fbpx
Wikipedia

Lie algebra extension

In the theory of Lie groups, Lie algebras and their representation theory, a Lie algebra extension e is an enlargement of a given Lie algebra g by another Lie algebra h. Extensions arise in several ways. There is the trivial extension obtained by taking a direct sum of two Lie algebras. Other types are the split extension and the central extension. Extensions may arise naturally, for instance, when forming a Lie algebra from projective group representations. Such a Lie algebra will contain central charges.

Starting with a polynomial loop algebra over finite-dimensional simple Lie algebra and performing two extensions, a central extension and an extension by a derivation, one obtains a Lie algebra which is isomorphic with an untwisted affine Kac–Moody algebra. Using the centrally extended loop algebra one may construct a current algebra in two spacetime dimensions. The Virasoro algebra is the universal central extension of the Witt algebra.[1]

Central extensions are needed in physics, because the symmetry group of a quantized system usually is a central extension of the classical symmetry group, and in the same way the corresponding symmetry Lie algebra of the quantum system is, in general, a central extension of the classical symmetry algebra.[2] Kac–Moody algebras have been conjectured to be symmetry groups of a unified superstring theory.[3] The centrally extended Lie algebras play a dominant role in quantum field theory, particularly in conformal field theory, string theory and in M-theory.[4][5]

A large portion towards the end is devoted to background material for applications of Lie algebra extensions, both in mathematics and in physics, in areas where they are actually useful. A parenthetical link, (background material), is provided where it might be beneficial.

History edit

Due to the Lie correspondence, the theory, and consequently the history of Lie algebra extensions, is tightly linked to the theory and history of group extensions. A systematic study of group extensions was performed by the Austrian mathematician Otto Schreier in 1923 in his PhD thesis and later published.[nb 1][6][7] The problem posed for his thesis by Otto Hölder was "given two groups G and H, find all groups E having a normal subgroup N isomorphic to G such that the factor group E/N is isomorphic to H".

Lie algebra extensions are most interesting and useful for infinite-dimensional Lie algebras. In 1967, Victor Kac and Robert Moody independently generalized the notion of classical Lie algebras, resulting in a new theory of infinite-dimensional Lie algebras, now called Kac–Moody algebras.[8][9] They generalize the finite-dimensional simple Lie algebras and can often concretely be constructed as extensions.[10]

Notation and proofs edit

Notational abuse to be found below includes eX for the exponential map exp given an argument, writing g for the element (g, eH) in a direct product G × H (eH is the identity in H), and analogously for Lie algebra direct sums (where also g + h and (g, h) are used interchangeably). Likewise for semidirect products and semidirect sums. Canonical injections (both for groups and Lie algebras) are used for implicit identifications. Furthermore, if G, H, ..., are groups, then the default names for elements of G, H, ..., are g, h, ..., and their Lie algebras are g, h, ... . The default names for elements of g, h, ..., are G, H, ... (just like for the groups!), partly to save scarce alphabetical resources but mostly to have a uniform notation.

Lie algebras that are ingredients in an extension will, without comment, be taken to be over the same field.

The summation convention applies, including sometimes when the indices involved are both upstairs or both downstairs.

Caveat: Not all proofs and proof outlines below have universal validity. The main reason is that the Lie algebras are often infinite-dimensional, and then there may or may not be a Lie group corresponding to the Lie algebra. Moreover, even if such a group exists, it may not have the "usual" properties, e.g. the exponential map might not exist, and if it does, it might not have all the "usual" properties. In such cases, it is questionable whether the group should be endowed with the "Lie" qualifier. The literature is not uniform. For the explicit examples, the relevant structures are supposedly in place.

Definition edit

Lie algebra extensions are formalized in terms of short exact sequences.[1] A short exact sequence is an exact sequence of length three,

 

 

 

 

 

(1)

such that i is a monomorphism, s is an epimorphism, and ker s = im i. From these properties of exact sequences, it follows that (the image of) h is an ideal in e. Moreover,

 

but it is not necessarily the case that g is isomorphic to a subalgebra of e. This construction mirrors the analogous constructions in the closely related concept of group extensions.

If the situation in (1) prevails, non-trivially and for Lie algebras over the same field, then one says that e is an extension of g by h.

Properties edit

The defining property may be reformulated. The Lie algebra e is an extension of g by h if

 

 

 

 

 

(2)

is exact. Here the zeros on the ends represent the zero Lie algebra (containing only the zero vector 0) and the maps are the obvious ones; ί maps 0 to 0 and σ maps all elements of g to 0. With this definition, it follows automatically that i is a monomorphism and s is an epimorphism.

An extension of g by h is not necessarily unique. Let e, e' denote two extensions and let the primes below have the obvious interpretation. Then, if there exists a Lie algebra isomorphism f:ee' such that

 
 

then the extensions e and e' are said to be equivalent extensions. Equivalence of extensions is an equivalence relation.

Extension types edit

Trivial edit

A Lie algebra extension

 

is trivial if there is a subspace i such that t = i ⊕ ker s and i is an ideal in t.[1]

Split edit

A Lie algebra extension

 

is split if there is a subspace u such that s = u ⊕ ker s as a vector space and u is a subalgebra in s.

An ideal is a subalgebra, but a subalgebra is not necessarily an ideal. A trivial extension is thus a split extension.

Central edit

Central extensions of a Lie algebra g by an abelian Lie algebra e can be obtained with the help of a so-called (nontrivial) 2-cocycle (background) on g. Non-trivial 2-cocycles occur in the context of projective representations (background) of Lie groups. This is alluded to further down.

A Lie algebra extension

 

is a central extension if ker s is contained in the center Z(e) of e.

Properties

  • Since the center commutes with everything, h ≅ im i = ker s in this case is abelian.
  • Given a central extension e of g, one may construct a 2-cocycle on g. Suppose e is a central extension of g by h. Let l be a linear map from g to e with the property that sl = Idg, i.e. l is a section of s. Use this section to define ε: g × ge by
 
 

The map ε satisfies

 

To see this, use the definition of ε on the left hand side, then use the linearity of l. Use Jacobi identity on g to get rid of half of the six terms. Use the definition of ε again on terms l([Gi,Gj]) sitting inside three Lie brackets, bilinearity of Lie brackets, and the Jacobi identity on e, and then finally use on the three remaining terms that Im ε ⊂ ker s and that ker sZ(e) so that ε(Gi, Gj) brackets to zero with everything. It then follows that φ = i−1 ∘ ε satisfies the corresponding relation, and if h in addition is one-dimensional, then φ is a 2-cocycle on g (via a trivial correspondence of h with the underlying field).

A central extension

 

is universal if for every other central extension

 

there exist unique homomorphisms   and   such that the diagram

 

commutes, i.e. i' ∘ Ψ = Φ ∘ i and s' ∘ Φ = s. By universality, it is easy to conclude that such universal central extensions are unique up to isomorphism.

Construction edit

By direct sum edit

Let  ,   be Lie algebras over the same field  . Define

 

and define addition pointwise on  . Scalar multiplication is defined by

 

With these definitions,   is a vector space over  . With the Lie bracket:

 

 

 

 

 

(3)

  is a Lie algebra. Define further

 

It is clear that (1) holds as an exact sequence. This extension of   by   is called a trivial extension. It is, of course, nothing else than the Lie algebra direct sum. By symmetry of definitions,   is an extension of   by   as well, but  . It is clear from (3) that the subalgebra   is an ideal (Lie algebra). This property of the direct sum of Lie algebras is promoted to the definition of a trivial extension.

By semidirect sum edit

Inspired by the construction of a semidirect product (background) of groups using a homomorphism G → Aut(H), one can make the corresponding construct for Lie algebras.

If ψ:g → Der h is a Lie algebra homomorphism, then define a Lie bracket on   by

 

 

 

 

 

(7)

With this Lie bracket, the Lie algebra so obtained is denoted e= hS g and is called the semidirect sum of h and g.

By inspection of (7) one sees that 0 ⊕ g is a subalgebra of e and h ⊕ 0 is an ideal in e. Define i:he by HH ⊕ 0 and s:eg by HGG, Hh, Gg. It is clear that ker s = im i. Thus e is a Lie algebra extension of g by h.

As with the trivial extension, this property generalizes to the definition of a split extension.

Example
Let G be the Lorentz group O(3, 1) and let T denote the translation group in 4 dimensions, isomorphic to ( , +), and consider the multiplication rule of the Poincaré group P

 

(where T and O(3, 1) are identified with their images in P). From it follows immediately that, in the Poincaré group, (0, Λ)(a, I)(0, Λ−1) = (Λ a, I) ∈ T ⊂ P. Thus every Lorentz transformation Λ corresponds to an automorphism ΦΛ of T with inverse ΦΛ−1 and Φ is clearly a homomorphism. Now define

 

endowed with multiplication given by (4). Unwinding the definitions one finds that the multiplication is the same as the multiplication one started with and it follows that P = P. From (5') follows that ΨΛ = AdΛ and then from (6') it follows that ψλ = adλ. λo(3, 1).

By derivation edit

Let δ be a derivation (background) of h and denote by g the one-dimensional Lie algebra spanned by δ. Define the Lie bracket on e = gh by[nb 2][11]

 

It is obvious from the definition of the bracket that h is and ideal in e in and that g is a subalgebra of e. Furthermore, g is complementary to h in e. Let i:he be given by H ↦ (0, H) and s:eg by (G, H) ↦ G. It is clear that im i = ker s. Thus e is a split extension of g by h. Such an extension is called extension by a derivation.

If ψ: g → der h is defined by ψ(μδ)(H) = μδ(H), then ψ is a Lie algebra homomorphism into der h. Hence this construction is a special case of a semidirect sum, for when starting from ψ and using the construction in the preceding section, the same Lie brackets result.

By 2-cocycle edit

If ε is a 2-cocycle (background) on a Lie algebra g and h is any one-dimensional vector space, let e = hg (vector space direct sum) and define a Lie bracket on e by

 

Here H is an arbitrary but fixed element of h. Antisymmetry follows from antisymmetry of the Lie bracket on g and antisymmetry of the 2-cocycle. The Jacobi identity follows from the corresponding properties of g and of ε. Thus e is a Lie algebra. Put G1 = 0 and it follows that μHZ(e). Also, it follows with i: μH ↦ (μH, 0) and s: (μH, G) ↦ G that Im i = ker s = {(μH, 0):μF} ⊂ Z(e). Hence e is a central extension of g by h. It is called extension by a 2-cocycle.

Theorems edit

Below follows some results regarding central extensions and 2-cocycles.[12]

Theorem[1]
Let φ1 and φ2 be cohomologous 2-cocycles on a Lie algebra g and let e1 and e2 be respectively the central extensions constructed with these 2-cocycles. Then the central extensions e1 and e2 are equivalent extensions.
Proof
By definition, φ2 = φ1 + δf. Define

 

It follows from the definitions that ψ is a Lie algebra isomorphism and (2) holds.

Corollary
A cohomology class [Φ] ∈ H2(g, F) defines a central extension of g which is unique up to isomorphism.

The trivial 2-cocycle gives the trivial extension, and since a 2-coboundary is cohomologous with the trivial 2-cocycle, one has
Corollary
A central extension defined by a coboundary is equivalent with a trivial central extension.

Theorem
A finite-dimensional simple Lie algebra has only trivial central extensions.
Proof
Since every central extension comes from a 2-cocycle φ, it suffices to show that every 2-cocycle is a coboundary. Suppose φ is a 2-cocycle on g. The task is to use this 2-cocycle to manufacture a 1-cochain f such that φ = δf.

The first step is to, for each G1g, use φ to define a linear map ρG1:gF by  . These linear maps are elements of g. Let ν:gg be the vector space isomorphism associated to the nondegenerate Killing form K, and define a linear map d:gg by  . This turns out to be a derivation (for a proof, see below). Since, for semisimple Lie algebras, all derivations are inner, one has d = adGd for some Gdg. Then

 

Let f be the 1-cochain defined by

 

Then

 

showing that φ is a coboundary.

Proof of d being a derivation

To verify that d actually is a derivation, first note that it is linear since ν is, then compute

 

By appeal to the non-degeneracy of K, the left arguments of K are equal on the far left and far right.

The observation that one can define a derivation d, given a symmetric non-degenerate associative form K and a 2-cocycle φ, by

 

or using the symmetry of K and the antisymmetry of φ,

 

leads to a corollary.

Corollary
Let L:'g × g: → F be a non-degenerate symmetric associative bilinear form and let d be a derivation satisfying

 

then φ defined by

 

is a 2-cocycle.

Proof The condition on d ensures the antisymmetry of φ. The Jacobi identity for 2-cocycles follows starting with

 

using symmetry of the form, the antisymmetry of the bracket, and once again the definition of φ in terms of L.

If g is the Lie algebra of a Lie group G and e is a central extension of g, one may ask whether there is a Lie group E with Lie algebra e. The answer is, by Lie's third theorem affirmative. But is there a central extension E of G with Lie algebra e? The answer to this question requires some machinery, and can be found in Tuynman & Wiegerinck (1987, Theorem 5.4).

Applications edit

The "negative" result of the preceding theorem indicates that one must, at least for semisimple Lie algebras, go to infinite-dimensional Lie algebras to find useful applications of central extensions. There are indeed such. Here will be presented affine Kac–Moody algebras and Virasoro algebras. These are extensions of polynomial loop-algebras and the Witt algebra respectively.

Polynomial loop-algebra edit

Let g be a polynomial loop algebra (background),

 

where g0 is a complex finite-dimensional simple Lie algebra. The goal is to find a central extension of this algebra. Two of the theorems apply. On the one hand, if there is a 2-cocycle on g, then a central extension may be defined. On the other hand, if this 2-cocycle is acting on the g0 part (only), then the resulting extension is trivial. Moreover, derivations acting on g0 (only) cannot be used for definition of a 2-cocycle either because these derivations are all inner and the same problem results. One therefore looks for derivations on C[λ, λ−1]. One such set of derivations is

 

In order to manufacture a non-degenerate bilinear associative antisymmetric form L on g, attention is focused first on restrictions on the arguments, with m, n fixed. It is a theorem that every form satisfying the requirements is a multiple of the Killing form K on g0.[13] This requires

 

Symmetry of K implies

 

and associativity yields

 

With m = 0 one sees that γk,n = γ0,k+n. This last condition implies the former. Using this fact, define f(n) = γ0,n. The defining equation then becomes

 

For every i  the definition

 

does define a symmetric associative bilinear form

 

These span a vector space of forms which have the right properties.

Returning to the derivations at hand and the condition

 

one sees, using the definitions, that

 

or, with n = l + m,

 

This (and the antisymmetry condition) holds if k = i, in particular it holds when k = i = 0.

Thus choose L = L0 and d = d0. With these choices, the premises in the corollary are satisfied. The 2-cocycle φ defined by

 

is finally employed to define a central extension of g,

 

with Lie bracket

 

For basis elements, suitably normalized and with antisymmetric structure constants, one has

 

This is a universal central extension of the polynomial loop algebra.[14]

A note on terminology

In physics terminology, the algebra of above might pass for a Kac–Moody algebra, whilst it will probably not in mathematics terminology. An additional dimension, an extension by a derivation is required for this. Nonetheless, if, in a physical application, the eigenvalues of g0 or its representative are interpreted as (ordinary) quantum numbers, the additional superscript on the generators is referred to as the level. It is an additional quantum number. An additional operator whose eigenvalues are precisely the levels is introduced further below.

Current algebra edit

 
Murray Gell-Mann, 1969 Nobel Laureate in physics, initiated the field of current algebra in the 1960s. It exploits known local symmetries even without knowledge of the underlying dynamics to extract predictions, e.g. the Adler–Weisberger sum rule.

As an application of a central extension of polynomial loop algebra, a current algebra of a quantum field theory is considered (background). Suppose one has a current algebra, with the interesting commutator being

 

 

 

 

 

(CA10)

with a Schwinger term. To construct this algebra mathematically, let g be the centrally extended polynomial loop algebra of the previous section with

 

as one of the commutation relations, or, with a switch of notation (lm, mn, ia, jb, λmGaTma) with a factor of i under the physics convention,[nb 3]

 

Define using elements of g,

 

One notes that

 

so that it is defined on a circle. Now compute the commutator,

 

For simplicity, switch coordinates so that y → 0, xxyz and use the commutation relations,

 

Now employ the Poisson summation formula,

 

for z in the interval (0, L) and differentiate it to yield

 

and finally

 

or

 

since the delta functions arguments only ensure that the arguments of the left and right arguments of the commutator are equal (formally δ(z) = δ(z − 0) ↦ δ((xy) − 0) = δ(xy)).

By comparison with CA10, this is a current algebra in two spacetime dimensions, including a Schwinger term, with the space dimension curled up into a circle. In the classical setting of quantum field theory, this is perhaps of little use, but with the advent of string theory where fields live on world sheets of strings, and spatial dimensions are curled up, there may be relevant applications.

Kac–Moody algebra edit

 
Robert Moody (left), Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, is a Canadian mathematician at University of Alberta. He is co-discoverer of the Kac–Moody algebra together with Victor Kac, Fellow of the American Mathematical Society, a Russian mathematician working at MIT.

The derivation d0 used in the construction of the 2-cocycle φ in the previous section can be extended to a derivation D on the centrally extended polynomial loop algebra, here denoted by g in order to realize a Kac–Moody algebra[15][16] (background). Simply set

 

Next, define as a vector space

 

The Lie bracket on e is, according to the standard construction with a derivation, given on a basis by

 

For convenience, define

 

In addition, assume the basis on the underlying finite-dimensional simple Lie algebra has been chosen so that the structure coefficients are antisymmetric in all indices and that the basis is appropriately normalized. Then one immediately through the definitions verifies the following commutation relations.

 

These are precisely the short-hand description of an untwisted affine Kac–Moody algebra. To recapitulate, begin with a finite-dimensional simple Lie algebra. Define a space of formal Laurent polynomials with coefficients in the finite-dimensional simple Lie algebra. With the support of a symmetric non-degenerate alternating bilinear form and a derivation, a 2-cocycle is defined, subsequently used in the standard prescription for a central extension by a 2-cocycle. Extend the derivation to this new space, use the standard prescription for a split extension by a derivation and an untwisted affine Kac–Moody algebra obtains.

