically satisfy the reflection equation (3.24). In the case that π:Uq(b^+)End(V) extends to a representation and V is finite-dimensional, there is an analogue to Remark 2.7. Namely, the solution space of (3.25) for irreducible representations is 1-dimensional and the existence of a solution of the intertwining condition (3.25) depending rationally on z leads to a trigonometric K-matrix. See [AV22b, Secs. 5 and 6] for more detail.

To explicitly determine Kπ+(z) in the cases where π+:Uq(b^+)End(V) does not extend to a Uq(g^)-representation, we will use the reflection equation (3.24), with the other K-matrix Kπ(z) determined using Proposition 3.8. Inline graphic

Borel Representations in Terms of the q-Oscillator Algebra

The infinite-dimensional vector space W

The countably-infinite-dimensional vector space plays a central role in the theory of Baxter’s Q-operators. We may define it as the free C-module over a given set {wj}jZ0:

W=j0Cwj. 4.1

Given this distinguished basis, elements of End(W) naturally identify with infinite-by-infinite matrices with the property that all but finitely many entries of each column are zero.

It is convenient to work with a particular subalgebra of End(W) depending on the deformation parameter q. More precisely, consider the C-linear maps a, a on W defined by

a·wj+1=wj,a·w0=0,a·wj=(1-q2(j+1))wj+1 4.2

for all jZ0. For the description of L-operators associated to Uq(g^) acting on WC2 (particular solutions of the Yang–Baxter equation), it is convenient to consider a linear operator qD which is a square root of 1-aa, i.e. qD·wj=qjwj for jZ0. Note that qD is invertible and we let q-D denote its inverse.

Remark 4.1

Often the q-oscillator algebra is defined as an abstract algebra, generated by a, a and q±D subject to certain relations, which naturally embeds into End(W). This version of the q-oscillator algebra appeared in the guise of a topological algebra for instance in [BGKNR10, Sec. 2.3] and with slightly different conventions in [KT14]10. Inline graphic

Diagonal operators from functions and an extended q-oscillator algebra

To accommodate the action of the universal R and K-matrices on certain level-0 modules, we will need an extension of the commutative subalgebra q±D and work over the commutative ring C[[z]].

Denote by F the commutative algebra of functions from Z0 to C[[z]]. For any fF we define f(D)End(W)[[z]] via

f(D)·wj=f(j)wj. 4.3

Thus, we obtain an algebra embedding FEnd(W)[[z]]. Now we combine this with the maps a, a defined above (viewed as maps on WC[[z]], acting trivially on the second factor).

Definition 4.2

The (extended) q-oscillator algebra is the subalgebra AEnd(W)[[z]] generated by a, a and F(D). Inline graphic

As can be verified on basis vectors, in A one has the relations

aa=1-q2(D+1),aa=1-q2D,af(D)=f(D+1)a,f(D)a=af(D+1). 4.4

One straightforwardly verifies that the subalgebras F(D), a and a are self-centralizing. Note that the operator

a¯:=-q-2DaEnd(W) 4.5

sends wj to (1-q-2(j+1))wj+1. Clearly, A is also generated by a¯, a and F(D). The transformation qq-1 defines an algebra automorphism of A, preserving the subalgebra F(D), fixing the generator a and interchanging the generators a and a¯.

Endomorphisms of WW

The linear maps

a1:=aIdW,a1:=aIdW,a2:=IdWa,a2:=IdWa

together with F(D1)F(D2) generate AA over C[[z]]. We will need a larger subalgebra of End(WW): we will allow all functions of two nonnegative integers as well as formal power series in certain locally nilpotent endomorphisms.

Denote by F(2) the commutative algebra of functions from Z0×Z0 to C[[z]]. For any fF(2) we define f(D1,D2)End(WW)[[z]] via

f(D1,D2)·(wjwk)=f(j,k)wjwk, 4.6

yielding an algebra embedding F(2)End(WW)[[z]]. Now note that a1a2 and a1a2 are locally nilpotent endomorphisms of WW. Hence, for any gk,,hk,F(2) series of the form

k,0(a2)gk,(D1,D2)a1k,k,0(a1)khk,(D1,D2)a2 4.7

truncate when applied to any basis vector wjwj. We obtain a class of well-defined elements of End(WW)[[z]]. We denote by A(2) the C[[z]]-span of the operator-valued formal series (4.7), which is easily seen to be a subalgebra of End(WW)[[z]].

The Borel representations

We introduce four level-0 representations of Uq(b^+). First of all, let μC be a free parameter. It is straightforward to check that the following assignments define a representation υ of Uq(g^) on W:

υ(e0)=υ(f1)=11-q2a,υ(k0)=q-μ+1+2D,υ(e1)=υ(f0)=q21-q2a(q-μ-qμ-2D),υ(k1)=qμ-1-2D. 4.8

The module structure on W defined by υ is the evaluation Verma module: affinizations of finite-dimensional irreducible Uq(sl2)-modules arise as quotients if μZ>0 (also see [KT14, Sec. 2.2]).

We will in addition consider three Uq(b^+)-representations which do not extend to representations of Uq(g^). A useful reducible representation ϕ:Uq(b^+)End(W) is given by

ϕ(e0)=0,ϕ(e1)=q1-q2a,ϕ(k0)=qμ+1+2D,ϕ(k1)=q-μ-1-2D 4.9

which is closely related to the special evaluation homomorphism defined in [KT14, Eq. (4.6)]. The following representations ϱ,ϱ¯:Uq(b^+)End(W) play an essential role in the definition of Baxter Q-operators:

ϱ(e0)=11-q2a,ϱ(e1)=q21-q2a,ϱ(k0)=q2D,ϱ(k1)=q-2D,ϱ¯(e0)=q21-q2a¯,ϱ¯(e1)=11-q2a,ϱ¯(k0)=q2(D+1),ϱ¯(k1)=q-2(D+1). 4.10

They correspond to the representations L1,a± introduced in [HJ12, Def. 3.7] for suitable aC× (called prefundamental representations in [FH15] which considers their role in the construction of Q-operators for closed chains).

We will henceforth repeatedly denote grading-shifted representations by the notation (2.29). Note that the grading-shifted representation υz is an algebra homomorphism from Uq(g^) to End(W)[z,z-1]. Furthermore, the grading-shifted representations υz|Uq(b^+), ϕz, ϱz, ϱ¯z are algebra homomorphisms from Uq(b^+) to End(W)[z]End(W)[[z]]. Finally, note that ϱz, ϱ¯z correspond to the representations defined by [KT14, Eq. (3.5)].

Remark 4.3

The grading-shifted representation in [VW20, Eq. (2.9)] is related to ϱz by a factor of -1 in the actions of e0 and e1: in other words it is equal to ϱ-z. Since the Baxter Q-operators only depend on z2, see [VW20, Lem. 4.5], there are no serious discrepancies. The benefit of the current choice is its consistency across the relevant level-0 representations, with υ having the same sign convention as finite-dimensional representations such as Π, see Sect. 5. Inline graphic

The Uq(b^+)-intertwiner O

The tensor products ϱq-μ/2zϱ¯qμ/2z and υzϕz of shifted representations are closely related in the following sense: the two induced Uq(b^+)-actions on WW are conjugate by an element in A(2) which is independent of z. More precisely, consider the deformed exponential

eq2(x)=k=0xk(q2;q2)k. 4.11

We refer to Appendix A for more detail. We now define the following element of GL(WW):

O=eq2(q2a1a¯2)-1qμ(D1-D2)/2. 4.12

The following statement is [KT14, Eq. (4.4)] and connects to [FH15, Thm. 3.8]; for completeness we provide a proof in the present conventions.

Theorem 4.4

The Uq(b^+)-representations ϱq-μ/2zϱ¯qμ/2z and υzϕz are intertwined by O:

O(ϱq-μ/2zϱ¯qμ/2z)(Δ(u))=(υzϕz)(Δ(u))Ofor alluUq(b^+). 4.13

Proof

The relations (A.13A.15) can be evaluated at y=q2, yielding

qμ(D2-D1)/2eq2(q2a1a¯2)a¯2=(q-μ/2a1+q2(D1+1)+μ/2a¯2)qμ(D2-D1)/2eq2(q2a1a¯2),qμ(D2-D1)/2eq2(q2a1a¯2)(a1(q-2μ-q-2D1)+q-2(D1+1)a2)==(a1q-3μ/2+q-μ/2-2(D1+1)a2)qμ(D2-D1)/2eq2(q2a1a¯2),qμ(D2-D1)/2eq2(q2a1a¯2)q2(D1+D2+1)=q2(D1+D2+1)qμ(D2-D1)/2eq2(q2a1a¯2),qμ(D2-D1)/2eq2(q2a1a¯2)q-2(D1+D2+1)=q-2(D1+D2+1)qμ(D2-D1)/2eq2(q2a1a¯2).

These directly imply (4.13) for u{e0,e1,k0,k1}.

Formalism for Uq(b^-)

Recall from (3.1) the automorphism ψ which interchanges the two Borel subalgebras. Note that the representation υ:Uq(g^)End(W) satisfies

υ=υψ. 4.14

Hence, it is natural to define representations of Uq(b^-) corresponding to ϱ, ϱ¯ and ϕ, as follows:

ϱ-:=ϱψ,ϱ¯-:=ϱ¯ψ,ϕ-:=ϕψ. 4.15

Explicitly, we have

ϱ-(f0)=q21-q2a,ϱ-(f1)=11-q2a,ϱ-(k0)=q2D,ϱ-(k1)=q-2D,ϱ¯-(f0)=11-q2a,ϱ¯-(f1)=q21-q2a¯,ϱ¯-(k0)=q2(D+1),ϱ¯-(k1)=q-2(D+1),ϕ-(f0)=q1-q2a,ϕ-(f1)=0,ϕ-(k0)=qμ+1+2D,ϕ-(k1)=q-μ-1-2D. 4.16

By (3.3), whereas the grading-shifted representations ϱz, ϱ¯z, ϕz take values in End(W)C[z], their negative counterparts ϱz-, ϱ¯z-, ϕz- take values in End(W)C[z-1].

Since ψ is a coalgebra antiautomorphism, using (3.3) we immediately deduce the following characterization of the tensorial opposite of the intertwiner O.

Corollary 4.5

The linear map

O21=eq2(q2a¯1a2)-1qμ(D2-D1)/2End(WW). 4.17

intertwines the Uq(b^-)-representations ϱ¯q-μ/2z-ϱqμ/2z- and ϕz-υz, viz.

O21(ϱ¯q-μ/2z-ϱqμ/2z-)(Δ(u))=(ϕz-υz)(Δ(u))O21foralluUq(b^-). 4.18

L-Operators and R-Operators

In order to define L-operators, we recall the standard 2-dimensional representation Π:Uq(g^)End(C2) determined by

Π(e0)=Π(f1)=0010,Π(k0)=q-100q,Π(e1)=Π(f0)=0100,Π(k1)=q00q-1. 5.1

In analogy with (4.14), we have

Π=Πψ. 5.2

L-operators for Uq(b^+)-modules

We will now obtain explicit formulas for certain scalar multiples of the four different actions of the grading-shifted universal R-matrix on WC2. In these cases both Theorem 2.4 and Proposition 2.6 apply. It turns out that the relevant linear equations all have 1-dimensional solution spaces over C[[z]]. The following linear operators are convenient scalar multiples.

Lϱ(z)=qDaq-D-1zaqD+1zq-D-qD+2z2, 5.3
Lϱ¯(z)=qD+1-q-D+1z2a¯q-DzaqDzq-D-1, 5.4
Lυ(z)=qD-q-D+μz2aq-D-2+μzaq(qD-μ-q-D+μ)zq-D-1+μ-qD+1z2, 5.5
Lϕ(z)=qD+10aqD+1zq-D-μ. 5.6

Remark 5.1

We have abused notation by representing linear operators on End(WC2) as 2×2 matrices with coefficients in End(W) (as opposed to the conventional usage that realizes operators on End(C2W) in this way). Inline graphic

The following result is [KT14, Cor. 4.2].

Theorem 5.2

The above L-operators satisfy the following relation in End(WWC2)[[z]]:

O12Lϱ(q-μ/2z)13Lϱ¯(qμ/2z)23=Lυ(z)13Lϕ(z)23O12. 5.7

Proof

From (2.16) one deduces

Lϱ(q-μ/2z)13Lϱ¯(qμ/2z)23(ϱq-μ/2zϱ¯qμ/2zΠ)((Δid)(R)),Lυ(z)13Lϕ(z)23(υzϕzΠ)((Δid)(R)).

Now Theorem 4.4 implies (5.7) up to a scalar. By applying both sides to w0w0(10) one observes that the scalar is 1.

Given the L-operators for the various Uq(b^+)-representations, Lemma 3.1 provides us with L-operators for the corresponding Uq(b^-)-representations: Lπ-(z)=Lπ(z)21 for π{ϱ,ϱ¯,υ,ϕ}. These are scalar multiples of RΠϱ-(z), RΠϱ¯-(z), RΠυ(z) and RΠϕ-(z), respectively. Theorem 5.2 immediately yields the following result:

Corollary 5.3

The following relation in End(C2WW)[[z]] is satisfied:

O32Lϱ-(q-μ/2z)13Lϱ¯-(qμ/2z)12=Lυ-(z)13Lϕ-(z)12O32. 5.8

Actions of R(z) on tensor products of infinite-dimensional Borel representations

By Theorem 2.4, the grading-shifted universal R-matrix has well-defined actions on the tensor product of the level-0 modules (υ,W) and (ϕ-,W) and on the tensor product of the level-0 modules (ϱ,W) and (ϱ¯-,W) as End(WW)-valued formal power series. Note that, using the terminology of Sect. 2.7, Cw0w0WW is the subspace of weight q-2 and hence w0w0 is an eigenvector of both actions of the universal R-matrix with invertible eigenvalues. It is convenient to use rescaled linear-operator-valued formal power series

Rϱϱ¯(z),Rυϕ(z)End(WW)[[z]], 5.9

uniquely defined by the condition that they fix w0w0:

Rϱϱ¯(z)(ϱϱ¯-)(R(z)),Rϱϱ¯(z)·(w0w0)=w0w0,Rυϕ(z)(υϕ-)(R(z)),Rυϕ(z)·(w0w0)=w0w0. 5.10

These power series will appear in the boundary factorization identity. In Appendix B we obtain explicit expressions for Rϱϱ¯(z) and Rυϕ(z), although we will not need these for the proof of the boundary factorization identity using the universal K-matrix formalism of Sect. 3.

K-Operators

In this section we consider solutions of reflection equations associated to the subalgebra Uq(k).

