In
mathematics
Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, the main results concerning irreducible
unitary representation
In mathematics, a unitary representation of a group ''G'' is a linear representation π of ''G'' on a complex Hilbert space ''V'' such that π(''g'') is a unitary operator for every ''g'' ∈ ''G''. The general theory is well-developed in the ca ...
s of the
Lie group
In mathematics, a Lie group (pronounced ) is a group (mathematics), group that is also a differentiable manifold, such that group multiplication and taking inverses are both differentiable.
A manifold is a space that locally resembles Eucli ...
SL(2, R) are due to
Gelfand and
Naimark (1946),
V. Bargmann (1947), and
Harish-Chandra
Harish-Chandra (né Harishchandra) FRS (11 October 1923 – 16 October 1983) was an Indian-American mathematician and physicist who did fundamental work in representation theory, especially harmonic analysis on semisimple Lie groups.
Early ...
(1952).
Structure of the complexified Lie algebra
We choose a basis ''H'', ''X'', ''Y'' for the complexification of the Lie algebra of SL(2, R) so that ''iH'' generates the Lie algebra of a compact Cartan subgroup ''K'' (so in particular unitary representations split as a sum of eigenspaces of ''H''), and is an
sl2-triple, which means that they satisfy the relations
:
One way of doing this is as follows:
:
corresponding to the subgroup ''K'' of matrices
:
:
The
Casimir operator
In mathematics, a Casimir element (also known as a Casimir invariant or Casimir operator) is a distinguished element of the center of the universal enveloping algebra of a Lie algebra. A prototypical example is the squared angular momentum operato ...
Ω is defined to be
:
It generates the center of the
universal enveloping algebra
In mathematics, the universal enveloping algebra of a Lie algebra is the unital associative algebra whose representations correspond precisely to the representations of that Lie algebra.
Universal enveloping algebras are used in the representa ...
of the complexified Lie algebra of SL(2, R). The Casimir element acts on any irreducible representation as multiplication by some complex scalar μ
2. Thus in the case of the Lie algebra sl
2, the
infinitesimal character of an irreducible representation is specified by one complex number.
The center ''Z'' of the group SL(2, R) is a cyclic group of order 2, consisting of the identity matrix and its negative. On any irreducible representation, the center either acts trivially, or by the nontrivial character of ''Z'', which represents the matrix -''I'' by multiplication by -1 in the representation space. Correspondingly, one speaks of the trivial or nontrivial ''central character''.
The central character and the infinitesimal character of an irreducible representation of any reductive Lie group are important invariants of the representation. In the case of irreducible admissible representations of SL(2, R), it turns out that, generically, there is exactly one representation, up to an isomorphism, with the specified central and infinitesimal characters. In the exceptional cases there are two or three representations with the prescribed parameters, all of which have been determined.
Finite-dimensional representations
For each nonnegative integer ''n'', the group SL(2, R) has an irreducible representation of dimension ''n'' + 1, which is unique up to an isomorphism. This representation can be constructed in the space of homogeneous polynomials of degree ''n'' in two variables. The case ''n'' = 0 corresponds to the
trivial representation
In the mathematical field of representation theory, a trivial representation is a representation of a group ''G'' on which all elements of ''G'' act as the identity mapping of ''V''. A trivial representation of an associative or Lie algebra is ...
. An irreducible finite-dimensional representation of a noncompact
simple Lie group
In mathematics, a simple Lie group is a connected non-abelian Lie group ''G'' which does not have nontrivial connected normal subgroups. The list of simple Lie groups can be used to read off the list of simple Lie algebras and Riemannian symm ...
of dimension greater than 1 is never unitary. Thus this construction produces only one unitary representation of SL(2, R), the trivial representation.
The ''finite-dimensional'' representation theory of the noncompact group SL(2, R) is equivalent to the
representation theory of SU(2), its compact form, essentially because their Lie algebras have the same complexification and they are "algebraically simply connected". (More precisely, the group SU(2) is simply connected and, although SL(2, R) is not, it has no non-trivial algebraic central extensions.) However, in the general ''infinite-dimensional'' case, there is no close correspondence between representations of a group and the representations of its Lie algebra. In fact, it follows from the
Peter–Weyl theorem
In mathematics, the Peter–Weyl theorem is a basic result in the theory of harmonic analysis, applying to topological groups that are Compact group, compact, but are not necessarily Abelian group, abelian. It was initially proved by Hermann Weyl, ...
that all irreducible representations of the compact Lie group SU(2) are finite-dimensional and unitary. The situation with SL(2, R) is completely different: it possesses infinite-dimensional irreducible representations, some of which are unitary, and some are not.
Principal series representations
A major technique of constructing representations of a reductive Lie group is the method of
parabolic induction In mathematics, parabolic induction is a method of constructing representations of a reductive group from representations of its parabolic subgroups.
If ''G'' is a reductive algebraic group and P=MAN is the Langlands decomposition of a paraboli ...
. In the case of the group SL(2, R), there is up to conjugacy only one proper parabolic subgroup, the
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 subgr ...
of the upper-triangular matrices of determinant 1. The inducing parameter of an induced
principal series representation is a (possibly non-unitary) character of the multiplicative group of real numbers, which is specified by choosing ε = ± 1 and a complex number μ. The corresponding principal series representation is denoted ''I''
ε,μ. It turns out that ε is the central character of the induced representation and the complex number μ may be identified with the
infinitesimal character via the
Harish-Chandra isomorphism
In mathematics, the Harish-Chandra isomorphism, introduced by ,
is an isomorphism of commutative rings constructed in the theory of Lie algebras. The isomorphism maps the center \mathcal(U(\mathfrak)) of the universal enveloping algebra U(\mathf ...