Virasoro algebra edit

The purpose is to construct the Virasoro algebra (named after Miguel Angel Virasoro)[nb 4] as a central extension by a 2-cocycle φ of the Witt algebra W (background). The Jacobi identity for 2-cocycles yields

 

 

 

 

 

(V10)

Letting   and using antisymmetry of η one obtains

 

In the extension, the commutation relations for the element d0 are

 

It is desirable to get rid of the central charge on the right hand side. To do this define

 

Then, using f as a 1-cochain,

 

so with this 2-cocycle, equivalent to the previous one, one has[nb 5]

 

With this new 2-cocycle (skip the prime) the condition becomes

 

and thus

 

where the last condition is due to the antisymmetry of the Lie bracket. With this, and with l + m + p = 0 (cutting out a "plane" in  ), (V10) yields

 

that with p = 1 (cutting out a "line" in  ) becomes

 

This is a difference equation generally solved by

 

The commutator in the extension on elements of W is then

 

With β = 0 it is possible to change basis (or modify the 2-cocycle by a 2-coboundary) so that

 

with the central charge absent altogether, and the extension is hence trivial. (This was not (generally) the case with the previous modification, where only d0 obtained the original relations.) With β ≠ 0 the following change of basis,

 

the commutation relations take the form

 

showing that the part linear in m is trivial. It also shows that H2(W,  ) is one-dimensional (corresponding to the choice of β). The conventional choice is to take α = −β = 112 and still retaining freedom by absorbing an arbitrary factor in the arbitrary object C. The Virasoro algebra V is then

 

with commutation relations

 

Bosonic open strings edit

The relativistic classical open string (background) is subject to quantization. This roughly amounts to taking the position and the momentum of the string and promoting them to operators on the space of states of open strings. Since strings are extended objects, this results in a continuum of operators depending on the parameter σ. The following commutation relations are postulated in the Heisenberg picture.[17]

 

All other commutators vanish.

Because of the continuum of operators, and because of the delta functions, it is desirable to express these relations instead in terms of the quantized versions of the Virasoro modes, the Virasoro operators. These are calculated to satisfy

 

They are interpreted as creation and annihilation operators acting on Hilbert space, increasing or decreasing the quantum of their respective modes. If the index is negative, the operator is a creation operator, otherwise it is an annihilation operator. (If it is zero, it is proportional to the total momentum operator.) In view of the fact that the light cone plus and minus modes were expressed in terms of the transverse Virasoro modes, one must consider the commutation relations between the Virasoro operators. These were classically defined (then modes) as

 

Since, in the quantized theory, the alphas are operators, the ordering of the factors matter. In view of the commutation relation between the mode operators, it will only matter for the operator L0 (for which m + n = 0). L0 is chosen normal ordered,

 

where c is a possible ordering constant. One obtains after a somewhat lengthy calculation[18] the relations

 

If one would allow for m + n = 0 above, then one has precisely the commutation relations of the Witt algebra. Instead one has

 

upon identification of the generic central term as (D − 2) times the identity operator, this is the Virasoro algebra, the universal central extension of the Witt algebra.

The operator L0 enters the theory as the Hamiltonian, modulo an additive constant. Moreover, the Virasoro operators enter into the definition of the Lorentz generators of the theory. It is perhaps the most important algebra in string theory.[19] The consistency of the Lorentz generators, by the way, fixes the spacetime dimensionality to 26. While this theory presented here (for relative simplicity of exposition) is unphysical, or at the very least incomplete (it has, for instance, no fermions) the Virasoro algebra arises in the same way in the more viable superstring theory and M-theory.

Group extension edit

A projective representation Π(G) of a Lie group G (background) can be used to define a so-called group extension Gex.

In quantum mechanics, Wigner's theorem asserts that if G is a symmetry group, then it will be represented projectively on Hilbert space by unitary or antiunitary operators. This is often dealt with by passing to the universal covering group of G and take it as the symmetry group. This works nicely for the rotation group SO(3) and the Lorentz group O(3, 1), but it does not work when the symmetry group is the Galilean group. In this case one has to pass to its central extension, the Bargmann group,[20] which is the symmetry group of the Schrödinger equation. Likewise, if G =  , the group of translations in position and momentum space, one has to pass to its central extension, the Heisenberg group.[21]

Let ω be the 2-cocycle on G induced by Π. Define[nb 6]

 

as a set and let the multiplication be defined by

 

Associativity holds since ω is a 2-cocycle on G. One has for the unit element

 

and for the inverse

 

The set ( , e) is an abelian subgroup of Gex. This means that Gex is not semisimple. The center of G, Z(G) = {zG|zg = gzgG} includes this subgroup. The center may be larger.

At the level of Lie algebras it can be shown that the Lie algebra gex of Gex is given by

 

as a vector space and endowed with the Lie bracket

 

Here η is a 2-cocycle on g. This 2-cocycle can be obtained from ω albeit in a highly nontrivial way.[nb 7]

Now by using the projective representation Π one may define a map Πex by

 

It has the properties

 

so Πex(Gex) is a bona fide representation of Gex.

In the context of Wigner's theorem, the situation may be depicted as such (replace   by U(1)); let SH denote the unit sphere in Hilbert space H, and let (·,·) be its inner product. Let PH denote ray space and [·,·] the ray product. Let moreover a wiggly arrow denote a group action. Then the diagram

 

commutes, i.e.

 

Moreover, in the same way that G is a symmetry of PH preserving [·,·], Gex is a symmetry of SH preserving (·,·). The fibers of π2 are all circles. These circles are left invariant under the action of U(1). The action of U(1) on these fibers is transitive with no fixed point. The conclusion is that SH is a principal fiber bundle over PH with structure group U(1).[21]

Background material edit

In order to adequately discuss extensions, structure that goes beyond the defining properties of a Lie algebra is needed. Rudimentary facts about these are collected here for quick reference.

Derivations edit

A derivation δ on a Lie algebra g is a map

 

such that the Leibniz rule

 

holds. The set of derivations on a Lie algebra g is denoted der g. It is itself a Lie algebra under the Lie bracket

 

It is the Lie algebra of the group Aut g of automorphisms of g.[22] One has to show

 

If the rhs holds, differentiate and set t = 0 implying that the lhs holds. If the lhs holds (A), write the rhs as

 

and differentiate the rhs of this expression. It is, using (A), identically zero. Hence the rhs of this expression is independent of t and equals its value for t = 0, which is the lhs of this expression.

