In
mathematics, a Lie algebra (pronounced ) is a
vector space together with an
operation
Operation or Operations may refer to:
Arts, entertainment and media
* ''Operation'' (game), a battery-operated board game that challenges dexterity
* Operation (music), a term used in musical set theory
* ''Operations'' (magazine), Multi-Man ...
called the Lie bracket, an
alternating bilinear map , that satisfies the
Jacobi identity. The Lie bracket of two vectors
and
is denoted
. However, it is flexible algebra">flexible. Nonetheless, much of the terminology of associative ring (mathematics), rings and associative algebra, algebras is commonly applied to Lie algebras. A ''Lie subalgebra'' is a subspace
\mathfrak \subseteq \mathfrak which is closed under the Lie bracket. An ''ideal''
\mathfrak i\subseteq\mathfrak is a subalgebra satisfying the stronger condition:
:
[\mathfrak,\mathfrak i]\subseteq \mathfrak i.
A Lie algebra ''homomorphism'' is a linear map compatible with the respective Lie brackets:
:
\phi: \mathfrak\to\mathfrak, \quad \phi( ,y=[\phi(x),\phi(y)] \ \text\
x,y \in \mathfrak g.
As for associative rings, ideals are precisely the
kernels of homomorphisms; given a Lie algebra
\mathfrak and an ideal
\mathfrak i in it, one constructs the ''factor algebra'' or ''quotient algebra''
\mathfrak/\mathfrak i, and the
first isomorphism theorem holds for Lie algebras.
Since the Lie bracket is a kind of infinitesimal
commutator of the corresponding Lie group, we say that two elements
x,y\in\mathfrak g ''commute'' if their bracket vanishes:
,y0.
The
centralizer subalgebra of a subset
S\subset \mathfrak is the set of elements commuting with ''
S'': that is,
\mathfrak_(S) = \. The centralizer of
\mathfrak itself is the ''center''
\mathfrak(\mathfrak). Similarly, for a subspace ''S'', the
normalizer subalgebra of ''
S'' is
\mathfrak_(S) = \. Equivalently, if
S is a Lie subalgebra,
\mathfrak_(S) is the largest subalgebra such that
S is an ideal of
\mathfrak_(S).
Examples
For
\mathfrak(2) \subset \mathfrak(2), the commutator of two elements
g \in \mathfrak(2) and
d \in \mathfrak(2):
\begin
\left \begin
a & b \\
c & d
\end,
\begin
x & 0 \\
0 & y
\end
\right&= \begin
ax & by\\
cx & dy \\
\end - \begin
ax & bx\\
cy & dy \\
\end \\
&= \begin
0 & b(y-x) \\
c(x-y) & 0
\end
\end
shows
\mathfrak(2) is a subalgebra, but not an ideal. In fact, every one-dimensional linear subspace of a Lie algebra has an induced abelian Lie algebra structure, which is generally not an ideal. For any simple Lie algebra, all abelian Lie algebras can never be ideals.
Direct sum and semidirect product
For two Lie algebras
\mathfrak and
\mathfrak, their
direct sum Lie algebra is the vector space
\mathfrak\oplus\mathfrakconsisting of all pairs
\mathfrak(x,x'), \,x\in\mathfrak, \ x'\in\mathfrak, with the operation
:
x,x'),(y,y')( ,y ',y',
so that the copies of
\mathfrak g, \mathfrak g' commute with each other:
x,0), (0,x')= 0.
Let
\mathfrak be a Lie algebra and
\mathfrak an ideal of
\mathfrak. If the canonical map
\mathfrak \to \mathfrak/\mathfrak splits (i.e., admits a section), then
\mathfrak is said to be a
semidirect product of
\mathfrak and
\mathfrak/\mathfrak,
\mathfrak=\mathfrak/\mathfrak\ltimes\mathfrak. See also
semidirect sum of Lie algebras.
Levi's theorem says that a finite-dimensional Lie algebra is a semidirect product of its radical and the complementary subalgebra (
Levi subalgebra).
Derivations
A
''derivation'' on the Lie algebra
\mathfrak (or on any
non-associative algebra) is a
linear map \delta\colon\mathfrak\rightarrow \mathfrak that obeys the
Leibniz law, that is,
:
\delta ( ,y = delta(x),y
Delta commonly refers to:
* Delta (letter) (Δ or δ), a letter of the Greek alphabet
* River delta, at a river mouth
* D (NATO phonetic alphabet: "Delta")
* Delta Air Lines, US
* Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 that causes COVID-19
Delta may also re ...
+ , \delta(y)/math>
for all x,y\in\mathfrak g. The ''inner derivation'' associated to any x\in\mathfrak g is the adjoint mapping \mathrm_x defined by \mathrm_x(y):= ,y/math>. (This is a derivation as a consequence of the Jacobi identity.) The outer derivations are derivations which do not come from the adjoint representation of the Lie algebra. If \mathfrak is semisimple, every derivation is inner.
The derivations form a vector space \mathrm(\mathfrak g), which is a Lie subalgebra of \mathfrak(\mathfrak); the bracket is commutator. The inner derivations form a Lie subalgebra of \mathrm(\mathfrak g).
Examples
For example, given a Lie algebra ideal \mathfrak \subset \mathfrak the adjoint representation \mathfrak_\mathfrak of \mathfrak acts as outer derivations on \mathfrak since ,i\subset \mathfrak for any x \in \mathfrak and i \in \mathfrak. For the Lie algebra \mathfrak_n of upper triangular matrices in \mathfrak(n), it has an ideal \mathfrak_n of strictly upper triangular matrices (where the only non-zero elements are above the diagonal of the matrix). For instance, the commutator of elements in \mathfrak_3 and \mathfrak_3 gives\begin
\left \begin
a & b & c \\
0 & d & e \\
0 & 0 & f
\end,
\begin
0 & x & y \\
0 & 0 & z \\
0 & 0 & 0
\end
\right&= \begin
0 & ax & ay+bz \\
0 & 0 & dz \\
0 & 0 & 0
\end - \begin
0 & dx & ex+yf \\
0 & 0 & fz \\
0 & 0 & 0
\end \\
&= \begin
0 & (a-d)x & (a-f)y-ex+bz \\
0 & 0 & (d-f)z \\
0 & 0 & 0
\end
\end
shows there exist outer derivations from \mathfrak_3 in \text(\mathfrak_3).
Split Lie algebra
Let ''V'' be a finite-dimensional vector space over a field ''F'', \mathfrak(V) the Lie algebra of linear transformations and \mathfrak \subseteq \mathfrak(V) a Lie subalgebra. Then \mathfrak is said to be split if the roots of the characteristic polynomials of all linear transformations in \mathfrak are in the base field ''F''. More generally, a finite-dimensional Lie algebra \mathfrak is said to be split if it has a Cartan subalgebra whose image under the adjoint representation \operatorname: \mathfrak \to \mathfrak(\mathfrak g) is a split Lie algebra. A split real form of a complex semisimple Lie algebra (cf. #Real form and complexification) is an example of a split real Lie algebra. See also split Lie algebra for further information.
Vector space basis
For practical calculations, it is often convenient to choose an explicit vector space basis for the algebra. A common construction for this basis is sketched in the article structure constants.
Definition using category-theoretic notation
Although the definitions above are sufficient for a conventional understanding of Lie algebras, once this is understood, additional insight can be gained by using notation common to category theory, that is, by defining a Lie algebra in terms of linear maps—that is, morphisms of the category of vector spaces—without considering individual elements. (In this section, the field over which the algebra is defined is supposed to be of characteristic different from two.)
For the category-theoretic definition of Lie algebras, two braiding isomorphisms are needed. If is a vector space, the ''interchange isomorphism'' \tau: A\otimes A \to A\otimes A is defined by
:\tau(x\otimes y)= y\otimes x.
The ''cyclic-permutation braiding'' \sigma:A\otimes A\otimes A \to A\otimes A\otimes A is defined as
:\sigma=(\mathrm\otimes \tau)\circ(\tau\otimes \mathrm),
where \mathrm is the identity morphism.
