Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Adjoint representation

Encyclopedia : A : AD : ADJ : Adjoint representation


In mathematics, the adjoint representation (or adjoint action) of a Lie group G is the natural representation of G on its own Lie algebra. This representation is the linearized version of the action of G on itself by conjugation.

Formal definition

Let G be a Lie group and let [\mathfrak g] be its Lie algebra (which we identify with TeG, the tangent space to the identity element in G). Define a map Ψ : G → Aut(G) by

[\Psi_g(h) = ghg^.\,]
For each g in G, Ψg is an automorphism of G. It follows that the derivative of Ψg at the identity is an automorphism of the Lie algebra [\mathfrak g]. We denote this map by Adg:
[\mathrm_g\colon \mathfrak g \to \mathfrak g.]
To say that Adg is a Lie algebra automorphism is to say that Adg is a linear transformation of [\mathfrak g] that preserves the Lie bracket. The map
[\mathrm\colon G \to \mathrm(\mathfrak g)]
which sends g to Adg is called the adjoint representation of G. This is indeed a representation of G since [\mathrm(\mathfrak g)] is a Lie subgroup of [\mathrm(\mathfrak g)] and the above adjoint map is a Lie group homomorphism. The dimension of the adjoint representation is the same as the dimension of the group G.

Adjoint representation of a Lie algebra

One may always pass from a representation of a Lie group G to a representation of its Lie algebra by taking the derivative at the identity. Taking the derivative of the adjoint map

[\mathrm\colon G \to \mathrm(\mathfrak g)]
gives the adjoint representation of the Lie algebra [\mathfrak g]:
[\mathrm\colon \mathfrak g \to \mathrm(\mathfrak g).]
Here [\mathrm(\mathfrak g)] is the Lie algebra of [\mathrm(\mathfrak g)] which may be identified with the derivation algebra of [\mathfrak g]. The adjoint representation of a Lie algebra is related in a fundamental way to the structure of that algebra. In particular, one can show that
[\mathrm_x(y) = [x,y]]
for all [x,y \in \mathfrak g]. For more information see: adjoint representation of a Lie algebra.

Examples

Properties

The following table summarizes the properties of the various maps mentioned in the definition

[\Psi\colon G \to \mathrm(G)\,] [\Psi_g\colon G \to G\,]
Lie group homomorphism:
  • [\Psi_ = \Psi_g\Psi_h]
Lie group automorphism:
  • [\Psi_g(ab) = \Psi_g(a)\Psi_g(b)]
  • [(\Psi_g)^ = \Psi_}]
[\mathrm\colon G \to \mathrm(\mathfrak g)] [\mathrm_g\colon \mathfrak g \to \mathfrak g]
Lie group homomorphism:
  • [\mathrm_ = \mathrm_g\mathrm_h]
Lie algebra automorphism:
  • [\mathrm_g] is linear
  • [(\mathrm_g)^ = \mathrm_}]
  • [\mathrm_g[x,y] = [mathrm_g(x),mathrm_g(y)]]
[\mathrm\colon \mathfrak g \to \mathrm(\mathfrak g)] [\mathrm_x\colon \mathfrak g \to \mathfrak g]
Lie algebra homomorphism:
  • [\mathrm] is linear
  • [\mathrm_ = [mathrm_x,mathrm_y]]
Lie algebra derivation:
  • [\mathrm_x] is linear
  • [\mathrm_x[y,z] = [mathrm_x(y),z] + [y,mathrm_x(z)]]

The image of G under the adjoint representation is denoted by AdG. If G is connected, the kernel of the adjoint representation coincides with the kernel of Ψ which is just the center of G. Therefore the adjoint representation of a connected Lie group G is faithful if and only if G is centerless. More generally, if G is not connected, then the kernel of the adjoint map is the centralizer of the identity component G0 of G. By the first isomorphism theorem we have

[\mathrm_G \cong G/C_G(G_0).]

Roots of a semisimple Lie group

If G is semisimple, the non-zero weights of the adjoint representation form a root system. To see how this works, consider the case G=SLn(R). We can take the group of diagonal matrices diag(t1,...,tn) as our maximal torus T. Conjugation by an element of T sends

[\begin
a_&a_&\cdots&a_\\ a_&a_&\cdots&a_\\\vdots&\vdots&\ddots&\vdots\\ a_&a_&\cdots&a_\\\end\mapsto\begin a_&t_1t_2^a_&\cdots&t_1t_n^a_\\t_2t_1^a_&a_&\cdots&t_2t_n^a_\\\vdots&\vdots&\ddots&\vdots\\t_nt_1^a_&t_nt_2^a_&\cdots&a_\\\end.]

Thus, T acts trivially on the diagonal part of the Lie algebra of G and with eigenvectors titj-1 on the various off-diagonal entries. The roots of G are the weights diag(t1,...,tn)→titj-1. This accounts for the standard description of the root system of G=SLn(R) as the set of vectors of the form eiej.

Variants and analogues

The adjoint representation can also be defined for algebraic groups over any field.

The co-adjoint representation is the contragredient representation of the adjoint representation. A. Kirillov observed that the orbit of any vector in a co-adjoint representation is a symplectic manifold. According to the philosophy in representation theory known as the orbit method (see also the Kirillov character formula), the irreducible representations of a Lie group G should be indexed in some way by its co-adjoint orbits. This relationship is closest in the case of nilpotent Lie groups.

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: