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Conformal group

In mathematics, the conformal group of an inner product space is the group of transformations from the space to itself that preserve angles. More formally, it is the group of transformations that preserve the conformal geometry of the space.

Several specific conformal groups are particularly important:

  • The conformal orthogonal group. If V is a vector space with a quadratic form Q, then the conformal orthogonal group CO(V, Q) is the group of linear transformations T of V for which there exists a scalar λ such that for all x in V
For a definite quadratic form, the conformal orthogonal group is equal to the orthogonal group times the group of dilations.

All conformal groups are Lie groups.

Angle analysis edit

In Euclidean geometry one can expect the standard circular angle to be characteristic, but in pseudo-Euclidean space there is also the hyperbolic angle. In the study of special relativity the various frames of reference, for varying velocity with respect to a rest frame, are related by rapidity, a hyperbolic angle. One way to describe a Lorentz boost is as a hyperbolic rotation which preserves the differential angle between rapidities. Thus, they are conformal transformations with respect to the hyperbolic angle.

A method to generate an appropriate conformal group is to mimic the steps of the Möbius group as the conformal group of the ordinary complex plane. Pseudo-Euclidean geometry is supported by alternative complex planes where points are split-complex numbers or dual numbers. Just as the Möbius group requires the Riemann sphere, a compact space, for a complete description, so the alternative complex planes require compactification for complete description of conformal mapping. Nevertheless, the conformal group in each case is given by linear fractional transformations on the appropriate plane.[2]

Mathematical definition edit

Given a (Pseudo-)Riemannian manifold   with conformal class  , the conformal group   is the group of conformal maps from   to itself.

More concretely, this is the group of angle-preserving smooth maps from   to itself. However, when the signature of   is not definite, the 'angle' is a hyper-angle which is potentially infinite.

For Pseudo-Euclidean space, the definition is slightly different.[3]   is the conformal group of the manifold arising from conformal compactification of the pseudo-Euclidean space   (sometimes identified with   after a choice of orthonormal basis). This conformal compactification can be defined using  , considered as a submanifold of null points in   by the inclusion   (where   is considered as a single spacetime vector). The conformal compactification is then   with 'antipodal points' identified. This happens by projectivising[check spelling] the space  . If   is the conformal compactification, then  . In particular, this group includes inversion of  , which is not a map from   to itself as it maps the origin to infinity, and maps infinity to the origin.

Conf(p,q) edit

For Pseudo-Euclidean space  , the Lie algebra of the conformal group is given by the basis   with the following commutation relations:[4]

 
and with all other brackets vanishing. Here   is the Minkowski metric.

In fact, this Lie algebra is isomorphic to the Lie algebra of the Lorentz group with one more space and one more time dimension, that is,  . It can be easily checked that the dimensions agree. To exhibit an explicit isomorphism, define

 
It can then be shown that the generators   with   obey the Lorentz algebra relations with metric  .

Conformal group in two spacetime dimensions edit

For two-dimensional Euclidean space or one-plus-one dimensional spacetime, the space of conformal symmetries is much larger. In physics it is sometimes said the conformal group is infinite-dimensional, but this is not quite correct as while the Lie algebra of local symmetries is infinite dimensional, these do not necessarily extend to a Lie group of well-defined global symmetries.

For spacetime dimension  , the local conformal symmetries all extend to global symmetries. For   Euclidean space, after changing to a complex coordinate   local conformal symmetries are described by the infinite dimensional space of vector fields of the form

 
Hence the local conformal symmetries of 2d Euclidean space is the infinite-dimensional Witt algebra.

Conformal group of spacetime edit

In 1908, Harry Bateman and Ebenezer Cunningham, two young researchers at University of Liverpool, broached the idea of a conformal group of spacetime[5][6][7] They argued that the kinematics groups are perforce conformal as they preserve the quadratic form of spacetime and are akin to orthogonal transformations, though with respect to an isotropic quadratic form. The liberties of an electromagnetic field are not confined to kinematic motions, but rather are required only to be locally proportional to a transformation preserving the quadratic form. Harry Bateman's paper in 1910 studied the Jacobian matrix of a transformation that preserves the light cone and showed it had the conformal property (proportional to a form preserver).[8] Bateman and Cunningham showed that this conformal group is "the largest group of transformations leaving Maxwell’s equations structurally invariant."[9] The conformal group of spacetime has been denoted C(1,3)[10]

Isaak Yaglom has contributed to the mathematics of spacetime conformal transformations in split-complex and dual numbers.[11] Since split-complex numbers and dual numbers form rings, not fields, the linear fractional transformations require a projective line over a ring to be bijective mappings.