Right K-operators

By Theorem 3.6, applying any of the level-0 Uq(b^+)-representations ϱ, ϱ¯, υ, ϕ to the grading-shifted universal K-matrix associated to Uq(k) we obtain End(W)-valued formal power series, satisfying the reflection equation (3.7). Moreover, in terms of the terminology of Sect. 2.7, the weight subspaces of all four actions are all 1-dimensional and therefore w0 is an eigenvector of each action with invertible eigenvalue. We will consider the scalar multiples of these linear operators which fix w0:

Kπ(z)π(K(z)),Kπ(z)·w0=w0. 6.1

for π{ϱ,ϱ¯,υ,ϕ}. It is convenient to obtain explicit expressions by applying Propositions 3.7 and 3.8. These could be found independently of the universal K-matrix formalism, either by solving the reflection equations directly in all cases or by following the approach outlined in [DG02, DM03, RV16] (this relies on the irreducibility of certain tensor products as Uq(k)((z))-modules; otherwise the reflection equation must be verified directly).

First of all, the linear operator

KΠ(z)=ξz2-100ξ-z2End(C2)[[z]] 6.2

is, up to a scalar, the unique solution of the Uq(k)-intertwining condition

KΠ(z)Πz(u)=Π1/z(u)KΠ(z)for alluUq(k). 6.3

By Theorem 3.6, it is proportional to the action of the grading-shifted universal K-matrix in the representation (Π,C2).

Recall that Πψ=Π. Hence, motivated by Proposition 3.7, we consider the right reflection equation for π{ϱ,ϱ¯,υ,ϕ}:

Lπ(yz)Kπ(y)Lπ(yz)KΠ(z)=KΠ(z)Lπ(yz)Kπ(y)Lπ(yz)End(WC2)[[y/z,z]]. 6.4

Lemma 6.1

We have

Kϱ(z)=(-q-Dξ)D(q2ξ-1z2;q2)D,Kϱ¯(z)=(qz2)-D(q2ξ-1z-2;q2)D-1,Kυ(z)=z-2D(q2-μξ-1z2;q2)D(q2-μξ-1z-2;q2)D,Kϕ(z)=(-q-μ-D-1ξ)D. 6.5

Note that these expressions were already given in [BT18] in different conventions. For completeness we sketch a proof relying on the universal K-matrix formalism.

Proof of Lemma 6.1

For Kυ(z), by a straightforward check, the intertwining condition

Kυ(z)υz(u)=υ1/z(u)Kυ(z)for alluUq(k) 6.6

can be solved to find Kυ(z), making use of Proposition 3.8. Since K(z) commutes with the action of k1 it follows that Kυ(z)=f(D) for some fF. Now imposing (6.6) for the generators e0-q-1ξ-1k0f1 and e1-q-1ξk1f0 yields the recurrence relation

f(D+1)f(D)=1-q2(D+1)-μξ-1z2z2-q2(D+1)-μξ-1.

In particular, the linear relation (6.6) has a 1-dimensional solution space. Together with the constraint f(0)=1 it yields the formula given in (6.5).

For π{ϱ,ϱ¯,ϕ}, it is convenient to consider the linear space

REπ:={Kπ(y)F(D)|(6.4)is satisfied} 6.7

and use Proposition 3.7 to find the explicit expression, relying on the second part of Theorem 3.6 for the fact that Kπ(y) lies in F(D). Indeed, the operator Kϱ(z) was obtained in [VW20, Sec. 2.4] as the unique element of the 1-dimensional linear space REϱ which fixes w0. In an analogous way we obtain the result for Kϱ¯(z).

Note that ϕ is a reducible representation. Indeed, the solution space of (6.4) with π=ϕ is infinite-dimensional: the general solution Kϕ(z) is of the form (-q-μ-D-1ξ)Dp with p in the centralizer of a in A, i.e. a polynomial in a with coefficients in C[[z]]. Since Kϕ(z)F(D), p is a scalar. The requirement that w0 is fixed forces p=1.

Left K-operators

We now obtain linear-operator-valued power series satisfying a reflection equation for the left boundary by using a well-established bijection, see [Sk88, Eq. (15)], between its solution set and the solution set of the right reflection equation. For fixed ξ~C× we define

K~Π(z):=(1-q2ξ~-1z2)-1(1-q2ξ~z2)-1(KΠ(qz)-1|ξξ~-1)=q2ξ~z2-100ξ~-q2z2. 6.8

Also, for π{ϱ,ϱ¯,υ,ϕ} we define

K~π(z):=Kπ(qz)-1|ξξ~-1. 6.9

Similarly, note that Lπ(γz) is invertible in End(WC2)[[z]] for all γC. We define

L~π(z)=Lπ(q2z)-1. 6.10

Lemma 6.2

For all π{ϱ,ϱ¯,υ,ϕ} the left reflection equation holds:

K~π(y)L~π(yz)K~Π(z)Lπ(yz)=Lπ(yz)K~Π(z)L~π(yz)K~π(y)End(WC2)[[y/z,z]]. 6.11

Proof

The desired equation (6.11) can be rewritten as

K~Π(z)-1L~π(yz)-1K~π(y)-1Lπ(yz)=Lπ(yz)K~π(y)-1L~(yz)-1K~Π(z)-1.

By (6.86.10), this is equivalent to the right-reflection equation (6.4) with yqy, zqz and ξξ~-1.

Using the explicit formulas (6.2) and (6.4) we obtain that the solutions of the left reflection equations (6.9) are the following End(W)-valued formal power series in z:

K~ϱ(z)=(-qDξ~)D(q4ξ~z2;q2)D-1,K~ϱ¯(z)=(q3z2)D(ξ~z-2;q2)D,K~υ(z)=(qz)2D(q-μξ~z-2;q2)D(q4-μξ~z2;q2)D,K~ϕ(z)=(-qμ+D+1ξ~)D. 6.12

Fusion Intertwiners Revisited

In this short intermezzo we explain how the universal K-matrix formalism naturally leads to relations involving K-operators and Uq(b+)-intertwiners, called fusion intertwiners, which play a key role in the short exact sequence approach to the Q-operator. These intertwiners were discussed in [VW20] and the relevant relations with K-matrices were shown by a linear-algebraic computation relying on the explicit expressions of the various constituent factors, see [VW20, Lem. 3.2]. In other words, the representation-theoretic origin of these relations was unclear, which we now remedy.

Level-0 representations of Uq(b^+) are amenable to scalar modifications of the action of Uq(h)=k1±1, see also [HJ12, Rmk. 2.5]. In particular, for rC×, define a modified Borel representation ϱ as follows:

ϱr(ei)=ϱ(ei),ϱr(k0)=rϱ(k0),ϱr(k1)=r-1ϱ(k1) 7.1

and consider the grading-shifted representation ϱr,z:=(ϱr)z. There exist Uq(b^+)-intertwiners

ι(r):(ϱqr,qz,W)(ϱr,zΠz,WC2),τ(r):(ϱr,zΠz,WC2)(ϱq-1r,q-1z,W),

called fusion intertwiners, which take part in the following short exact sequence: graphic file with name 220_2024_4973_Figl_HTML.jpg Explicitly11, we have

ι(r)=q-Da-qD+1r,τ(r)=qD,q-Dr-1a. 7.3

Analogously to Theorem 5.2, fusion relations for the L-operators L(r,z), defined as suitable scalar multiples of (ϱr,zΠ)(R), now follow from these intertwining properties and the coproduct formulas for R (2.16), see [VW20, Eqns. (3.8) and (3.9)].