If Gg, then adG, acting by adG1(G2) = [G1, G2], is a derivation. The set adG: Gg is the set of inner derivations on g. For finite-dimensional simple Lie algebras all derivations are inner derivations.[23]

Semidirect product (groups) edit

Consider two Lie groups G and H and Aut H, the automorphism group of H. The latter is the group of isomorphisms of H. If there is a Lie group homomorphism Φ:G → Aut H, then for each gG there is a Φ(g) ≡ Φg ∈ Aut H with the property Φgg' = ΦgΦg', g,g' ∈ G. Denote with E the set H × G and define multiplication by

 

 

 

 

 

(4)

Then E is a group with identity (eH, eG) and the inverse is given by (h, g)−1 = (Φg−1(h−1), g−1). Using the expression for the inverse and equation (4) it is seen that H is normal in E. Denote the group with this semidirect product as E = HS G.

Conversely, if E = HS G is a given semidirect product expression of the group E, then by definition H is normal in E and Cg ∈ Aut H for each gG where Cg (h) ≡ ghg−1 and the map Φ:gCg is a homomorphism.

Now make use of the Lie correspondence. The maps Φg:HH, gG each induce, at the level of Lie algebras, a map Ψg:hh. This map is computed by

 

 

 

 

 

(5)

For instance, if G and H are both subgroups of a larger group E and Φg = ghg−1, then

 

 

 

 

 

(5')

and one recognizes Ψ as the adjoint action Ad of E on h restricted to G. Now Ψ:G → Aut h [ ⊂ GL(h) if h is finite-dimensional] is a homomorphism,[nb 8] and appealing once more to the Lie correspondence, there is a unique Lie algebra homomorphism ψ:g → Lie(Aut h) = Der h ⊂ gl(h).[nb 9] This map is (formally) given by

 

 

 

 

 

(6)

for example, if Ψ = Ad, then (formally)

 

 

 

 

 

(6')

where a relationship between Ad and the adjoint action ad rigorously proved in here is used.

Lie algebra
The Lie algebra is, as a vector space, e = hg. This is clear since GH generates E and GH = (eH, eG). The Lie bracket is given by[24]

 
Computation of Lie bracket

To compute the Lie bracket, begin with a surface in E parametrized by s and t. Elements of h in e = hg are decorated with a bar, and likewise for g.

 

One has

 

and

 

by 5 and thus

 

Now differentiate this relationship with respect to t and evaluate at t = 0$:

 

and

 

by 6 and thus

 

Cohomology edit

For the present purposes, consideration of a limited portion of the theory Lie algebra cohomology suffices. The definitions are not the most general possible, or even the most common ones, but the objects they refer to are authentic instances of more the general definitions.

2-cocycles
The objects of primary interest are the 2-cocycles on g, defined as bilinear alternating functions,

 

that are alternating,

 

and having a property resembling the Jacobi identity called the Jacobi identity for 2-cycles,

 

The set of all 2-cocycles on g is denoted Z2(g, F).

2-cocycles from 1-cochains
Some 2-cocycles can be obtained from 1-cochains. A 1-cochain on g is simply a linear map,

 

The set of all such maps is denoted C1(g, F) and, of course (in at least the finite-dimensional case) C1(g, F) ≅ g*. Using a 1-cochain f, a 2-cocycle δf may be defined by

 

The alternating property is immediate and the Jacobi identity for 2-cocycles is (as usual) shown by writing it out and using the definition and properties of the ingredients (here the Jacobi identity on g and the linearity of f). The linear map δ:C1(g, F) → Z2(g, F) is called the coboundary operator (here restricted to C1(g, F)).

The second cohomology group
Denote the image of C1(g, F) of δ by B2(g, F). The quotient

 

is called the second cohomology group of g. Elements of H2(g, F) are equivalence classes of 2-cocycles and two 2-cocycles φ1 and φ2 are called equivalent cocycles if they differ by a 2-coboundary, i.e. if φ1 = φ2 + δf for some fC1(g, F). Equivalent 2-cocycles are called cohomologous. The equivalence class of φZ2(g, F) is denoted [φ] ∈ H2.

These notions generalize in several directions. For this, see the main articles.

Structure constants edit

Let B be a Hamel basis for g. Then each Gg has a unique expression as

 

for some indexing set A of suitable size. In this expansion, only finitely many cα are nonzero. In the sequel it is (for simplicity) assumed that the basis is countable, and Latin letters are used for the indices and the indexing set can be taken to be   = 1, 2, .... One immediately has

 

for the basis elements, where the summation symbol has been rationalized away, the summation convention applies. The placement of the indices in the structure constants (up or down) is immaterial. The following theorem is useful:

Theorem:There is a basis such that the structure constants are antisymmetric in all indices if and only if the Lie algebra is a direct sum of simple compact Lie algebras and u(1) Lie algebras. This is the case if and only if there is a real positive definite metric g on g satisfying the invariance condition

 

in any basis. This last condition is necessary on physical grounds for non-Abelian gauge theories in quantum field theory. Thus one can produce an infinite list of possible gauge theories using the Cartan catalog of simple Lie algebras on their compact form (i.e., sl(n,  ) → su(n), etc. One such gauge theory is the U(1) × SU(2) × SU(3) gauge theory of the standard model with Lie algebra u(1) ⊕ su(2) ⊕ su(3).[25]

Killing form edit

The Killing form is a symmetric bilinear form on g defined by

 

Here adG is viewed as a matrix operating on the vector space g. The key fact needed is that if g is semisimple, then, by Cartan's criterion, K is non-degenerate. In such a case K may be used to identify g and g. If λg, then there is a ν(λ) = Gλg such that

 

This resembles the Riesz representation theorem and the proof is virtually the same. The Killing form has the property