It has been traditional since the work of Ludwik Silberstein in 1914 to use the ring of biquaternions to represent the Lorentz group. For the spacetime conformal group, it is sufficient to consider linear fractional transformations on the projective line over that ring. Elements of the spacetime conformal group were called spherical wave transformations by Bateman. The particulars of the spacetime quadratic form study have been absorbed into Lie sphere geometry.

Commenting on the continued interest shown in physical science, A. O. Barut wrote in 1985, "One of the prime reasons for the interest in the conformal group is that it is perhaps the most important of the larger groups containing the Poincaré group."[12]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Jayme Vaz, Jr.; Roldão da Rocha, Jr. (2016). An Introduction to Clifford Algebras and Spinors. Oxford University Press. p. 140. ISBN 9780191085789.
  2. ^ Tsurusaburo Takasu (1941) "Gemeinsame Behandlungsweise der elliptischen konformen, hyperbolischen konformen und parabolischen konformen Differentialgeometrie", 2, Proceedings of the Imperial Academy 17(8): 330–8, link from Project Euclid, MR14282
  3. ^ Schottenloher, Martin (2008). A Mathematical Introduction to Conformal Field Theory (PDF). Springer Science & Business Media. p. 23. ISBN 978-3540686255.
  4. ^ Di Francesco, Philippe; Mathieu, Pierre; Sénéchal, David (1997). Conformal field theory. New York: Springer. ISBN 9780387947853.
  5. ^ Bateman, Harry (1908). "The conformal transformations of a space of four dimensions and their applications to geometrical optics" . Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. 7: 70–89. doi:10.1112/plms/s2-7.1.70.
  6. ^ Bateman, Harry (1910). "The Transformation of the Electrodynamical Equations" . Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. 8: 223–264. doi:10.1112/plms/s2-8.1.223.
  7. ^ Cunningham, Ebenezer (1910). "The principle of Relativity in Electrodynamics and an Extension Thereof" . Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. 8: 77–98. doi:10.1112/plms/s2-8.1.77.
  8. ^ Warwick, Andrew (2003). Masters of theory: Cambridge and the rise of mathematical physics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 416–24. ISBN 0-226-87375-7.
  9. ^ Robert Gilmore (1994) [1974] Lie Groups, Lie Algebras and some of their Applications, page 349, Robert E. Krieger Publishing ISBN 0-89464-759-8 MR1275599
  10. ^ Boris Kosyakov (2007) Introduction to the Classical Theory of Particles and Fields, page 216, Springer books via Google Books
  11. ^ Isaak Yaglom (1979) A Simple Non-Euclidean Geometry and its Physical Basis, Springer, ISBN 0387-90332-1, MR520230
  12. ^ A. O. Barut & H.-D. Doebner (1985) Conformal groups and Related Symmetries: Physical Results and Mathematical Background, Lecture Notes in Physics #261 Springer books, see preface for quotation

Further reading edit

  • Kobayashi, S. (1972). Transformation Groups in Differential Geometry. Classics in Mathematics. Springer. ISBN 3-540-58659-8. OCLC 31374337.
  • Sharpe, R.W. (1997), Differential Geometry: Cartan's Generalization of Klein's Erlangen Program, Springer-Verlag, New York, ISBN 0-387-94732-9.
  • Peter Scherk (1960) "Some Concepts of Conformal Geometry", American Mathematical Monthly 67(1): 1−30 doi:10.2307/2308920
  • Martin Schottenloher, The conformal group, chapter 2 of A mathematical introduction to conformal field theory, 2008 (pdf)
  • page on conformal groups

conformal, group, mathematics, conformal, group, inner, product, space, group, transformations, from, space, itself, that, preserve, angles, more, formally, group, transformations, that, preserve, conformal, geometry, space, several, specific, conformal, group. In mathematics the conformal group of an inner product space is the group of transformations from the space to itself that preserve angles More formally it is the group of transformations that preserve the conformal geometry of the space Several specific conformal groups are particularly important The conformal orthogonal group If V is a vector space with a quadratic form Q then the conformal orthogonal group CO V Q is the group of linear transformations T of V for which there exists a scalar l such that for all x in V Q T x l 2 Q x displaystyle Q Tx lambda 2 Q x For a definite quadratic form the conformal orthogonal group is equal to the orthogonal group times the group of dilations The conformal group of the sphere is generated by the inversions in circles This group is also known as the Mobius group In Euclidean space En n gt 2 the conformal group is generated by inversions in hyperspheres In a pseudo Euclidean space Ep q the conformal group is Conf p q O p 1 q 1 Z2 1 All conformal groups are Lie groups Contents 1 Angle analysis 2 Mathematical definition 3 Conf p q 4 Conformal group in two spacetime dimensions 5 Conformal group of spacetime 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingAngle analysis editIn Euclidean geometry one can expect the standard circular angle to be characteristic but in pseudo Euclidean space there is also the hyperbolic angle In the study of special relativity the various frames of reference for varying velocity with respect to a rest frame are related by rapidity a hyperbolic angle One way to describe a Lorentz boost is as a hyperbolic rotation which preserves the differential angle between rapidities Thus they are conformal transformations with respect to the hyperbolic angle A method to generate an appropriate conformal group is to mimic the steps of the Mobius group as the conformal group of the ordinary complex plane Pseudo Euclidean geometry is supported by alternative complex planes where points are split complex numbers or dual numbers Just as the Mobius group requires the Riemann sphere a compact space for a complete description so the alternative complex planes require compactification for complete description of conformal mapping Nevertheless the conformal group in each case is given by linear fractional transformations on the appropriate plane 2 Mathematical definition editGiven a Pseudo Riemannian manifold M displaystyle M nbsp with conformal class g displaystyle g nbsp the conformal group Conf M displaystyle text Conf M nbsp is the group of conformal maps from M displaystyle M nbsp to itself More concretely this is the group of angle preserving smooth maps from M displaystyle M nbsp to itself However when the signature of g displaystyle g nbsp is not definite the angle is a hyper angle which is potentially infinite For Pseudo Euclidean space the definition is slightly different 3 Conf p q displaystyle text Conf p q nbsp is the conformal group of the manifold arising from conformal compactification of the pseudo Euclidean space E p q displaystyle mathbf E p q nbsp sometimes identified with R p q displaystyle mathbb R p q nbsp after a choice of orthonormal basis This conformal compactification can be defined using S p S q displaystyle S p times S q nbsp considered as a submanifold of null points in R p 1 q 1 displaystyle mathbb R p 1 q 1 nbsp by the inclusion x t X x t displaystyle mathbf x mathbf t mapsto X mathbf x mathbf t nbsp where X displaystyle X nbsp is considered as a single spacetime vector The conformal compactification is then S p S q displaystyle S p times S q nbsp with antipodal points identified This happens by projectivising check spelling the space R p 1 q 1 displaystyle mathbb R p 1 q 1 nbsp If N p q displaystyle N p q nbsp is the conformal compactification then Conf p q Conf N p q displaystyle text Conf p q text Conf N p q nbsp In particular this group includes inversion of R p q displaystyle mathbb R p q nbsp which is not a map from R p q displaystyle mathbb R p q nbsp to itself as it maps the origin to infinity and maps infinity to the origin Conf p q editFor Pseudo Euclidean space R p q displaystyle mathbb R p q nbsp the Lie algebra of the conformal group is given by the basis M m n P m K m D displaystyle M mu nu P mu K mu D nbsp with the following commutation relations 4 D K m i K m D P m i P m K m P n 2 i h m n D M m n K m M n r i h m n K r h m r K n P r M m n i h r m P n h r n P m M m n M r s i h n r M m s h m s M n r h m r M n s h n s M m r displaystyle begin aligned amp D K mu iK mu amp D P mu iP mu amp K mu P nu 2i eta mu nu D M mu nu amp K mu M nu rho i eta mu nu K rho eta mu rho K nu amp P rho M mu nu i eta rho mu P nu eta rho nu P mu amp M mu nu M rho sigma i eta nu rho M mu sigma eta mu sigma M nu rho eta mu rho M nu sigma eta nu sigma M mu rho end aligned nbsp and with all other brackets vanishing Here h m n displaystyle eta mu nu nbsp is the Minkowski metric In fact this Lie algebra is isomorphic to the Lie algebra of the Lorentz group with one more space and one more time dimension that is c o n f p q s o p 1 q 1 displaystyle mathfrak conf p q cong mathfrak so p 1 q 1 nbsp It can be easily checked that the dimensions agree To exhibit an explicit isomorphism defineJ m n M m n J 1 m 1 2 P m K m J 0 m 1 2 P m K m J 1 0 D displaystyle begin aligned amp J mu nu M mu nu amp J 1 mu frac 1 2 P mu K mu amp J 0 mu frac 1 2 P mu K mu amp J 1 0 D end aligned nbsp It can then be shown that the generators J a b displaystyle J ab nbsp with a b 1 0 n p q displaystyle a b 1 0 cdots n p q nbsp obey the Lorentz algebra