Research
I study noncommutative algebras with a focus on deformation
theory. Elements in such algebras don't commute. A simple
example is the skew polynomial ring consisting of polynomials in x and
y but with the relation yx = -xy instead of yx=xy. Noncommutative
algebras often arise as deformations of familiar algebraic
structures. We might consider the polynomials in x and y but with
the relation yx=q xy for some indeterminant q. We obtain
different noncommutative structures by setting q to different values,
and we consider this whole family of noncommutative algebras as a
deformation of the commutative polynomial ring.
In my Ph.D. thesis, I study deformations of algebras that arise from the
action of the symmetric group Sym_n on a polynomial ring over fields of
positive characteristic. The deformations that arise are analogs
of Lusztig's graded affine Hecke algebras (used to study the
representation of groups of Lie type) and of Drinfeld Hecke
algebras. Similar deformations arise in algebraic combinatorics
and representation theory, often in the study of symplectic orbifolds,
under the name of symplectic reflection algebras or rational Cherednik
algebras.