in the Bruhat order and if The elements where "w" varies over "W" form a basis of the algebra "H", which is called the "dual canonical basis" of the Hecke algebra "H". The "canonical basis" is obtained in a similar way. The polynomials making appearance in this theorem are the Kazhdan-Lusztig polynomials.
The Kazhdan-Lusztig notions of left, right and two-sided "cells" in Coxeter groups are defined through the behavior of the canonical basis under the action of "H".
Hecke algebra of a locally compact group
Iwahori-Hecke algebras first appeared as an important special case of a very general construction in group theory. Let ("G","K") be a pair consisting of a locally compact topological group "G" and its closed subgroup "K". Then the space of bi-"K"-invariant continuous functions of compact support
:"C" ["K""G"/"K"]
can be endowed with a structure of an associative algebra under the operation of convolution. This algebra is denoted
:"H"("G"//"K")
and called the Hecke ring of the pair ("G","K"). If we start with a Gelfand pair then the resulting algebra turns out to be commutative. In particular, this holds when
:"G"="SL"n(Qp) and "K"="SL"n(Zp)
and the representations of the corresponding commutative Hecke ring were studied by Ian G. Macdonald.
On the other hand, in the case
:"G" = "SL"2(Q) and "K" = "SL"2(Z)
we arrive at the abstract ring behind Hecke operators in the theory of modular forms, which gave the name to Hecke algebras in general.
The case leading to the Hecke algebra of a finite Weyl group is when "G" is the finite Chevalley group over a finite field with "p"k elements, and "B" is its Borel subgroup. Iwahori showed that the Hecke ring
:"H"("G"//"K")
is obtained from the generic Hecke algebra "H"q of the Weyl group "W" of "G" by specializing the indeterminate "q" of the latter algebra to "p"k, the cardinality of the finite field. George Lusztig remarked in 1984 ("Characters of reductive groups over a finite field", xi, footnote)::"I think it would be most appropriate to call it the Iwahori algebra, but the name Hecke ring (or algebra) given by Iwahori himself has been in use for almost 20 years and it is probably too late to change it now."
Iwahori and Matsumoto (1965) considered the case when "G" is a group of points of a reductive algebraic group over a non-archimedean local field "K", such as "Q""p", and "K" is what is now called an Iwahori subgroup of "G". The resulting Hecke ring is isomorphic to the Hecke algebra of the affine Weyl group of "G", or the affine Hecke algebra, where the indeterminate "q" has been specialized to the cardinality of the residue field of "K".
Work of Roger Howe in the 1970s and his papers with Allen Moy on representations of "p"-adic "GL""n" opened a possibility of classifying irreducible admissible representations of reductive groups over local fields in terms of appropriately constructed Hecke algebras. (Important contributions were also made by Joseph Bernstein and Andrey Zelevinsky.) These ideas were taken much further in Colin Bushnell and Philip Kutzko's "theory of types", allowing them to complete the classification in the general linear case. Many of the techniques can be extended to other reductive groups, which remains an area of active research. It has been conjectured that all Hecke algebras that are ever needed are mild generalizations of affine Hecke algebras.
Representations of Hecke algebras
It follows from Iwahori's work that complex representations of Hecke algebras of finite type are intimately related with the structure of the spherical principal series representations of finite Chevalley groups.
George Lusztig pushed this connection much further and was able to describe most of the characters of finite groups of Lie type in terms of representation theory of Hecke algebras. This work used a mixture of geometric techniques and various reductions, led to introduction of various objects generalizing Hecke algebras and detailed understanding of their representations (for "q" not a root of unity). Modular representations of Hecke algebras and representations at roots of unity turned out to be related with the theory of canonical bases in affine quantum groups and very interesting combinatorics.
Representation theory of affine Hecke algebras was developed by Lusztig with a view towards applying it to description of representations of "p"-adic groups. It is in many ways quite different in flavor from the finite case. A generalization of affine Hecke algebras, called "double affine Hecke algebra", was used by Ivan Cherednik in his proof of the Macdonald conjectures.
References
*David Goldschmidt [http://www.ams.org/online_bks/ulect4/ Group Characters, Symmetric Functions, and the Hecke Algebra] ISBN 0-8218-3220-4
*Iwahori, Nagayoshi; Matsumoto, Hideya [http://www.numdam.org/item?id=PMIHES_1965__25__5_0 "On some Bruhat decomposition and the structure of the Hecke rings of p-adic Chevalley groups."] Publications Mathématiques de l'IHÉS, 25 (1965), p. 5-48
* Alexander Kleshchev, "Linear and projective representations of symmetric groups", Cambridge tracts in mathematics, vol. 163. Cambridge University Press, 2005. ISBN 0 521 83703 0
* George Lusztig, "Hecke algebras with unequal parameters", CRM monograph series, vol.18, American Mathematical Society, 2003. ISBN 0-8218-3356-1
* Andrew Mathas, "Iwahori-Hecke algebras and Schur algebras of the symmetric group", University Lecture Series, vol.15, American Mathematical Society, 1999. ISBN 0-8218-1926-7
* Lusztig, George, "On a theorem of Benson and Curtis", J. Algebra 71 (1981), no. 2, 490--498. DOI|10.1016/0021-8693(81)90188-5
* Colin Bushnell and Philip Kutzko, "The admissible dual of GL(n) via compact open subgroups", Annals of Mathematics Studies, vol. 129, Princeton University Press, 1993. ISBN 0-691-02114-7