In
mathematics, a Poisson–Lie group is a
Poisson manifold
In differential geometry, a Poisson structure on a smooth manifold M is a Lie bracket \ (called a Poisson bracket in this special case) on the algebra (M) of smooth functions on M , subject to the Leibniz rule
: \ = \h + g \ .
Equivalen ...
that is also a
Lie group
In mathematics, a Lie group (pronounced ) is a group that is also a differentiable manifold. A manifold is a space that locally resembles Euclidean space, whereas groups define the abstract concept of a binary operation along with the addit ...
, with the group multiplication being compatible with the
Poisson algebra In mathematics, a Poisson algebra is an associative algebra together with a Lie bracket that also satisfies Leibniz's law; that is, the bracket is also a derivation. Poisson algebras appear naturally in Hamiltonian mechanics, and are also centr ...
structure on the manifold.
The infinitesimal counterpart of a Poisson–Lie group is a
Lie bialgebra In mathematics, a Lie bialgebra is the Lie-theoretic case of a bialgebra: it is a set with a Lie algebra and a Lie coalgebra structure which are compatible.
It is a bialgebra where the multiplication is skew-symmetric and satisfies a dual Jacobi ...
, in analogy to Lie algebras as the infinitesimal counterparts of Lie groups.
Many
quantum group
In mathematics and theoretical physics, the term quantum group denotes one of a few different kinds of noncommutative algebras with additional structure. These include Drinfeld–Jimbo type quantum groups (which are quasitriangular Hopf algebra ...
s are quantizations of the Poisson algebra of functions on a Poisson–Lie group.
Definition
A Poisson–Lie group is a Lie group ''
'' equipped with a Poisson bracket for which the group multiplication
with
is a
Poisson map, where the manifold
has been given the structure of a product Poisson manifold.
Explicitly, the following identity must hold for a Poisson–Lie group:
:
where
and
are real-valued, smooth functions on the Lie group, while ''
'' and ''
'' are elements of the Lie group. Here, ''
'' denotes left-multiplication and ''
'' denotes right-multiplication.
If
denotes the corresponding Poisson bivector on ''
'', the condition above can be equivalently stated as
:
In particular, taking ''
'' one obtains
, or equivalently
. Applying
Weinstein splitting theorem to ''
'' one sees that non-trivial Poisson-Lie structure is never symplectic, not even of constant rank.
Poisson-Lie groups - Lie bialgebra correspondence
The Lie algebra
of a Poisson–Lie group has a natural structure of
Lie coalgebra given by linearising the Poisson tensor
at the identity, i.e.
is a
comultiplication In mathematics, coalgebras or cogebras are structures that are dual (in the category-theoretic sense of reversing arrows) to unital associative algebras. The axioms of unital associative algebras can be formulated in terms of commutative diagrams ...
. Moreover, the algebra and the coalgebra structure are compatible, i.e.
is a
Lie bialgebra In mathematics, a Lie bialgebra is the Lie-theoretic case of a bialgebra: it is a set with a Lie algebra and a Lie coalgebra structure which are compatible.
It is a bialgebra where the multiplication is skew-symmetric and satisfies a dual Jacobi ...
,
The classical
Lie group–Lie algebra correspondence In mathematics, Lie group–Lie algebra correspondence allows one to correspond a Lie group to a Lie algebra or vice versa, and study the conditions for such a relationship. Lie groups that are isomorphic to each other have Lie algebras that are iso ...
, which gives an
equivalence of categories
In category theory, a branch of abstract mathematics, an equivalence of categories is a relation between two categories that establishes that these categories are "essentially the same". There are numerous examples of categorical equivalences ...
between
simply connected
In topology, a topological space is called simply connected (or 1-connected, or 1-simply connected) if it is path-connected and every path between two points can be continuously transformed (intuitively for embedded spaces, staying within the spa ...
Lie groups and finite-dimensional Lie algebras, was extended by
Drinfeld to an equivalence of categories between simply connected Poisson–Lie groups and finite-dimensional Lie bialgebras.
Thanks to Drinfeld theorem, any Poisson–Lie group ''
'' has a dual Poisson–Lie group, defined as the Poisson–Lie group integrating the dual ''
'' of its bialgebra.
Homomorphisms
A Poisson–Lie group homomorphism
is defined to be both a Lie group homomorphism and a Poisson map. Although this is the "obvious" definition, neither left translations nor right translations are Poisson maps. Also, the inversion map
taking
is not a Poisson map either, although it is an anti-Poisson map:
:
for any two smooth functions
on ''
''.
Examples
Trivial examples
* Any
trivial Poisson structure on a Lie group ''
'' defines a Poisson–Lie group structure, whose bialgebra is simply
with the trivial comultiplication.
* The dual ''
'' of a Lie algebra, together with its
linear Poisson structure, is an additive Poisson–Lie group.
These two example are dual of each other via Drinfeld theorem, in the sense explained above.
Other examples
Let
be any
semisimple
In mathematics, semi-simplicity is a widespread concept in disciplines such as linear algebra, abstract algebra, representation theory, category theory, and algebraic geometry. A semi-simple object is one that can be decomposed into a sum of ''sim ...
Lie group. Choose a maximal torus
and a choice of
positive roots
In mathematics, a root system is a configuration of vectors in a Euclidean space satisfying certain geometrical properties. The concept is fundamental in the theory of Lie groups and Lie algebras, especially the classification and representatio ...
.
Let
be the corresponding opposite
Borel subgroup
In the theory of algebraic groups, a Borel subgroup of an algebraic group ''G'' is a maximal Zariski closed and connected solvable algebraic subgroup. For example, in the general linear group ''GLn'' (''n x n'' invertible matrices), the subgrou ...
s, so that
and there is a natural projection
.
Then define a Lie group
:
which is a subgroup of the product
, and has the same dimension as
.
The standard Poisson–Lie group structure on ''
'' is determined by identifying the Lie algebra of
with the dual of
the Lie algebra of
, as in the standard
Lie bialgebra In mathematics, a Lie bialgebra is the Lie-theoretic case of a bialgebra: it is a set with a Lie algebra and a Lie coalgebra structure which are compatible.
It is a bialgebra where the multiplication is skew-symmetric and satisfies a dual Jacobi ...
example.
This defines a Poisson–Lie group structure on both
and on the dual Poisson Lie group
.
This is the "standard" example: the Drinfeld-Jimbo quantum group
is a quantization of the Poisson algebra of functions on the group
.
Note that
is
solvable, whereas
is semisimple.
See also
*
Lie bialgebra In mathematics, a Lie bialgebra is the Lie-theoretic case of a bialgebra: it is a set with a Lie algebra and a Lie coalgebra structure which are compatible.
It is a bialgebra where the multiplication is skew-symmetric and satisfies a dual Jacobi ...
*
Quantum group
In mathematics and theoretical physics, the term quantum group denotes one of a few different kinds of noncommutative algebras with additional structure. These include Drinfeld–Jimbo type quantum groups (which are quasitriangular Hopf algebra ...
*
Affine quantum group
*
Quantum affine algebras In mathematics, a quantum affine algebra (or affine quantum group) is a Hopf algebra that is a ''q''-deformation of the universal enveloping algebra of an affine Lie algebra. They were introduced independently by and as a special case of their ge ...
References
*
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Poisson-Lie group
Lie groups
Symplectic geometry
Structures on manifolds