relations with metric h a b diag 1 1 1 1 1 1 displaystyle tilde eta ab operatorname diag 1 1 1 cdots 1 1 cdots 1 nbsp Conformal group in two spacetime dimensions editFor two dimensional Euclidean space or one plus one dimensional spacetime the space of conformal symmetries is much larger In physics it is sometimes said the conformal group is infinite dimensional but this is not quite correct as while the Lie algebra of local symmetries is infinite dimensional these do not necessarily extend to a Lie group of well defined global symmetries For spacetime dimension n gt 2 displaystyle n gt 2 nbsp the local conformal symmetries all extend to global symmetries For n 2 displaystyle n 2 nbsp Euclidean space after changing to a complex coordinate z x i y displaystyle z x iy nbsp local conformal symmetries are described by the infinite dimensional space of vector fields of the forml n z n 1 z displaystyle l n z n 1 partial z nbsp Hence the local conformal symmetries of 2d Euclidean space is the infinite dimensional Witt algebra Conformal group of spacetime editIn 1908 Harry Bateman and Ebenezer Cunningham two young researchers at University of Liverpool broached the idea of a conformal group of spacetime 5 6 7 They argued that the kinematics groups are perforce conformal as they preserve the quadratic form of spacetime and are akin to orthogonal transformations though with respect to an isotropic quadratic form The liberties of an electromagnetic field are not confined to kinematic motions but rather are required only to be locally proportional to a transformation preserving the quadratic form Harry Bateman s paper in 1910 studied the Jacobian matrix of a transformation that preserves the light cone and showed it had the conformal property proportional to a form preserver 8 Bateman and Cunningham showed that this conformal group is the largest group of transformations leaving Maxwell s equations structurally invariant 9 The conformal group of spacetime has been denoted C 1 3 10 Isaak Yaglom has contributed to the mathematics of spacetime conformal transformations in split complex and dual numbers 11 Since split complex numbers and dual numbers form rings not fields the linear fractional transformations require a projective line over a ring to be bijective mappings It has been traditional since the work of Ludwik Silberstein in 1914 to use the ring of biquaternions to represent the Lorentz group For the spacetime conformal group it is sufficient to consider linear fractional transformations on the projective line over that ring Elements of the spacetime conformal group were called spherical wave transformations by Bateman The particulars of the spacetime quadratic form study have been absorbed into Lie sphere geometry Commenting on the continued interest shown in physical science A O Barut wrote in 1985 One of the prime reasons for the interest in the conformal group is that it is perhaps the most important of the larger groups containing the Poincare group 12 See also editConformal map Conformal symmetryReferences edit Jayme Vaz Jr Roldao da Rocha Jr 2016 An Introduction to Clifford Algebras and Spinors Oxford University Press p 140 ISBN 9780191085789 Tsurusaburo Takasu 1941 Gemeinsame Behandlungsweise der elliptischen konformen hyperbolischen konformen und parabolischen konformen Differentialgeometrie 2 Proceedings of the Imperial Academy 17 8 330 8 link from Project Euclid MR14282 Schottenloher Martin 2008 A Mathematical Introduction to Conformal Field Theory PDF Springer Science amp Business Media p 23 ISBN 978 3540686255 Di Francesco Philippe Mathieu Pierre Senechal David 1997 Conformal field theory New York Springer ISBN 9780387947853 Bateman Harry 1908 The conformal transformations of a space of four dimensions and their applications to geometrical optics Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 7 70 89 doi 10 1112 plms s2 7 1 70 Bateman Harry 1910 The Transformation of the Electrodynamical Equations Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 8 223 264 doi 10 1112 plms s2 8 1 223 Cunningham Ebenezer 1910 The principle of Relativity in Electrodynamics and an Extension Thereof Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 8 77 98 doi 10 1112 plms s2 8 1 77 Warwick Andrew 2003 Masters of theory Cambridge and the rise of mathematical physics Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 416 24 ISBN 0 226 87375 7 Robert Gilmore 1994 1974 Lie Groups Lie Algebras and some of their Applications page 349 Robert E Krieger Publishing ISBN 0 89464 759 8 MR1275599 Boris Kosyakov 2007 Introduction to the Classical Theory of Particles and Fields page 216 Springer books via Google Books Isaak Yaglom 1979 A Simple Non Euclidean Geometry and its Physical Basis Springer ISBN 0387 90332 1 MR520230 A O Barut amp H D Doebner 1985 Conformal groups and Related Symmetries Physical Results and Mathematical Background Lecture Notes in Physics 261 Springer books see preface for quotationFurther reading edit nbsp The Wikibook Associative Composition Algebra has a page on the topic of Conformal spacetime transformations Kobayashi S 1972 Transformation Groups in Differential Geometry Classics in Mathematics Springer ISBN 3 540 58659 8 OCLC 31374337 Sharpe R W 1997 Differential Geometry Cartan s Generalization of Klein s Erlangen Program Springer Verlag New York ISBN 0 387 94732 9 Peter Scherk 1960 Some Concepts of Conformal Geometry American Mathematical Monthly 67 1 1 30 doi 10 2307 2308920 Martin Schottenloher The conformal group chapter 2 of A mathematical introduction to conformal field theory 2008 pdf page on conformal groups Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Conformal group amp oldid 1182728685 Conformal group of spacetime, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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