Recalling the universal object K and Theorem 3.6, we define the corresponding K-operator Kϱ(r,z) as the unique scalar multiple of ϱr,z(K) which fixes w0 (cf. [VW20, Prop. 2.5]). Then

(ϱr,zΠz)(Δ(K))Kϱ(r,z)1L(r,z2)KΠ(z)2 7.4

as a consequence of (3.19). Since K lies in a completion of Uq(b^+), the intertwining properties of ι(r) and τ(r) now directly yield the following fusion relation for the K-operator:

Kϱ(r,z)1L(r,z2)KΠ(z)2ι(r)ι(r)Kϱ(qr,qz)τ(r)Kϱ(r,z)1L(r,z2)KΠ(z)2Kϱ(q-1r,q-1z)τ(r),

with the scalar factors determined by applying the two sides of the equation to w0, say. We will be able to prove a boundary counterpart of the factorization identity (5.7) using similar ideas.

We recover, with a much smaller computational burden, the key result [VW20, Lemma 3.2] (a similar relation for left K-operators can easily be deduced from this, as explained in the last sentence of [VW20, Proof of Lemma 3.2]). In the approach to Baxter’s Q-operator using short exact sequences, the fusion relations for L and K-operators induce fusion relations for 2-boundary monodromy operators, see [VW20, Lem. 4.2] from which Baxter’s relation (1.1) follows by taking traces, see [VW20, Sec. 5.2].

Boundary Factorization Identity

In motivating and presenting the key boundary relations, it is very useful to introduce a graphical representation of spaces and operators. Let us introduce the following pictures for the different representations from Sects. 4 and 5:graphic file with name 220_2024_4973_Figm_HTML.jpg For any vector spaces V, V, denote by P the linear map from VV to VV such that P(vv)=vv for all vV, vV. Also set z=z1/z2. We then have the following pictures for L-operators and R-operators: graphic file with name 220_2024_4973_Fign_HTML.jpg We now make the following definitions12:

R~ϱϱ¯(z):=Rϱϱ¯(q2z)-1,R~υϕ(z):=Rυϕ(q2z)-1, 8.1

and represent these modified R-matrices by the following pictures: graphic file with name 220_2024_4973_Figo_HTML.jpg

The various right-boundary K-matrices are represented as follows: graphic file with name 220_2024_4973_Figp_HTML.jpg

The left-boundary K-matrices defined in Sect. 6.2 are represented by the natural analogues of these pictures. For example: graphic file with name 220_2024_4973_Figq_HTML.jpg

Making use of these pictures, we see that Theorem 5.2 and Corollary 5.3 are represented by graphic file with name 220_2024_4973_Figr_HTML.jpg

For the compatibility with the right boundary we claim that graphic file with name 220_2024_4973_Figs_HTML.jpg which corresponds to the following identity in A(2):

Kυ(z)1Rυϕ(z2)Kϕ(z)2O=OKϱ(q-μ/2z)1Rϱϱ¯(z2)Kϱ¯(qμ/2z)2, 8.2

which we call the right boundary factorization identity. The diagrams above serve as a motivation for the identity, which we now prove using results from Sect. 3 (an alternative computational proof of Theorem 8.1 is given in Appendix C).

Theorem 8.1

For all μC, all qC× not a root of unity and all ξC×, relation (8.2) is satisfied.

Proof

The proof is analogous to the proof of Theorem 5.2. We first note that

(ϱq-μ/2zϱ¯qμ/2z)((idψ)(R))=(ϱq-μ/2zϱ¯q-μ/2z-1-)(R)Rϱϱ¯(z2),(υzϕz)((idψ)(R))=(υzϕ-1-)(R)Rυϕ(z2).

Noting the coproduct formula (3.19), we obtain

Kϱ(q-μ/2z)1Rϱϱ¯(z2)Kϱ¯(qμ/2z)2(ϱq-μ/2zϱ¯qμ/2z)(Δ(K)),Kυ(z)1Rυϕ(z2)Kϕ(z)2(υzϕz)(Δ(K)).

Now Theorem 4.4 implies (8.2) up to a scalar. The fact that all factors fix w0w0 shows that the scalar is 1.

Compatibility with the left boundary requires that graphic file with name 220_2024_4973_Figt_HTML.jpg

The identity in A(2) corresponding to this is

K~ϱ¯(qμ/2z,ξ~)2R~ϱϱ¯(z2)K~ϱ(q-μ/2z,ξ~)1O-1=O-1K~ϕ(z,ξ~)2R~υϕ(z2)K~υ(z,ξ~)1. 8.3

Theorem 8.2

Relation (8.3) is satisfied.

Proof

Given the definitions (6.12) and (8.1), this follows straightforwardly by inverting (8.2) and replacing (z,ξ)(qz,ξ~-1).

Discussion

The main result of this paper is Theorem 8.1 which can be viewed as a boundary analogue of Theorem 5.2. To establish this result, first we needed to show that all R and K-operators involved in equation (8.2) are well-defined actions of the universal elements R and K on the infinite-dimensional Uq(b^+)-modules involved. The key fact that allows for this is that R and K live in completions of Uq(b^+)Uq(b^-) and of Uq(b^+), respectively. This is very familiar for R but for K relies on the recent works [AV22a, AV22b]. Introducing the Uq(b^+)-intertwiner O and the formula for Δ(K) given by (3.19), relation (8.2) follows immediately from the intertwining property of O.

The open Q-operator Q(z) of [VW20] is the trace of a product of R and K-operators over the Uq(b^+)-module (ϱz,W) and there is a similar construction of an open Q-operator Q¯(z). In a future paper, the authors will present this construction and the use of Theorem 8.2 in deriving a boundary analogue of the factorization relation Tμ(z)Q(zq-μ/2)Q¯(zqμ/2). They will also develop the analogous theory for different coideal subalgebras, in particular those for which non-diagonal solutions of the reflection equation are intertwiners. There is a quite subtle rational degeneration of the construction in the present paper. The first-named author will study this in a separate paper, giving an alternative approach to Q-operators for the open XXX spin chain, cf. [FS15].

Acknowledgements

B.V. would like to thank A. Appel, P. Baseilhac and N. Reshetikhin for useful discussions. This research was supported in part by funding from EPSRC grant EP/R009465/1, from the Simons Foundation and the Centre de Recherches Mathématiques (CRM), through the Simons-CRM scholar-in-residence programme, and by the Galileo Galilei Institute (GGI) scientific programme on ‘Randomness, Integrability and Universality’. R.W. would like to acknowledge and thank CRM and the GGI for their hospitality and support. A.C. is grateful for support from EPSRC DTP award EP/M507866/1.

Deformed Pochhammer Symbols and Exponentials

This appendix is independent from the main text, but provides identities which are used there. We review some basic theory of deformed Pochhammer symbols and exponentials (as formal power series) with a deformation parameter pC×, which corresponds to q2 in the main text.