.
The principal series representation ''I''
ε,μ (or more precisely its Harish-Chandra module of ''K''-finite elements) admits a basis consisting of elements ''w''
''j'', where the index ''j'' runs through the even integers if ε=1 and the odd integers if ε=-1. The action of ''X'', ''Y'', and ''H'' is given by the formulas
:
:
:
Admissible representations
Using the fact that it is an eigenvector of the Casimir operator and has an eigenvector for ''H'', it follows easily that any irreducible
admissible representation
In mathematics, admissible representations are a well-behaved class of Group representation, representations used in the representation theory of reductive group, reductive Lie groups and locally compact group, locally compact totally disconnected ...
is a subrepresentation of a parabolically induced representation. (This also is true for more general reductive Lie groups and is known as
Casselman's subrepresentation theorem.) Thus the irreducible admissible representations of SL(2, R) can be found by decomposing the principal series representations ''I''
ε,μ into irreducible components and determining the isomorphisms. We summarize the decompositions as follows:
*''I''
ε,μ is reducible if and only if μ is an integer and ε=−(−1)
μ. If ''I''
ε,μ is irreducible then it is isomorphic to ''I''
ε,−μ.
*''I''
−1, 0 splits as the direct sum ''I''
ε,0 = ''D''
+0 + ''D''
−0 of two irreducible representations, called limit of discrete series representations. ''D''
+0 has a basis ''w''
''j'' for ''j''≥1, and ''D''
−0 has a basis ''w''
''j'' for ''j''≤−1,
*If ''I''
ε,μ is reducible with μ>0 (so ε=−(−1)
μ) then it has a unique irreducible quotient which has finite dimension μ, and the kernel is the sum of two discrete series representations ''D''
+μ + ''D''
−μ. The representation ''D''
μ has a basis ''w''
μ+''j'' for ''j''≥1, and ''D''
−μ has a basis ''w''
−μ−''j'' for ''j''≤−1.
*If ''I''
ε,μ is reducible with μ<0 (so ε=−(−1)
μ) then it has a unique irreducible subrepresentation, which has finite dimension -μ, and the quotient is the sum of two discrete series representations ''D''
+μ + ''D''
−μ.
This gives the following list of irreducible admissible representations:
*A finite-dimensional representation of dimension μ for each positive integer μ, with central character −(−1)
μ.
*Two limit of discrete series representations ''D''
+0, ''D''
−0, with μ=0 and non-trivial central character.
*Discrete series representations ''D''
μ for μ a non-zero integer, with central character −(−1)
μ.
*Two families of irreducible principal series representations ''I''
ε,μ for ε≠−(−1)
μ (where ''I''
ε,μ is isomorphic to ''I''
ε,−μ).
Relation with the Langlands classification
According to the
Langlands classification
In mathematics, the Langlands classification is a description of the irreducible representations of a reductive Lie group ''G'', suggested by Robert Langlands (1973). There are two slightly different versions of the Langlands classification. One of ...
, the irreducible admissible representations are parametrized by certain tempered representations of Levi subgroups ''M'' of parabolic subgroups ''P''=''MAN''. This works as follows:
*The discrete series, limit of discrete series, and unitary principal series representations ''I''
ε,μ with μ imaginary are already tempered, so in these cases the parabolic subgroup ''P'' is SL(2, R) itself.
*The finite-dimensional representations and the representations ''I''
ε,μ for ℜμ>0, μ not an integer or ε≠−(−1)
μ are the irreducible quotients of the principal series representations ''I''
ε,μ for ℜμ>0, which are induced from tempered representations of the parabolic subgroup ''P'' = ''MAN'' of upper triangular matrices, with ''A'' the positive diagonal matrices and ''M'' the center of order 2. For μ a positive integer and ε=−(−1)
μ the principal series representation has a finite-dimensional representation as its irreducible quotient, and otherwise it is already irreducible.
Unitary representations
The irreducible unitary representations can be found by checking which of the irreducible admissible representations admit an invariant positively definite Hermitian form. This results in the following list of unitary representations of SL(2, R):
*The trivial representation (the only finite-dimensional representation in this list).
*The two
limit of discrete series representations ''D''
+''0'', ''D''
−''0''.
*The
discrete series representation
In mathematics, a discrete series representation is an irreducible unitary representation of a locally compact topological group ''G'' that is a subrepresentation of the left regular representation of ''G'' on L²(''G''). In the Plancherel measur ...
s ''D''
''k'', indexed by non-zero integers ''k''. They are all distinct.
*The two families of irreducible
principal series representation, consisting of the spherical principal series ''I''
+,''i''μ indexed by the real numbers μ, and the non-spherical unitary principal series ''I''
−,''i''μ indexed by the non-zero real numbers μ. The representation with parameter μ is isomorphic to the one with parameter −μ, and there are no further isomorphisms between them.
*The
complementary series representations ''I''
+,μ for 0<, μ, <1. The representation with parameter μ is isomorphic to the one with parameter −μ, and there are no further isomorphisms between them.
Of these, the two limit of discrete series representations, the discrete series representations, and the two families of principal series representations are
tempered, while the trivial and complementary series representations are not tempered.
References
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See also
*
Spin (physics)
Spin is an Intrinsic and extrinsic properties, intrinsic form of angular momentum carried by elementary particles, and thus by List of particles#Composite particles, composite particles such as hadrons, atomic nucleus, atomic nuclei, and atoms. S ...
*
Representation theory of SU(2)
*
Rotation group SO(3)#A note on Lie algebra
{{DEFAULTSORT:Representation Theory Of Sl2(R)
Representation theory of Lie groups