 

which is referred to as associativity. By defining gαβ = K[Gα,Gβ]

algebra, extension, theory, groups, algebras, their, representation, theory, enlargement, given, algebra, another, algebra, extensions, arise, several, ways, there, trivial, extension, obtained, taking, direct, algebras, other, types, split, extension, central. In the theory of Lie groups Lie algebras and their representation theory a Lie algebra extension e is an enlargement of a given Lie algebra g by another Lie algebra h Extensions arise in several ways There is the trivial extension obtained by taking a direct sum of two Lie algebras Other types are the split extension and the central extension Extensions may arise naturally for instance when forming a Lie algebra from projective group representations Such a Lie algebra will contain central charges Starting with a polynomial loop algebra over finite dimensional simple Lie algebra and performing two extensions a central extension and an extension by a derivation one obtains a Lie algebra which is isomorphic with an untwisted affine Kac Moody algebra Using the centrally extended loop algebra one may construct a current algebra in two spacetime dimensions The Virasoro algebra is the universal central extension of the Witt algebra 1 Central extensions are needed in physics because the symmetry group of a quantized system usually is a central extension of the classical symmetry group and in the same way the corresponding symmetry Lie algebra of the quantum system is in general a central extension of the classical symmetry algebra 2 Kac Moody algebras have been conjectured to be symmetry groups of a unified superstring theory 3 The centrally extended Lie algebras play a dominant role in quantum field theory particularly in conformal field theory string theory and in M theory 4 5 A large portion towards the end is devoted to background material for applications of Lie algebra extensions both in mathematics and in physics in areas where they are actually useful A parenthetical link background material is provided where it might be beneficial Contents 1 History 2 Notation and proofs 3 Definition 4 Properties 5 Extension types 5 1 Trivial 5 2 Split 5 3 Central 6 Construction 6 1 By direct sum 6 2 By semidirect sum 6 3 By derivation 6 4 By 2 cocycle 7 Theorems 8 Applications 8 1 Polynomial loop algebra 8 2 Current algebra 8 3 Kac Moody algebra 8 4 Virasoro algebra 8 4 1 Bosonic open strings 8 5 Group extension 9 Background material 9 1 Derivations 9 2 Semidirect product groups 9 3 Cohomology 9 4 Structure constants 9 5 Killing form 9 6 Loop algebra 9 7 Current algebra physics 9 8 Affine Kac Moody algebra 9 9 Witt algebra 9 10 Projective representation 9 11 Relativistic classical string theory 10 See also 11 Remarks 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Books 13 2 Journals 13 3 WebHistory editDue to the Lie correspondence the theory and consequently the history of Lie algebra extensions is tightly linked to the theory and history of group extensions A systematic study of group extensions was performed by the Austrian mathematician Otto Schreier in 1923 in his PhD thesis and later published nb 1 6 7 The problem posed for his thesis by Otto Holder was given two groups G and H find all groups E having a normal subgroup N isomorphic to G such that the factor group E N is isomorphic to H Lie algebra extensions are most interesting and useful for infinite dimensional Lie algebras In 1967 Victor Kac and Robert Moody independently generalized the notion of classical Lie algebras resulting in a new theory of infinite dimensional Lie algebras now called Kac Moody algebras 8 9 They generalize the finite dimensional simple Lie algebras and can often concretely be constructed as extensions 10 Notation and proofs editNotational abuse to be found below includes eX for the exponential map exp given an argument writing g for the element g eH in a direct product G H eH is the identity in H and analogously for Lie algebra direct sums where also g h and g h are used interchangeably Likewise for semidirect products and semidirect sums Canonical injections both for groups and Lie algebras are used for implicit identifications Furthermore if G H are groups then the default names for elements of G H are g h and their Lie algebras are g h The default names for elements of g h are G H just like for the groups partly to save scarce alphabetical resources but mostly to have a uniform notation Lie algebras that are ingredients in an extension will without comment be taken to be over the same field The summation convention applies including sometimes when the indices involved are both upstairs or both downstairs Caveat Not all proofs and proof outlines below have universal validity The main reason is that the Lie algebras are often infinite dimensional and then there may or may not be a Lie group corresponding to the Lie algebra Moreover even if such a group exists it may not have the usual properties e g the exponential map might not exist and if it does it might not have all the usual properties In such cases it is questionable whether the group should be endowed with the Lie qualifier The literature is not uniform For the explicit examples the relevant structures are supposedly in place Definition editLie algebra extensions are formalized in terms of short exact sequences 1 A short exact sequence is an exact sequence of length three h i e s g displaystyle mathfrak h overset i hookrightarrow mathfrak e overset s twoheadrightarrow mathfrak g nbsp 1 such that i is a monomorphism s is an epimorphism and ker s im i From these properties of exact sequences it follows that the image of h is an ideal in e Moreover g e Im i e Ker s displaystyle mathfrak g cong mathfrak e operatorname Im i mathfrak e operatorname Ker s nbsp but it is not necessarily the case that g is isomorphic to a subalgebra of e This construction mirrors the analogous constructions in the closely related concept of group extensions If the situation in 1 prevails non trivially and for Lie algebras over the same field then one says that e is an extension of g by h Properties editThe defining property may be reformulated The Lie algebra e is an extension of g by h if 0 i h i e s g s 0 displaystyle 0 overset iota hookrightarrow mathfrak h overset i hookrightarrow mathfrak e overset s twoheadrightarrow mathfrak g overset sigma twoheadrightarrow 0 nbsp 2 is exact Here the zeros on the ends represent the zero Lie algebra