Deformed Pochhammer symbols

Let x be a formal variable. For nZ, the (finite) deformed Pochhammer symbol (x;p)nC[[x]] is defined by

(x;p)n:=m=0n-1(1-xpm)ifn0,m=n-1(1-xpm)-1ifn<0 A.1

(the definition for n<0 is understood as a product of geometric series); since its constant coefficient is nonzero, it is invertible. For all pC× and nZ0 we have the following basic identity in C[[x]], see [GR90, (I.2), (I.3)]:

(x;p)-n=(p-nx;p)n-1=(x/p;p-1)n-1=(-x)-npn(n+1)/2(p/x;p)n-1. A.2

Assuming |p|<1, the infinite deformed Pochhammer symbol

(x;p):=m=0(1-xpm) A.3

is an invertible formal power series with well-defined coefficients in C. The following identity holds in C[[x]], see [GR90, (I.5)]:

(x;p)n=(x;p)(pnx;p). A.4

Deformed exponentials

From now on we assume that p is not a root of unity. In particular, (p;p)k0 for all kZ0. The deformed exponential is the invertible formal power series

ep(x):=1ϕ0(0;-;p,x)=k=0xk(p;p)k. A.5

The ordinary exponential formal power series arises as the termwise limit limp1ep((1-p)x)=ex. This series satisfies the functional relation

ep(px)=(1-x)ep(x), A.6

see [GR90, Sec. 1.3]. Since constants are the only formal power series which are invariant under xpx, an inspection of constant coefficients shows that (A.6) implies

ep(x)=1(x;p)if|p|<1. A.7

Similarly we consider the invertible formal power series

Ep(x):=0ϕ0(-;-;p,-x)=k=0pk(k-1)/2xk(p;p)k. A.8

Then Ep(-x)-1 also satisfies (A.6) and by comparing constant coefficients again we deduce ep(x)=Ep(-x)-1. By evaluating (A.2) at x=1, we obtain Ep(-x)=ep-1(p-1x) and hence

ep(x)=ep-1(p-1x)-1C[[x]]. A.9

Deformed exponentials in x and y satisfy various useful identities in particular deformations of the commutative algebra C[[x,y]]. For instance, in any algebra generated by the symbols x and y such that yx=γxy for γC, the definition implies the following identity:

yep(x)=ep(γx)y A.10

which we will use repeatedly. For a survey of product formulas analogous to exp(x)exp(y)=exp(x+y), see [Ko97]. We will need the following result.

Lemma A.1

Let xy be elements of an algebra such that yx=pxy. The following identities hold as formal power series in xy:

ep(x)ep(y)=ep(x+y), A.11
ep(y)ep(x)=ep(x(1-y))ep(y)=ep(x)ep(-xy)ep(y)=ep(x)ep((1-x)y). A.12
Proof

(A.11) is a direct consequence of the well-known q-binomial formula, see e.g. [GR90, Ex. 1.35]. For (A.12) see [Ko97, Prop. 3.2].

Deformed exponentials as linear maps

Let V be a C-linear space. Call an operator f on V locally nilpotent if for all vV there exists o(v)Z0 such that fo(v)(v)=0 (note that nilpotent operators are locally nilpotent and if V is finite-dimensional the converse is true). If f is nilpotent, the deformed exponential ep(f) defines an invertible map on V. If additionally y is an indeterminate then ep(yf) is a well-defined invertible element of End(V)[[y]].

In the case V=WW the following commutation relations for linear-operator valued formal series are satisfied, expressed in terms of the linear operators a, a, a¯, f(D) (fF) on W defined in Sect. 4.2.

Lemma A.2

Let y be a formal variable. In End(WW)[[y]] the following identities hold:

[ep(ya1a¯2),f(D1+D2)]=[ep(ya1a¯2),a1]=[ep(ya1a¯2),a¯2]=0 A.13

for all fF and

[ep(ya1a¯2),a1]=ypD1a¯2ep(ya1a¯2), A.14
[ep(ya1a¯2),p-D1a2]=yep(ya1a¯2)a1p-D1. A.15
Proof

Note that (A.13) follows directly from the definition of the deformed exponential. A straightforward inductive argument using (4.4) yields

[ak+1,a]=(1-pk+1)pDak, A.16
[(a¯)k+1,a]pk+1=(1-pk+1)(a¯)k, A.17

for all kZ0, which imply (A.14) and (A.15), respectively.

Explicit Expressions for R-Operators

In this appendix we derive explicit formulas for Rϱϱ¯(z) and Rυϕ(z), defined by (5.10) as images of the universal R-matrix R fixing w0w0. We expect that these will be useful in further studies of Baxter’s Q-operators for the open XXZ spin chain; for now they will allow us to give a proof of the boundary factorization identity which does not rely on the universal K-matrix formalism. First we note that, by the second part of Theorem 2.4, Rϱϱ¯(z) and Rυϕ(z) lie in the centralizer

A0(2):={XA(2)|[X,qD1+D2]=0}. B.1

One straightforwardly verifies that A0(2) is generated by elements of the form

k0(a¯2)kfk(D1,D2)a1k,k0(a1)kfk(D1,D2)a2k,fkF(2). B.2

Hence, elements of A0(2) in fact commute with all elements of the form f(D1+D2) (fF).

Explicit expression for Rυϕ(z)

We first state and prove an explicit formula for Rυϕ(z). We keep using the shorthand notation p=q2.

Theorem B.1

For all zC we have

Rυϕ(z)=ep(za1a2)q(μ-1)(D2-D1)-2D1(D2+1). B.3
Proof

From Proposition 2.6 we deduce that Rυϕ(z) is a solution of the linear relation

X(υzϕ-)(Δ(u))=(υzϕ-)(Δop(u))Xfor alluUq(b^-). B.4

First of all, note that the element in the right-hand side of (B.3) satisfies (B.4) with u{k0,k1} and so it suffices to prove that the vector space

X={XA0(2)|Xsatisfies(B.4)foru{f0,f1}} B.5

is spanned by ep(z2a1a2)q(μ-1)(D2-D1)-2D1(D2+1). Using the explicit formulas (2.2), (4.8) and (4.16), we obtain that (B.4) is equivalent to the system

X(z-1a1(q-μ-qμ-2D1)q-μ-2D2-1+q-1a2)=(z-1a1(q-μ-qμ-2D1)+qμ-2(D1+1)a2)X,Xa1qμ+1+2D2=a1X.

Without loss of generality we may write X=X~q(μ-1)(D2-D1)-2D1(D2+1) with X~A0(2). Hence (B.4) is equivalent to

z-1[X~,a1(1-pμ-D1)]=pμ-D1-1a2X~-X~pD1a2,[X~,a1]=0. B.6

It is straightforward to check that the centralizer in A0(2) of a1 is the subalgebra generated by elements of the form k0(a1)kfk(D2)a2k with fkF. It follows that X~ is of this form. Therefore (B.4) is equivalent to the single equation

k0[(a1)k,a1(1-pμ-D1)]fk(D2)a2k==zk0(a1)k(pμ-D1-k-1fk(D2+1)-pD1fk(D2))a2k+1.

The commutator vanishes if k=0 so in the left-hand side we replace k by k+1. For k0 we have

[(a)k+1,a(1-pμ-D)]=(a)k(1-pk+1)(pμ-D-k-1-pD).

Hence (B.4) is equivalent to the recurrence relation

(1-pk+1)(pμ-D1-k-1-pD1)fk+1(D2)=z(pμ-D1-k-1fk(D2+1)-pD1fk(D2)).

Viewing F(2)(D1,D2) as an F(D2)-module, the elements p±D1 are linearly independent. Hence the above recurrence relation is equivalent to the system

(1-pk+1)fk+1(D)=zfk(D+1),fk(D+1)=fk(D).

This is in turn equivalent to fk(D)(p;p)k-1zkC for kZ>0, as required.

The automorphism χ and the q-oscillator subalgebra A~

To obtain an expression for Rυϕ(z) in terms of deformed exponentials, it is very convenient to point out an additional automorphism χ. It cannot be defined on all of A so we will consider a subalgebra A~. First, consider the subalgebra F~(D)F(D) generated by

p±D(D+1)/2,γD,(pγ~;p)D±1,(pγz2;p)D,(-γz2)-D(pγ-1z-2;p)D-1

for all γC× and γ~C×\pZ.