Equivalently, \sigma is defined by
:\sigma(x\otimes y\otimes z)= y\otimes z\otimes x.
With this notation, a Lie algebra can be defined as an object A in the category of vector spaces together with a morphism
: cdot,\cdotA\otimes A\rightarrow A
that satisfies the two morphism equalities
: cdot,\cdotcirc(\mathrm+\tau)=0,
and
: cdot,\cdotcirc ( cdot,\cdototimes \mathrm) \circ (\mathrm +\sigma+\sigma^2)=0.
Examples
Vector spaces
Any vector space V endowed with the identically zero Lie bracket becomes a Lie algebra. Such Lie algebras are called abelian
Abelian may refer to:
Mathematics Group theory
* Abelian group, a group in which the binary operation is commutative
** Category of abelian groups (Ab), has abelian groups as objects and group homomorphisms as morphisms
* Metabelian group, a grou ...
, cf. below. Any one-dimensional Lie algebra over a field is abelian, by the alternating property of the Lie bracket.
Associative algebra with commutator bracket
* On an associative algebra A over a field F with multiplication (x, y) \mapsto xy, a Lie bracket may be defined by the commutator ,y= xy - yx. With this bracket, A is a Lie algebra. The associative algebra ''A'' is called an ''enveloping algebra'' of the Lie algebra (A, ,\cdot\, , \cdot \,. Every Lie algebra can be embedded into one that arises from an associative algebra in this fashion; see universal enveloping algebra.
* The associative algebra of the endomorphisms of an ''F''-vector space V with the above Lie bracket is denoted \mathfrak(V).
*For a finite dimensional vector space V = F^n, the previous example is exactly the Lie algebra of ''n'' × ''n'' matrices, denoted \mathfrak(n, F) or \mathfrak_n(F), and with bracket ,YXY-YX where adjacency indicates matrix multiplication. This is the Lie algebra of the general linear group, consisting of invertible matrices.
Special matrices
Two important subalgebras of \mathfrak_n(F) are:
* The matrices of trace zero form the special linear Lie algebra \mathfrak_n(F), the Lie algebra of the special linear group \mathrm_n(F).
*The skew-hermitian matrices form the unitary Lie algebra \mathfrak u(n), the Lie algebra of the unitary group ''U''(''n'').
Matrix Lie algebras
A complex matrix group is a Lie group consisting of matrices, G\subset M_n(\mathbb), where the multiplication of ''G'' is matrix multiplication. The corresponding Lie algebra \mathfrak g is the space of matrices which are tangent vectors to ''G'' inside the linear space M_n(\mathbb): this consists of derivatives of smooth curves in ''G'' at the identity: \mathfrak = \.
The Lie bracket of \mathfrak is given by the commutator of matrices, ,YXY-YX. Given the Lie algebra, one can recover the Lie group as the image of the matrix exponential mapping \exp: M_n(\mathbb)\to M_n(\mathbb) defined by \exp(X) = I + X + \tfracX^2+\cdots, which converges for every matrix X: that is, G=\exp(\mathfrak g).
The following are examples of Lie algebras of matrix Lie groups:
* The special linear group _n(\mathbb), consisting of all matrices with determinant 1. Its Lie algebra \mathfrak_n(\mathbb)consists of all matrices with complex entries and trace 0. Similarly, one can define the corresponding real Lie group _n(\mathbb) and its Lie algebra \mathfrak_n(\mathbb).
* The unitary group U(n) consists of ''n'' × ''n'' unitary matrices (satisfying U^*=U^). Its Lie algebra \mathfrak(n) consists of skew-self-adjoint matrices (X^*=-X).
* The special orthogonal group \mathrm(n), consisting of real determinant-one orthogonal matrices (A^=A^). Its Lie algebra \mathfrak(n) consists of real skew-symmetric matrices (X^=-X). The full orthogonal group \mathrm(n), without the determinant-one condition, consists of \mathrm(n) and a separate connected component, so it has the ''same'' Lie algebra as \mathrm(n). See also infinitesimal rotations with skew-symmetric matrices. Similarly, one can define a complex version of this group and algebra, simply by allowing complex matrix entries.
Two dimensions
* On any field F there is, up to isomorphism, a single two-dimensional nonabelian Lie algebra. With generators ''x, y,'' its bracket is defined as \left , y\right = y. It generates the affine group in one dimension.
:This can be realized by the matrices:
:: x= \left( \begin 1 & 0\\ 0 & 0 \end\right), \qquad y= \left( \begin 0 & 1\\ 0 & 0 \end\right).
Since
: \left( \begin 1 & c\\ 0 & 0 \end\right)^ = \left( \begin 1 & c\\ 0 & 0 \end\right)
for any natural number n and any c, one sees that the resulting Lie group elements are upper triangular 2×2 matrices with unit lower diagonal:
:: \exp(a\cdotx+b\cdoty)= \left( \begin e^a & \tfrac(e^a-1)\\ 0 & 1 \end\right) = 1 + \tfrac\left(a\cdotx+b\cdoty\right).
Three dimensions
* The Heisenberg algebra _3(\mathbb) is a three-dimensional Lie algebra generated by elements , , and with Lie brackets
:: ,y= z,\quad ,z= 0, \quad ,z= 0.
:It is usually realized as the space of 3×3 strictly upper-triangular matrices, with the commutator Lie bracket and the basis
::
x = \left( \begin
0&1&0\\
0&0&0\\
0&0&0
\end\right),\quad
y = \left( \begin
0&0&0\\
0&0&1\\
0&0&0
\end\right),\quad
z = \left( \begin
0&0&1\\
0&0&0\\
0&0&0
\end\right)~.\quad
:Any element of the Heisenberg group has a representation as a product of group generators, i.e., matrix exponentials of these Lie algebra generators,
::\left( \begin
1&a&c\\
0&1&b\\
0&0&1
\end\right)= e^ e^ e^~.
* The Lie algebra \mathfrak(3) of the group SO(3) is spanned by the three matrices
::
F_1 = \left( \begin
0&0&0\\
0&0&-1\\
0&1&0
\end\right),\quad
F_2 = \left( \begin
0&0&1\\
0&0&0\\
-1&0&0
\end\right),\quad
F_3 = \left( \begin
0&-1&0\\
1&0&0\\
0&0&0
\end\right)~.\quad
:The commutation relations among these generators are
::_1, F_2
Onekama ( ) is a village in Manistee County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 411 at the 2010 census. The village is located on the shores of Portage Lake and is surrounded by Onekama Township. The town's name is derived from "On ...
= F_3,
:: _2, F_3= F_1,
:: _3, F_1= F_2.
:The three-dimensional Euclidean space \mathbb^3 with the Lie bracket given by the cross product
In mathematics, the cross product or vector product (occasionally directed area product, to emphasize its geometric significance) is a binary operation on two vectors in a three-dimensional oriented Euclidean vector space (named here E), and i ...
of vectors has the same commutation relations as above: thus, it is isomorphic to \mathfrak(3). This Lie algebra is unitarily equivalent to the usual Spin (physics) angular-momentum component operators for spin-1 particles in quantum mechanics
Quantum mechanics is a fundamental theory in physics that provides a description of the physical properties of nature at the scale of atoms and subatomic particles. It is the foundation of all quantum physics including quantum chemistry, q ...
.
Infinite dimensions
* An important class of infinite-dimensional real Lie algebras arises in differential topology. The space of smooth vector fields on a differentiable manifold ''M'' forms a Lie algebra, where the Lie bracket is defined to be the commutator of vector fields. One way of expressing the Lie bracket is through the formalism of Lie derivatives, which identifies a vector field ''X'' with a first order partial differential operator ''L''''X'' acting on smooth functions by letting ''L''''X''(''f'') be the directional derivative of the function ''f'' in the direction of ''X''. The Lie bracket 'X'',''Y''of two vector fields is the vector field defined through its action on functions by the formula:
:: L_f=L_X(L_Y f)-L_Y(L_X f).\,
* Kac–Moody algebras are a large class of infinite-dimensional Lie algebras whose structure is very similar to the finite-dimensional cases above.
* The Moyal algebra is an infinite-dimensional Lie algebra that contains all classical Lie algebras as subalgebras.
* The Virasoro algebra is of paramount importance in string theory.
Representations
Definitions
Given a vector space ''V'', let \mathfrak(V) denote the Lie algebra consisting of all linear endomorphisms of ''V'', with bracket given by ,YXY-YX. A ''representation'' of a Lie algebra \mathfrak on ''V'' is a Lie algebra homomorphism
:\pi: \mathfrak g \to \mathfrak(V).
A representation is said to be ''faithful'' if its kernel is zero. Ado's theorem states that every finite-dimensional Lie algebra has a faithful representation on a finite-dimensional vector space.
Adjoint representation
For any Lie algebra \mathfrak, we can define a representation
:\operatorname\colon\mathfrak \to \mathfrak(\mathfrak)
given by \operatorname(x)(y) = , y
The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark () in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline o ...
/math>; it is a representation on the vector space \mathfrak called the adjoint representation.
Goals of representation theory
One important aspect of the study of Lie algebras (especially semisimple Lie algebras) is the study of their representations. (Indeed, most of the books listed in the references section devote a substantial fraction of their pages to representation theory.) Although Ado's theorem is an important result, the primary goal of representation theory is not to find a faithful representation of a given Lie algebra \mathfrak. Indeed, in the semisimple case, the adjoint representation is already faithful. Rather the goal is to understand ''all'' possible representation of \mathfrak, up to the natural notion of equivalence. In the semisimple case over a field of characteristic zero, Weyl's theorem says that every finite-dimensional representation is a direct sum of irreducible representations (those with no nontrivial invariant subspaces). The irreducible representations, in turn, are classified by a theorem of the highest weight.
Representation theory in physics
The representation theory of Lie algebras plays an important role in various parts of theoretical physics. There, one considers operators on the space of states that satisfy certain natural commutation relations. These commutation relations typically come from a symmetry of the problem—specifically, they are the relations of the Lie algebra of the relevant symmetry group. An example would be the angular momentum operators, whose commutation relations are those of the Lie algebra \mathfrak(3) of the rotation group SO(3). Typically, the space of states is very far from being irreducible under the pertinent operators, but one can attempt to decompose it into irreducible pieces. In doing so, one needs to know the irreducible representations of the given Lie algebra. In the study of the quantum hydrogen atom, for example, quantum mechanics textbooks give (without calling it that) a classification of the irreducible representations of the Lie algebra \mathfrak(3).
Structure theory and classification
Lie algebras can be classified to some extent. In particular, this has an application to the classification of Lie groups.
Abelian, nilpotent, and solvable
Analogously to abelian, nilpotent, and solvable groups, defined in terms of the derived subgroups, one can define abelian, nilpotent, and solvable Lie algebras.
A Lie algebra \mathfrak is ''abelian'' if the Lie bracket vanishes, i.e. 'x'',''y''= 0, for all ''x'' and ''y'' in \mathfrak. Abelian Lie algebras correspond to commutative (or abelian
Abelian may refer to:
Mathematics Group theory
* Abelian group, a group in which the binary operation is commutative
** Category of abelian groups (Ab), has abelian groups as objects and group homomorphisms as morphisms
* Metabelian group, a grou ...
) connected Lie groups such as vector spaces \mathbb^n or tori \mathbb^n, and are all of the form \mathfrak^n, meaning an ''n''-dimensional vector space with the trivial Lie bracket.
A more general class of Lie algebras is defined by the vanishing of all commutators of given length. A Lie algebra \mathfrak is '' nilpotent'' if the lower central series
: \mathfrak > mathfrak,\mathfrak> \mathfrak,\mathfrak\mathfrak] > \mathfrak,\mathfrak\mathfrak">\mathfrak,\mathfrak\mathfrak\mathfrak] > \cdots
becomes zero eventually. By Engel's theorem, a Lie algebra is nilpotent if and only if for every ''u'' in \mathfrak the adjoint endomorphism
:\operatorname(u):\mathfrak \to \mathfrak, \quad \operatorname(u)v= ,v/math>
is nilpotent.
More generally still, a Lie algebra \mathfrak is said to be '' solvable'' if the derived series:
: \mathfrak > mathfrak,\mathfrak> \mathfrak,\mathfrak mathfrak,\mathfrak > [ \mathfrak,\mathfrak mathfrak,\mathfrak, \mathfrak,\mathfrak mathfrak,\mathfrak] > \cdots
becomes zero eventually.
Every finite-dimensional Lie algebra has a unique maximal solvable ideal, called its radical of a Lie algebra, radical. Under the Lie correspondence, nilpotent (respectively, solvable) connected Lie groups correspond to nilpotent (respectively, solvable) Lie algebras.
Simple and semisimple
A Lie algebra is " simple" if it has no non-trivial ideals and is not abelian. (This implies that a one-dimensional—necessarily abelian—Lie algebra is by definition not simple, even though it has no nontrivial ideals.) A Lie algebra \mathfrak is called '' semisimple'' if it is isomorphic to a direct sum of simple algebras. There are several equivalent characterizations of semisimple algebras, such as having no nonzero solvable ideals.
The concept of semisimplicity for Lie algebras is closely related with the complete reducibility (semisimplicity) of their representations. When the ground field ''F'' has characteristic zero, any finite-dimensional representation of a semisimple Lie algebra is semisimple (i.e., direct sum of irreducible representations). In general, a Lie algebra is called reductive if the adjoint representation is semisimple. Thus, a semisimple Lie algebra is reductive.
Cartan's criterion
Cartan's criterion gives conditions for a Lie algebra to be nilpotent, solvable, or semisimple. It is based on the notion of the Killing form, a symmetric bilinear form on \mathfrak defined by the formula
: K(u,v)=\operatorname(\operatorname(u)\operatorname(v)),
where tr denotes the trace of a linear operator. A Lie algebra \mathfrak is semisimple if and only if the Killing form is nondegenerate. A Lie algebra \mathfrak is solvable if and only if K(\mathfrak, mathfrak,\mathfrak=0.
Classification
The Levi decomposition
In Lie theory and representation theory, the Levi decomposition, conjectured by Wilhelm Killing and Élie Cartan and proved by , states that any finite-dimensional real Lie algebra ''g'' is the semidirect product of a solvable ideal and a ...
expresses an arbitrary Lie algebra as a semidirect sum
In mathematics, specifically in group theory, the concept of a semidirect product is a generalization of a direct product. There are two closely related concepts of semidirect product:
* an ''inner'' semidirect product is a particular way in wh ...
of its solvable radical and a semisimple Lie algebra, almost in a canonical way. (Such a decomposition exists for a finite-dimensional Lie algebra over a field of characteristic zero.) Furthermore, semisimple Lie algebras over an algebraically closed field have been completely classified through their root systems.
Relation to Lie groups
Although Lie algebras are often studied in their own right, historically they arose as a means to study Lie groups.
We now briefly outline the relationship between Lie groups and Lie algebras. Any Lie group gives rise to a canonically determined Lie algebra (concretely, ''the tangent space at the identity''). Conversely, for any finite-dimensional Lie algebra \mathfrak g, there exists a corresponding connected Lie group G with Lie algebra \mathfrak g. This is Lie's third theorem; see the Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula. This Lie group is not determined uniquely; however, any two Lie groups with the same Lie algebra are ''locally isomorphic'', and in particular, have the same universal cover. For instance, the special orthogonal group SO(3) and the special unitary group SU(2) give rise to the same Lie algebra, which is isomorphic to \mathbb^3 with the cross-product, but SU(2) is a simply-connected twofold cover of SO(3).
If we consider ''simply connected'' Lie groups, however, we have a one-to-one correspondence: For each (finite-dimensional real) Lie algebra \mathfrak g, there is a unique simply connected Lie group G with Lie algebra \mathfrak g.
The correspondence between Lie algebras and Lie groups is used in several ways, including in the classification of Lie groups and the related matter of the representation theory of Lie groups. Every representation of a Lie algebra lifts uniquely to a representation of the corresponding connected, simply connected Lie group, and conversely every representation of any Lie group induces a representation of the group's Lie algebra; the representations are in one-to-one correspondence. Therefore, knowing the representations of a Lie algebra settles the question of representations of the group.
As for classification, it can be shown that any connected Lie group with a given Lie algebra is isomorphic to the universal cover mod a discrete central subgroup. So classifying Lie groups becomes simply a matter of counting the discrete subgroups of the center, once the classification of Lie algebras is known (solved by Cartan et al. in the semisimple case).
If the Lie algebra is infinite-dimensional, the issue is more subtle. In many instances, the exponential map is not even locally a homeomorphism (for example, in Diff(S1), one may find diffeomorphisms arbitrarily close to the identity that are not in the image of exp). Furthermore, some infinite-dimensional Lie algebras are not the Lie algebra of any group.
Real form and complexification
Given a complex Lie algebra \mathfrak g, a real Lie algebra \mathfrak_0 is said to be a '' real form'' of \mathfrak g if the complexification \mathfrak_0 \otimes_ \mathbb \simeq \mathfrak is isomorphic to \mathfrak. A real form need not be unique; for example, \mathfrak_2 \mathbb has two real forms \mathfrak_2 \mathbb and \mathfrak_2.
Given a semisimple finite-dimensional complex Lie algebra \mathfrak g, a '' split form'' of it is a real form that splits; i.e., it has a Cartan subalgebra which acts via an adjoint representation with real eigenvalues. A split form exists and is unique (up to isomorphisms). A ''compact form
In mathematics, the notion of a real form relates objects defined over the field of real and complex numbers. A real Lie algebra ''g''0 is called a real form of a complex Lie algebra ''g'' if ''g'' is the complexification of ''g''0:
: \mathfra ...
'' is a real form that is the Lie algebra of a compact Lie group. A compact form exists and is also unique.
Lie algebra with additional structures
A Lie algebra can be equipped with some additional structures that are assumed to be compatible with the bracket. For example, a graded Lie algebra is a Lie algebra with a graded vector space structure. If it also comes with differential (so that the underlying graded vector space is a chain complex), then it is called a differential graded Lie algebra.
A simplicial Lie algebra is a simplicial object in the category of Lie algebras; in other words, it is obtained by replacing the underlying set with a simplicial set (so it might be better thought of as a family of Lie algebras).
Lie ring
A ''Lie ring'' arises as a generalisation of Lie algebras, or through the study of the lower central series of groups. A Lie ring is defined as a nonassociative ring with multiplication that is anticommutative and satisfies the Jacobi identity. More specifically we can define a Lie ring L to be an abelian group
In mathematics, an abelian group, also called a commutative group, is a group in which the result of applying the group operation to two group elements does not depend on the order in which they are written. That is, the group operation is com ...
with an operation cdot,\cdot/math> that has the following properties:
* Bilinearity:
:: + y, z= , z
The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark () in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline o ...
+ , z
The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark () in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline o ...
\quad , x + y
The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark () in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline o ...
= , x
The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark () in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline o ...
+ , y
The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark () in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline o ...
:for all ''x'', ''y'', ''z'' ∈ ''L''.
* The ''Jacobi identity'':
:: ,[y,z + [y,[z,x">,z.html" ;"title=",[y,z">,[y,z + [y,[z,x + [z,[x,y">,z">,[y,z<_a>_+_[y,[z,x.html" ;"title=",z.html" ;"title=",[y,z">,[y,z + [y,[z,x">,z.html" ;"title=",[y,z">,[y,z + [y,[z,x + [z,[x,y = 0 \quad
:for all ''x'', ''y'', ''z'' in ''L''.
* For all ''x'' in ''L'':
:: ,x0 \quad
Lie rings need not be Lie groups under addition. Any Lie algebra is an example of a Lie ring. Any associative ring can be made into a Lie ring by defining a bracket operator ,y= xy - yx. Conversely to any Lie algebra there is a corresponding ring, called the universal enveloping algebra.
Lie rings are used in the study of finite p-groups through the ''Lazard correspondence''. The lower central factors of a ''p''-group are finite abelian ''p''-groups, so modules over Z/''p''Z. The direct sum of the lower central factors is given the structure of a Lie ring by defining the bracket to be the commutator of two coset representatives. The Lie ring structure is enriched with another module homomorphism, the ''p''th power map, making the associated Lie ring a so-called restricted Lie ring.
Lie rings are also useful in the definition of a p-adic analytic groups and their endomorphisms by studying Lie algebras over rings of integers such as the p-adic integers. The definition of finite groups of Lie type due to Chevalley involves restricting from a Lie algebra over the complex numbers to a Lie algebra over the integers, and then reducing modulo ''p'' to get a Lie algebra over a finite field.
Examples
* Any Lie algebra over a general ring instead of a field is an example of a Lie ring. Lie rings are ''not'' Lie groups under addition, despite the name.
* Any associative ring can be made into a Lie ring by defining a bracket operator
:: ,y= xy - yx.
* For an example of a Lie ring arising from the study of groups, let G be a group with ,y x^y^xy the commutator operation, and let G = G_0 \supseteq G_1 \supseteq G_2 \supseteq \cdots \supseteq G_n \supseteq \cdots be a central series in G — that is the commutator subgroup _i,G_j/math> is contained in G_ for any i,j. Then
:: L = \bigoplus G_i/G_
:is a Lie ring with addition supplied by the group operation (which is abelian in each homogeneous part), and the bracket operation given by
:: G_i, yG_j= ,y_\
:extended linearly. The centrality of the series ensures that the commutator ,y/math> gives the bracket operation the appropriate Lie theoretic properties.
See also
* Adjoint representation of a Lie algebra
* Affine Lie algebra In mathematics, an affine Lie algebra is an infinite-dimensional Lie algebra that is constructed in a canonical fashion out of a finite-dimensional simple Lie algebra. Given an affine Lie algebra, one can also form the associated affine Kac-Moody al ...
* Anyonic Lie algebra
* Automorphism of a Lie algebra
In abstract algebra, an automorphism of a Lie algebra \mathfrak g is an isomorphism from \mathfrak g to itself, that is, a linear map preserving the Lie bracket. The set of automorphisms of \mathfrak are denoted \text(\mathfrak), the automorphism g ...
* Chiral Lie algebra
* Free Lie algebra
* Index of a Lie algebra
In algebra, let g be a Lie algebra over a field K. Let further \xi\in\mathfrak^* be a one-form on g. The stabilizer g''ξ'' of ''ξ'' is the Lie subalgebra of elements of g that annihilate ''ξ'' in the coadjoint representation. The index of the L ...
* Lie algebra cohomology
* Lie algebra extension
In the theory of Lie groups, Lie algebras and their representation theory, a Lie algebra extension is an enlargement of a given Lie algebra by another Lie algebra . Extensions arise in several ways. There is the trivial extension obtained by t ...
* Lie algebra representation
* Lie bialgebra
* Lie coalgebra
* Lie operad
* Particle physics and representation theory
* Lie superalgebra
* Poisson algebra
* Pre-Lie algebra
* Quantum groups
* Moyal algebra
* Quasi-Frobenius Lie algebra In mathematics, a quasi-Frobenius Lie algebra
:(\mathfrak, ,\,\,,\,\,\,\beta )
over a field k is a Lie algebra
:(\mathfrak, ,\,\,,\,\,\,)
equipped with a nondegenerate skew-symmetric bilinear form
:\beta : \mathfrak\times\mathfrak\to k, wh ...
* Quasi-Lie algebra
* Restricted Lie algebra
* Serre relations
In mathematics, a Lie algebra is semisimple if it is a direct sum of simple Lie algebras. (A simple Lie algebra is a non-abelian Lie algebra without any non-zero proper ideals).
Throughout the article, unless otherwise stated, a Lie algebra is ...
* Symmetric Lie algebra
* Gelfand–Fuks cohomology
Remarks
References
Sources
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* Erdmann, Karin & Wildon, Mark. ''Introduction to Lie Algebras'', 1st edition, Springer, 2006.
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External links
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Lie Algebra
Lie groups