Classical Lie algebras #
This file is the place to find definitions and basic properties of the classical Lie algebras:
- Aₗ = sl(l+1)
- Bₗ ≃ so(l+1, l) ≃ so(2l+1)
- Cₗ = sp(l)
- Dₗ ≃ so(l, l) ≃ so(2l)
Main definitions #
LieAlgebra.SpecialLinear.sl
LieAlgebra.Symplectic.sp
LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.so
LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.so'
LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.soIndefiniteEquiv
LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.typeD
LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.typeB
LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.typeDEquivSo'
LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.typeBEquivSo'
Implementation notes #
Matrices or endomorphisms #
Given a finite type and a commutative ring, the corresponding square matrices are equivalent to the
endomorphisms of the corresponding finite-rank free module as Lie algebras, see lieEquivMatrix'
.
We can thus define the classical Lie algebras as Lie subalgebras either of matrices or of
endomorphisms. We have opted for the former. At the time of writing (August 2020) it is unclear
which approach should be preferred so the choice should be assumed to be somewhat arbitrary.
Diagonal quadratic form or diagonal Cartan subalgebra #
For the algebras of type B
and D
, there are two natural definitions. For example since the
2l × 2l
matrix:
$$ J = \left[\begin{array}{cc} 0_l & 1_l\\ 1_l & 0_l \end{array}\right] $$
defines a symmetric bilinear form equivalent to that defined by the identity matrix I
, we can
define the algebras of type D
to be the Lie subalgebra of skew-adjoint matrices either for J
or
for I
. Both definitions have their advantages (in particular the J
-skew-adjoint matrices define
a Lie algebra for which the diagonal matrices form a Cartan subalgebra) and so we provide both.
We thus also provide equivalences typeDEquivSo'
, soIndefiniteEquiv
which show the two
definitions are equivalent. Similarly for the algebras of type B
.
Tags #
classical lie algebra, special linear, symplectic, orthogonal
The special linear Lie algebra: square matrices of trace zero.
Equations
- LieAlgebra.SpecialLinear.sl n R = { toSubmodule := LinearMap.ker (Matrix.traceLinearMap n R R), lie_mem' := ⋯ }
Instances For
When j ≠ i, the elementary matrices are elements of sl n R, in fact they are part of a natural
basis of sl n R
.
Equations
- LieAlgebra.SpecialLinear.Eb R i j h = ⟨Matrix.stdBasisMatrix i j 1, ⋯⟩
Instances For
The symplectic Lie algebra: skew-adjoint matrices with respect to the canonical skew-symmetric bilinear form.
Equations
Instances For
The definite orthogonal Lie subalgebra: skew-adjoint matrices with respect to the symmetric bilinear form defined by the identity matrix.
Equations
Instances For
The indefinite diagonal matrix with p
1s and q
-1s.
Equations
- LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.indefiniteDiagonal p q R = Matrix.diagonal (Sum.elim (fun (x : p) => 1) fun (x : q) => -1)
Instances For
The indefinite orthogonal Lie subalgebra: skew-adjoint matrices with respect to the symmetric bilinear form defined by the indefinite diagonal matrix.
Equations
Instances For
A matrix for transforming the indefinite diagonal bilinear form into the definite one, provided
the parameter i
is a square root of -1.
Equations
- LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.Pso p q R i = Matrix.diagonal (Sum.elim (fun (x : p) => 1) fun (x : q) => i)
Instances For
There is a constructive inverse of Pso p q R i
.
Equations
- LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.invertiblePso p q R hi = (LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.Pso p q R i).invertibleOfRightInverse (LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.Pso p q R (-i)) ⋯
Instances For
An equivalence between the indefinite and definite orthogonal Lie algebras, over a ring containing a square root of -1.
Equations
- One or more equations did not get rendered due to their size.
Instances For
A matrix defining a canonical even-rank symmetric bilinear form.
It looks like this as a 2l x 2l
matrix of l x l
blocks:
[ 0 1 ] [ 1 0 ]
Equations
- LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.JD l R = Matrix.fromBlocks 0 1 1 0
Instances For
The classical Lie algebra of type D as a Lie subalgebra of matrices associated to the matrix
JD
.
Equations
Instances For
A matrix transforming the bilinear form defined by the matrix JD
into a split-signature
diagonal matrix.
It looks like this as a 2l x 2l
matrix of l x l
blocks:
[ 1 -1 ] [ 1 1 ]
Equations
- LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.PD l R = Matrix.fromBlocks 1 (-1) 1 1
Instances For
The split-signature diagonal matrix.
Equations
Instances For
Equations
- LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.invertiblePD l R = (LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.PD l R).invertibleOfRightInverse (⅟2 • (LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.PD l R).transpose) ⋯
An equivalence between two possible definitions of the classical Lie algebra of type D.
Equations
- One or more equations did not get rendered due to their size.
Instances For
A matrix defining a canonical odd-rank symmetric bilinear form.
It looks like this as a (2l+1) x (2l+1)
matrix of blocks:
[ 2 0 0 ] [ 0 0 1 ] [ 0 1 0 ]
where sizes of the blocks are:
[1 x 1
1 x l
1 x l
]
[l x 1
l x l
l x l
]
[l x 1
l x l
l x l
]
Equations
- LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.JB l R = Matrix.fromBlocks (2 • 1) 0 0 (LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.JD l R)
Instances For
The classical Lie algebra of type B as a Lie subalgebra of matrices associated to the matrix
JB
.
Equations
Instances For
A matrix transforming the bilinear form defined by the matrix JB
into an
almost-split-signature diagonal matrix.
It looks like this as a (2l+1) x (2l+1)
matrix of blocks:
[ 1 0 0 ] [ 0 1 -1 ] [ 0 1 1 ]
where sizes of the blocks are:
[1 x 1
1 x l
1 x l
]
[l x 1
l x l
l x l
]
[l x 1
l x l
l x l
]
Equations
- LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.PB l R = Matrix.fromBlocks 1 0 0 (LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.PD l R)
Instances For
Equations
- LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.invertiblePB l R = (LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.PB l R).invertibleOfRightInverse (Matrix.fromBlocks 1 0 0 ⅟(LieAlgebra.Orthogonal.PD l R)) ⋯
An equivalence between two possible definitions of the classical Lie algebra of type B.
Equations
- One or more equations did not get rendered due to their size.