For elements of F~(D), unlike general elements of F(D), the symbol D can be formally evaluated at negative integers. Accordingly, we define an involutive automorphism χ of F~(D) accomplishing the formal replacement D-D-1. To be more precise, we set

χ(p±D(D+1)/2)=p±D(D+1)/2,χ(γD)=γ-D-1,χ((pγ~;p)D±1)=(1-γ~)1p±D(D+1)/2(-γ~)D(pγ~-1;p)D1,χ((pγz2;p)D)=(1-γz2)-1pD(D+1)/2(-γz2)-D(pγ-1z-2;p)D-1,χ((-γz2)-D(pγ-1z-2;p)D-1)=(1-γz2)p-D(D+1)/2(pγz2;p)D. B.7

We denote the subalgebra of End(W) generated by a, a and F~(D) by A~. It is straightforward to check that χ extends to a (non-involutive) algebra automorphism of A~ by means of the assignments

χ(a)=a¯,χ(a)=a. B.8

We can formulate a completion of the tensor product A~A~ in a similar way as for AA. More precisely, we consider the subalgebra F~(2) of F(2) generated by the subsets F~(D1), F~(D2) and the special elements p±D1(D2+1). The completed tensorial square of A~ is defined to be the subalgebra A~(2) of End(WW) generated by the elements (4.7) with gk,,hk,F~(2). Note that the boundary factorization identity (8.2) is an identity in the subalgebra A~(2)End(WW)[[z]].

The automorphism

χ(2):=σ(χχ-1) B.9

of A~A~ naturally extends to an automorphism of A~(2), fixing p±D1(D2+1) and acting termwise on power series in locally nilpotent operators.

Remark B.2

The map χ can be seen as an infinite-dimensional version of conjugation by anti-diagonal matrices; certain Uq(b^+)-representations are naturally related this way. For instance, for the 2-dimensional representation Π, note that Ad(J)Π=ΠΦ where Ad denotes ‘conjugation by’ and J=(0110). In the same way, χ relates the prefundamental representations ϱ and ϱ¯ up to a twist by the diagram automorphism Φ: χϱ=ϱ¯Φ. Hence, the condition (2.19) and the 1-dimensionality of the solution space of the relevant linear equation implies (Ad(J)χ)(Lϱ(z))=Lϱ¯(z). At the same time, a suitable scalar multiple of RΠΠ(z), i.e. the R-matrix for the XXZ chain, is fixed by Ad(JJ) and we will see in Sect. B.3 that the same statement is true for Rϱϱ¯(z) and χ(2).

From (3.5) it follows that Φ(Uq(k))=Uq(k)|ξξ-1. Hence, the boundary counterparts of the above relations also involve inversion of the free parameter ξ:

Ad(J)(KΠ(z))|ξξ-1=-ξKΠ(z),χ(Kϱ(z))|ξξ-1=q-1(z2-ξ-1)-1Kϱ¯(z).

In fact, applying χAd(J) to the reflection equation (6.4) with π=ϱ and inverting ξ we see that

Kϱ(z)χ(Kϱ(z))|ξξ-1

defines a bijection: REϱREϱ¯ of the solution spaces defined in (6.7). Inline graphic

We can use the map χ(2) to generate further relations similar to those in Lemma A.2.

Lemma B.3

Let y be a formal parameter. In End(WW)[[y]] the following identities hold:

[a¯2,ep(ya1a2)]=yep(ya1a2)a1p-D2-1, B.10
[a¯1a2,ep(ya1a¯2)]=y(ep(ya1a¯2)p-D1-1-p-D2-1ep(ya1a¯2)). B.11
Proof

In this proof we view the algebra A as a subalgebra of End(W)[[y]], and similarly for A(2). To prove (B.10), first we apply χ(2) to (A.14), obtaining

[ep(ya1a¯2),a2]=ya1p-D2-1ep(ya1a¯2). B.12

Now consider the unique involutive algebra anti-automorphism η:AA which exchanges a and a and fixes f(D) for all fF and the unique involutive algebra anti-automorphism η¯:AA which exchanges a and a¯ and fixes f(D) for all fF. Then η(2):=ηη¯ is an algebra antiautomorphism of AA. It extends in a natural way to an algebra antiautomorphism of A(2). By applying η(2) to (B.12) we obtain (B.10).

Finally, to prove (B.11), upon right-multiplying (A.15) by pD1+D2+1 we obtain

[ep(ya1a¯2),a1pD2]=yep(ya1a¯2)a1pD2. B.13

From (A.14) and (B.13) it follows that

[ep(ya1a¯2),a1a2pD2]=y(a¯2pD1ep(ya1a¯2)a2+a1ep(ya1a¯2)a1)pD2=y(pD1ep(ya1a¯2)(pD2-1)+(1-pD1)ep(ya1a¯2)pD2)=y(ep(ya1a¯2)pD2-pD1ep(ya1a¯2)). B.14

Now (B.11) follows as the χ(2)-image of (B.14).

Explicit expression for Rϱϱ¯(z)

To aid the computation of Rϱϱ¯(z), consider the subalgebra A~0(2)=A~(2)A0(2), which is preserved by χ(2).

Lemma B.4

Rϱϱ¯(z) is a A~0(2)-valued formal power series whose coefficients are fixed by χ(2).

Proof

It is clear from (4.10) and (4.16) that ϱϱ¯- takes values in A~A~A~(2). Now recall (2.20) and note that the factor κ acts as pD1(D2+1). Furthermore, noting the form of (Σzid)(Θ) given by (2.26) with the components Θλ lying in Uq(n^+)λUq(n^+)-λ (λQ^+), we obtain that the action of R(z) on (ϱϱ¯-,WW) is by an element of A~0(2). For the second part, note that

χ(2)(ϱϱ¯-)=(χ-1χ)(ϱ¯-ϱ)σ=(ϱϱ¯-)(ωω)σ.

Applying this to R(z), making use of (2.27), (2.24) and (2.18), we obtain χ(2)(Rϱϱ¯(z))=Rϱϱ¯(z).

In the derivation of the formula for Rϱϱ¯(z), we rely on the following result.

Lemma B.5

The centralizer of the subset {a1,a¯2} in A(2) is equal to C[[z]].

Proof

This centralizer is the intersection of the centralizer of a1 and the centralizer of a¯2, which are easily found to be equal to

{k,0(a1)kfk,(D2)a2|fk,F},{k,0(a¯2)kgk,(D1)a1|gk,F},

respectively. Clearly their intersection is trivial.

Now we are ready to state and prove a formula for Rϱϱ¯(z) in terms of deformed exponentials.

Theorem B.6

For all z we have

Rϱϱ¯(z)=eq2(q3za1a¯2)eq2(q-1za1a2)q-2D1(D2+1). B.15
Proof

Clearly, w0w0 is fixed by the expression on the right-hand side of (B.15). In the following we initially work over the ring C[[z,z2]] for some new indeterminate z2 and write z1=zz2. By applying ϱz1Π1ϱ¯2- to (2.17) and left and right-multiplying by Lϱ¯,23-(z2-1)-1 we obtain

Rϱϱ¯(z)12Lϱ(z1)13Lϱ¯-(z2-1)32-1=Lϱ¯-(z2-1)32-1Lϱ(z1)13Rϱϱ¯(z)12 B.16

an equation in (A~(2)End(C2))[[z2]]. By a direct computation we obtain

Lϱ¯-(z2-1)-1=1z22-1q-D-1z22a¯q-D-1z2aqD-1z2qD+1z22-q-D-1End(C2)A~. B.17

Now we consider the equation

(z22-1)X12Lϱ(z1)13Lϱ¯-(z2-1)32-1=(z22-1)Lϱ¯-(z2-1)32-1Lϱ(z1)13X12 B.18

in (A~(2)End(C2))[[z2]], for some XA~0(2) such that χ(2)(X)=X. It suffices to prove that

X={XA~0(2)|Xsatisfies(B.18)and is fixed byχ(2)}, B.19

which by Lemma B.4 contains (ϱzϱ¯-)(R), is spanned by the element given in the right-hand side of (B.15).

By considering explicit expressions for (z22-1)Lϱ(z1)13Lϱ¯-(z2-1)32-1 and (z22-1)Lϱ¯-(z2-1)32-1Lϱ(z1)13, we obtain that (B.18) amounts to the system

X(qD1-D2-1-a1a2q-D1+D2-2z)=(qD1-D2-1-a1a¯2qD1-D2z)X,X((a¯2qD1-D2-1+a1q-D1-D2-2z)-a1q-D1+D2zz22)==(a¯2q-D1-D2-1-(a1q-D1-D2-2+a¯2qD1-D2+1z)zz22)X,X(a2q-D1+D2-1-(a1qD1-D2+a2qD1+D2+1z)zz22)==((a2qD1+D2-1+a1qD1-D2z)-a1qD1+D2+2zz22)X,X(q-D1+D2+1+qD1-D2+1z2-a1a¯2qD1-D2z)=(q-D1+D2+1+qD1-D2+1z2-a1a2q-D1+D2-2z)X

for XA~0(2) fixed by χ(2). Since C[[z,z2]](C[[z]])[[z2]], considering expansion coefficients with respect to z2, we can use [X,qD1+D2]=0 to deduce that the above system is equivalent to

Xa2q-2D1=(a2+a1q-2D2+1z)X,a1X=X(a1q-2(D2+1)+q-1a2z),Xa1q2(D2+1)=(a1+a¯2q2D1+3z)X,a¯2X=X(a¯2q2D1+q-1a1z), B.20
[X,q2D1]=(Xa1a2q2D2-1-a1a¯2q2D1+1X)z,[X,q2D2+q2D1z2]=(Xa1a¯2q2D1-1-a1a2q2D2-3X)z. B.21

Note that q-2D1(D2+1)A~0(2) is fixed by χ(2). Hence without loss of generality we may write

X=X~q-2D1(D2+1), B.22

for some X~A~0(2) fixed by χ(2). The system (B.20B.21) is equivalent to

[X~,a2]=q-2D2+1a1X~z,[a1,X~]=X~q2D1-1a2z, B.23
[X~,a1]=a¯2q2D1+3X~z,[a¯2,X~]=X~a1q-2D2-3z, B.24
[X~,q2D1]=(X~a1a2q2D1-1-a1a¯2q2D1+1X~)z, B.25
[X~,q2D2+q2D1z2]=(X~a1a¯2q2D2+3-a1a2q2D2-3X~)z. B.26

Since χ(2) fixes X~, the equations in (B.23) and the equations in (B.24) are pairwise equivalent. At the same time, the system (B.23B.24) implies (B.25) and (B.26). To show this, since [X~,q2D1]=[a1a1,X~] from (B.23B.24) we obtain

[X~,q2D1]+a1a¯2q2D1+1X~z-X~a1a2q2D1-1z==a1a¯2q2D1+1X~z-[X~,a2]a1+a1[a1,X~]-X~a1a2q2D1-1z=(a¯2q2D1+3[a1,X~]-[X~,a1]a2q2D1-1)z,

which vanishes, thereby recovering (B.25). Applying χ(2) to (B.25) we obtain [X~,q-2D2]=(X~a1a2q-2D2-1-a1a¯2q-2D2+1X~)z. Left-and-right multiplying this by q2D2 and using (B.23B.24) to rewrite the result we obtain

[X~,q2D2]=(a¯2X~a1q2D2+3-q2D2-1a1X~a2)z. B.27

Finally, using (B.27) and again (B.23B.24), we derive that

[X~,q2D2+q2D1z2]-X~a1a¯2q2D2+3z+a1a2q2D2-3X~z==a¯2X~a1q2D2+3z-q2D2-1a1X~a2z+[X~,q2D1]z2+-(a¯2X~-X~a1q-2D2-3z)a1q2D2+3z+a1q2D2-1(X~a2-a1q-2D2+1X~z)z=(X~a1a1+a1a1X~+[X~,1-a1a1])z2

which vanishes, thereby proving (B.26) as well.

We have obtained that the system (B.23B.26) is equivalent to the system (B.24). Writing p=q2, without loss of generality we set

X~=Yep(q3za1a¯2)ep(q-1za1a2)

for some YA~0(2) fixed by χ(2), noting that ep(q3za1a¯2) and ep(q-1za1a2) lie in A~0(2) and are fixed by χ(2). The theorem now follows from the following claim.

Claim: (B.24) is satisfied if and only if YC[[z]].

In the special case Y=1, (B.24) is indeed satisfied:

[X~,a1]-a¯2q2D1+3zX~==([ep(q3za1a¯2),a1]-a¯2q2D1+3zep(q3za1a¯2))ep(q-1za1a2),[a¯2,X~]-X~a1q-2D2-3z==ep(q3za1a¯2)([a¯2,ep(q-1za1a2)]-ep(q-1za1a2)a1q-2D2-3z),

with the expressions in parentheses vanishing by virtue of (A.14) and (B.10) (with y=q-1z).

For general Y we therefore have

[X~,a1]-a¯2q2D1+3zX~=[Y,a1]ep(q3za1a¯2)ep(q-1za1a2),[a¯2,X~]-X~a1q-2D2-3z=[a¯2,Y]ep(q3za1a¯2)ep(q-1za1a2).

Both right-hand sides vanish, i.e. (B.24) is indeed satisfied, if and only if Y lies in the centralizer in A~(2) of {a1,a¯2}, which is trivial by Lemma B.5. This proves the claim.

An Alternative Proof of the Main Theorem

In this part of the appendix we give a proof of the boundary factorization identity (8.2) independent of the universal K-matrix formalism, instead relying on the explict expressions obtained in Appendix B. Before we state and prove a key lemma, note that expressions of the form ep(γDy) where γC× and y is an indeterminate give rise to well-defined End(W)-valued formal power series, sending wj to ep(γjy)wj.

Lemma C.1

Let y be a formal parameter and let p be a nonzero complex number, not a root of unity. In End(WW)[[y]] we have the identities

ep(pa1a¯2)(y;p)D1=(y;p)D1ep(-a1a¯2pD1y)ep(pa1a¯2) C.1
ep(pa1a¯2)(p1-D1y;p)D1-1ep(pya¯1a2)=ep(pya¯1a2)(p1-D2y;p)D2-1ep(pa1a¯2). C.2

Proof

Note that

WW=mZ0(WW)m,(WW)m:=j,k0j+k=mCwjwk.

Because each factor in (C.1C.2) preserves each finite-dimensional subspace (WW)m, it suffices to prove the restrictions of (C.1C.2) to (WW)m, where mZ0 is fixed but arbitrary. Note that on (WW)m the operators appearing as arguments of the deformed exponentials are nilpotent. Therefore the operators on the left- and right-hand side of the restricted equations depend rationally on p and hence it suffices to prove them with p restricted to an open subset of C.

We will prove the restriction of (C.1) to (WW)m for all pC such that |p|<1. Combining (A.4) and (A.7) we obtain (y;p)D=ep(pDy)ep(y); as a consequence, (C.1) is equivalent to

ep(pa1a¯2)ep(pD1y)=ep(pD1y)ep(-a1a¯2pD1y)ep(pa1a¯2). C.3

But this equation follows directly from (A.12) and the observation (a1a¯2)(pD1y)=p(pD1y)(a1a¯2).

On the other hand,13 we will prove the restricted version of (C.2) for all pC× such that |p|>1. In this case, for all jZ0 we have

(p1-jy;p)j-1=(y;p-1)j-1=(p-jy;p-1)(y;p-1)C[[y]].

From (A.7) and (A.9) we deduce the identity

(p-jy;p-1)=ep-1(p-jy)-1=ep(p1-jy)C[[y]].

Hence (p1-Dy;p)D-1=(y;p-1)-1ep(p1-Dy) in End(W)[[y]] and (C.2) is equivalent to

ep(pa1a¯2)ep(p1-D1y)ep(pya¯1a2)=ep(pya¯1a2)ep(p1-D2y)ep(pa1a¯2). C.4

To prove (C.4), note that (B.11) can be evaluated at y=p, and the result can be rewritten as

ep(pa1a¯2)(p-D1+a¯1a2)=(p-D2+a¯1a2)ep(pa1a¯2).

By iteration we obtain

ep(pa1a¯2)ep(p1-D1y+pya¯1a2)=ep(p1-D2y+pya¯1a2)ep(pa1a¯2). C.5

Note that (a¯1a2)p1-D1=pp1-D1(a¯1a2) and p1-D2(a¯1a2)=p(a¯1a2)p1-D2. Applying (A.11), we obtain (C.4), as required.

Alternative proof of Theorem 8.1

By virtue of (4.12), the desired identity, viz.

Kυ(z)1Rυϕ(z2)Kϕ(z)2O=OKϱ(q-μ/2z)1Rϱϱ¯(z2)Kϱ¯(qμ/2z)2 C.6

for arbitrary μC and q,ξC× such that q is not a root of unity, is equivalent to

ep(pa1a¯2)Kυ(z)1Rυϕ(z2)Kϕ(z)2ep(pa1a¯2)-1==qμ(D1-D2)/2Kϱ(q-μ/2z)1Rϱϱ¯(z2)Kϱ¯(qμ/2z)2qμ(D2-D1)/2 C.7

where p=q2. The strategy of the proof is as follows. We move various simple factors in F(2)(D1,D2) to the right in both sides of (C.7), thus bringing them to a similar form. Then more advanced product formulas involving q-exponentials and finite q-Pochhammer symbols yield the desired equality.

More precisely, we set γ=pq-μξ-1C× and from (A.2) deduce

(γz-2;p)j-1=pj(1-j)/2(-γ-1z2)j(p1-jγ-1z2;p)j-1

for all jZ0. Using the identities q-D2a=-qa¯q-D2 and q-D2a=aq2D-1q-D2, we obtain, for the left-hand side of (C.7),

ep(pa1a¯2)Kυ(z)1Rυϕ(z2)Kϕ(z)2ep(pa1a¯2)-1==ep(pa1a¯2)(-γ-1q1-D1)D1(γz2;p)D1(p1-D1γ-1z2;p)D1-1ep(z2a1a2)··q(2μ-1)D1-2D2-2D1D2-D22(-ξ)D2ep(pa1a¯2)-1=ep(pa1a¯2)(γz2;p)D1(p1-D1γ-1z2;p)D1-1··ep(pγ-1z2a¯1a2)(-q-D1-D2-2ξ)D1+D2ep(pa1a¯2)-1=ep(pa1a¯2)(γz2;p)D1(p1-D1γ-1z2;p)D1-1··ep(pγ-1z2a¯1a2)ep(pa1a¯2)-1(-q-D1-D2-2ξ)D1+D2. C.8

Similarly, for the right-hand side of (C.7) we obtain

qμ(D1-D2)/2Kϱ(q-μ/2z)1Rϱϱ¯(z2)Kϱ¯(qμ/2z)2qμ(D2-D1)/2==(γz2;p)D1qμ(D1-D2)/2-D12(-ξ)D1ep(q3z2a1a¯2)ep(q-1z2a1a2)··(p1-D2γ-1z2;p)D2-1qμ(D2-D1)/2-2(D1+D2)-2D1D2-D22(-ξ)D2=(γz2;p)D1ep(-a1a¯2q2D1γz2)ep(pγ-1z2a¯1a2)(p1-D2γ-1z2;p)D2-1(-q-D1-D2-2ξ)D1+D2. C.9

Therefore (C.7) is equivalent to

ep(pa1a¯2)(γz2;p)D1(p1-D1γ-1z2;p)D1-1ep(pγ-1z2a¯1a2)ep(pa1a¯2)-1==(γz2;p)D1ep(-a1a¯2pD1γz2)ep(pγ-1z2a¯1a2)(p1-D2γ-1z2;p)D2-1. C.10

Applying (C.1) with y=γz2 and (C.2) with y=γ-1z2, we deduce (C.10), as required.    

Data Availability

Data sharing is not applicable to this article as no datasets were generated or analysed during the current study.

Footnotes

1

It is equal to exp(ϵdpr) if we define Uq(g~) as a topological Hopf algebra over C[[ϵ]].

2

Note that in the topological Hopf algebra setting one simply has κ=qcd+dc+h1h1/2.

3

Note that in Sect. 5 we will use the notation Rπ+π-(z) for a rescaled version of the action of the grading-shifted universal R-matrix.

4

One can of course apply πz+π- to (2.15) for arbitrary Uq(b^±)-representations π±, yielding (2.31) for all uUq(g^) such that Δ(u) and Δop(u) both lie in Uq(b^+)Uq(b^-). However, by applying counits this subalgebra is seen to be equal to Uq(b^+)Uq(b^-)=Uq(h^). Hence, one would just recover the second statement of Theorem 2.4.

5

In particular, S~, like the antipode S itself, is an algebra antiautomorphism and a coalgebra antiautomorphism.

6

In general, each element or map in the right coideal setting of [Ko14, AV22a, AV22b] is denoted by a prime on the corresponding object in the current left coideal setting.

7

Note that our convention for the coproduct is as in [AV22a], but the ordering of the tensor product of the two Borel subalgebras is opposite. Hence the R-matrix in [AV22a], denoted here by R, is equal to R21-1.

8

In Sect. 6 we will use this notation for a rescaled version of the action of the grading-shifted universal K-matrix.

9

Analogous to the case of the R-matrix, we can observe that the intersection of Uq(k) and Uq(b^+) is contained in Uq(h^). Therefore, applying a level-0 representation π to (3.18) just recovers the second part of Theorem 3.6.

10

The two vector spaces W1 and W2 introduced in [KT14, Sec. 2.3] are naturally isomorphic, so that the two algebras Osc1 and Osc2 can be identified with the same subalgebra of End(W1)End(W2).

11

The sign mismatch with [VW20, Eq. (3.1)] is explained in Remark 4.3.

12

These are the modified forms of the R-matrices that appear in the corresponding left reflection equations, see [Sk88, Eq. (13)].

13

We will need (C.2) with |p|<1, but we are not aware of a direct proof of this.

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