containing only the zero vector 0 and the maps are the obvious ones i maps 0 to 0 and s maps all elements of g to 0 With this definition it follows automatically that i is a monomorphism and s is an epimorphism An extension of g by h is not necessarily unique Let e e denote two extensions and let the primes below have the obvious interpretation Then if there exists a Lie algebra isomorphism f e e such that f i i s f s displaystyle f circ i i quad s circ f s nbsp nbsp then the extensions e and e are said to be equivalent extensions Equivalence of extensions is an equivalence relation Extension types editTrivial edit A Lie algebra extension h i t s g displaystyle mathfrak h overset i hookrightarrow mathfrak t overset s twoheadrightarrow mathfrak g nbsp is trivial if there is a subspace i such that t i ker s and i is an ideal in t 1 Split edit A Lie algebra extension h i s s g displaystyle mathfrak h overset i hookrightarrow mathfrak s overset s twoheadrightarrow mathfrak g nbsp is split if there is a subspace u such that s u ker s as a vector space and u is a subalgebra in s An ideal is a subalgebra but a subalgebra is not necessarily an ideal A trivial extension is thus a split extension Central edit Central extensions of a Lie algebra g by an abelian Lie algebra e can be obtained with the help of a so called nontrivial 2 cocycle background on g Non trivial 2 cocycles occur in the context of projective representations background of Lie groups This is alluded to further down A Lie algebra extension h i e s g displaystyle mathfrak h overset i hookrightarrow mathfrak e overset s twoheadrightarrow mathfrak g nbsp is a central extension if ker s is contained in the center Z e of e Properties Since the center commutes with everything h im i ker s in this case is abelian Given a central extension e of g one may construct a 2 cocycle on g Suppose e is a central extension of g by h Let l be a linear map from g to e with the property that s l Idg i e l is a section of s Use this section to define e g g e byϵ G 1 G 2 l G 1 G 2 l G 1 l G 2 G 1 G 2 g displaystyle epsilon G 1 G 2 l G 1 G 2 l G 1 l G 2 quad G 1 G 2 in mathfrak g nbsp nbsp The map e satisfies ϵ G 1 G 2 G 3 ϵ G 2 G 3 G 1 ϵ G 3 G 1 G 2 0 e displaystyle epsilon G 1 G 2 G 3 epsilon G 2 G 3 G 1 epsilon G 3 G 1 G 2 0 in mathfrak e nbsp To see this use the definition of e on the left hand side then use the linearity of l Use Jacobi identity on g to get rid of half of the six terms Use the definition of e again on terms l Gi Gj sitting inside three Lie brackets bilinearity of Lie brackets and the Jacobi identity on e and then finally use on the three remaining terms that Im e ker s and that ker s Z e so that e Gi Gj brackets to zero with everything It then follows that f i 1 e satisfies the corresponding relation and if h in addition is one dimensional then f is a 2 cocycle on g via a trivial correspondence of h with the underlying field A central extension 0 i h i e s g s 0 displaystyle 0 overset iota hookrightarrow mathfrak h overset i hookrightarrow mathfrak e overset s twoheadrightarrow mathfrak g overset sigma twoheadrightarrow 0 nbsp is universal if for every other central extension 0 i h i e s g s 0 displaystyle 0 overset iota hookrightarrow mathfrak h overset i hookrightarrow mathfrak e overset s twoheadrightarrow mathfrak g overset sigma twoheadrightarrow 0 nbsp there exist unique homomorphisms F e e displaystyle Phi mathfrak e to mathfrak e nbsp and PS h h displaystyle Psi mathfrak h to mathfrak h nbsp such that the diagram nbsp commutes i e i PS F i and s F s By universality it is easy to conclude that such universal central extensions are unique up to isomorphism Construction editBy direct sum edit Let g displaystyle mathfrak g nbsp h displaystyle mathfrak h nbsp be Lie algebras over the same field F displaystyle F nbsp Define e h g displaystyle mathfrak e mathfrak h times mathfrak g nbsp and define addition pointwise on e displaystyle mathfrak e nbsp Scalar multiplication is defined by a H G a H a G a F H h G g displaystyle alpha H G alpha H alpha G alpha in F H in mathfrak h G in mathfrak g nbsp With these definitions h g h g displaystyle mathfrak h times mathfrak g equiv mathfrak h oplus mathfrak g nbsp is a vector space over F displaystyle F nbsp With the Lie bracket H 1 G 1 H 2 G 2 H 1 H 2 G 1 G 2 displaystyle H 1 G 1 H 2 G 2 H 1 H 2 G 1 G 2 nbsp 3 e displaystyle mathfrak e nbsp is a Lie algebra Define further i h e H H 0 s e g H G G displaystyle i mathfrak h hookrightarrow mathfrak e H mapsto H 0 quad s mathfrak e twoheadrightarrow mathfrak g H G mapsto G nbsp It is clear that 1 holds as an exact sequence This extension of g displaystyle mathfrak g nbsp by h displaystyle mathfrak h nbsp is called a trivial extension It is of course nothing else than the Lie algebra direct sum By symmetry of definitions e displaystyle mathfrak e nbsp is an extension of h displaystyle mathfrak h nbsp by g displaystyle mathfrak g nbsp as well but h g g h displaystyle mathfrak h oplus mathfrak g neq mathfrak g oplus mathfrak h nbsp It is clear from 3 that the subalgebra 0 g displaystyle 0 oplus mathfrak g nbsp is an ideal Lie algebra This property of the direct sum of Lie algebras is promoted to the definition of a trivial extension By semidirect sum edit Inspired by the construction of a semidirect product background of groups using a homomorphism G Aut H one can make the corresponding construct for Lie algebras If ps g Der h is a Lie algebra homomorphism then define a Lie bracket on e h g displaystyle mathfrak e mathfrak h oplus mathfrak g nbsp by H G H G H H ps G H ps G H G G H H h G G g displaystyle H G H G H H psi G H psi G H G G quad H H in mathfrak h G G in mathfrak g nbsp 7 With this Lie bracket the Lie algebra so obtained is denoted e h S g and is called the semidirect sum of h and g By inspection of 7 one sees that 0 g is a subalgebra of e and h 0 is an ideal in e Define i h e by H H 0 and s e g by H G G H h G g It is clear that ker s im i Thus e is a Lie algebra extension of g by h As with the trivial extension this property generalizes to the definition of a split extension ExampleLet G be the Lorentz group O 3 1 and let T denote the translation group in 4 dimensions isomorphic to R 4 displaystyle mathbb R 4 nbsp and consider the multiplication rule of the Poincare group P a 2 L 2 a 1 L 1 a 2 L 2 a 1 L 2 L 1 a 1 a 2 T P L 1 L 2 O 3 1 P displaystyle a 2 Lambda 2 a 1 Lambda 1 a 2 Lambda 2 a 1 Lambda 2 Lambda 1 quad a 1 a 2 in mathrm T subset mathrm P Lambda 1 Lambda 2 in mathrm O 3 1 subset mathrm P nbsp where T and O 3 1 are identified with their images in P From it follows immediately that in the Poincare group 0 L a I 0 L 1 L a I T P Thus every Lorentz transformation L corresponds to an automorphism FL of T with inverse FL 1 and F is clearly a homomorphism Now define P T S O 3 1 displaystyle overline mathrm P mathrm T otimes S mathrm O 3 1 nbsp endowed with multiplication given by 4 Unwinding the definitions one finds that the multiplication is the same as the multiplication one started with and it follows that P P From 5 follows that PSL AdL and then from 6 it follows that psl adl l o 3 1 By derivation edit Let d be a derivation background of h and denote by g the one dimensional Lie algebra spanned by d Define the Lie bracket on e g h by nb 2 11 G 1 H 1 G 2 H 2 l d H 1 m d H 2 H 1 H 2 l d H 1 m d H 2 displaystyle G 1 H 1 G 2 H 2 lambda delta H 1 mu delta H 2 H 1 H 2 lambda delta H 1 mu delta H 2 nbsp It is obvious from the definition of the bracket that h is and ideal in e in and that g is a subalgebra of e Furthermore g is complementary to h in e Let i h e be given by H 0 H and s e g by G H G It is clear that im i ker s Thus e is a split extension of g by h Such an extension is called extension by a derivation If ps g der h is defined by ps md H md H then ps is a Lie algebra homomorphism into der h Hence this construction is a special case of a semidirect sum for when starting from ps and using the construction in the preceding section the same Lie brackets result By 2 cocycle edit If e is a 2 cocycle background on a Lie algebra g and h is any one dimensional vector space let e h g vector space direct sum and define a Lie bracket on e by m H G 1 n H G 2 G 1 G 2 ϵ G 1 G 2 H m n F displaystyle mu H G 1 nu H G 2 G 1 G 2 epsilon G 1 G 2 H quad mu nu in F nbsp Here H is an arbitrary but fixed element of h Antisymmetry follows from antisymmetry of the Lie bracket on g and antisymmetry of the 2 cocycle The Jacobi identity follows from the corresponding properties of g and of e Thus e is a Lie algebra Put G1 0 and it follows that mH Z e Also it follows with i mH mH 0 and s mH G G that Im i ker s mH 0 m F Z e Hence e is a central extension of g by h It is called extension by a 2 cocycle Theorems editBelow follows some results regarding central extensions and 2 cocycles 12 Theorem 1 Let f1 and f2 be cohomologous 2 cocycles on a Lie algebra g and let e1 and e2 be respectively the central extensions constructed with these 2 cocycles Then the central extensions e1 and e2 are equivalent extensions Proof By definition f2 f1 df Define ps G m c e 1 G m c f G c e 2 displaystyle psi G mu c in mathfrak e 1 mapsto G mu c f G c in mathfrak e 2 nbsp It follows from the definitions that ps is a Lie algebra isomorphism and 2 holds Corollary A cohomology class F H2 g F defines a central extension of g which is unique up to isomorphism The trivial 2 cocycle gives the trivial extension and since a 2 coboundary is cohomologous with the trivial 2 cocycle one has Corollary A central extension defined by a coboundary is equivalent with a trivial central extension Theorem A finite dimensional simple Lie algebra has only trivial central extensions Proof Since every central extension comes from a 2 cocycle f it suffices to show that every 2 cocycle is a coboundary Suppose f is a 2 cocycle on g The task is to use this 2 cocycle to manufacture a 1 cochain f such that f df The first step is to for each G1 g use f to define a linear map rG1 g F by r G 1 G 2 f G 1 G 2 displaystyle rho G 1 G 2 equiv varphi G 1 G 2 nbsp These linear maps are elements of g Let n g g be the vector space isomorphism associated to the nondegenerate Killing form K and define a linear map d g g by d G 1 n r G 1 displaystyle d G 1 equiv nu rho G 1 nbsp This turns out to be a derivation for a proof see below Since for semisimple Lie algebras all derivations are inner one has d adGd for some Gd g Then f G 1 G 2 r G 1 G 2 K n r G 1 G 2 K d G 1 G 2 K a d G d G 1 G 2 K G d G 1 G 2 K G d G 1 G 2 displaystyle varphi G 1 G 2 equiv rho G 1 G 2 K nu rho G 1 G 2 equiv K d G 1 G 2 K mathrm ad G d G 1 G 2 K G d G 1 G 2 K G d G 1 G 2 nbsp Let f be the 1 cochain defined by f G K G d G displaystyle f G K G d G nbsp Then d f G 1 G 2 f G 1 G 2 K G d G 1 G 2 f G 1 G 2 displaystyle delta f G 1 G 2 f G 1 G 2 K G d G 1 G 2 varphi G 1 G 2 nbsp showing that f is a coboundary Proof of d being a derivationTo verify that d actually is a derivation first note that it is linear since n is then compute K d G 1 G 2 G 3 f G 1 G 2 G 3 f G 1 G 2 G 3 f G 2 G 3 G 1 K d G 1 G 2 G 3 K d G 1 G 3 G 1 K d G 1 G 2 G 3 K G 1 d G 2 G 3 K d G 1 G 2 G 1 d G 2 G 3 displaystyle begin aligned K d G 1 G 2 G 3 amp varphi G 1 G 2 G 3 varphi G 1 G 2 G 3 varphi G 2 G 3 G 1 amp K d G 1 G 2 G 3 K d G 1 G 3 G 1 K d G 1 G 2 G 3 K G 1 d G 2 G 3 amp K d G 1 G 2 G 1 d G 2 G 3 end aligned nbsp By appeal to the non degeneracy of K the left arguments of K are equal on the far left and far right The observation that one can define a derivation d given a symmetric non degenerate associative form K and a 2 cocycle f by K n r G 1 G 2 K d G 1 G 2 displaystyle K nu rho G 1 G 2 equiv K d G 1 G 2 nbsp or using the symmetry of K and the antisymmetry of f K d G 1 G 2 K G 1 d G 2 displaystyle K d G 1 G 2 K G 1 d G 2 nbsp leads to a corollary Corollary Let L g g F be a non degenerate symmetric associative bilinear form and let d be a derivation satisfying L d G 1 G 2 L G 1 d G 2 displaystyle L d G 1 G 2 L G 1 d G 2 nbsp then f defined by f G 1 G 2 L d G 1 G 2 displaystyle varphi G 1 G 2 L d G 1 G 2 nbsp is a 2 cocycle Proof The condition on d ensures the antisymmetry of f The Jacobi identity for 2 cocycles follows starting with f G 1 G 2 G 3 L d G 1 G 2 G 3 L d G 1 G 2 G 3 L G 1 d G 2 G 3 displaystyle varphi G1 G 2 G 3 L d G1 G 2 G 3 L d G1 G 2 G 3 L G1 d G 2 G 3 nbsp using symmetry of the form the antisymmetry of the bracket and once again the definition of f in terms of L If g is the Lie algebra of a Lie group G and e is a central extension of g one may ask whether there is a Lie group E with Lie algebra e The answer is by Lie s third theorem affirmative But is there a central extension E of G with Lie algebra e The answer to this question requires some machinery and can be found in Tuynman amp Wiegerinck 1987 Theorem 5 4 Applications editThe negative result of the preceding theorem indicates that one must at least for semisimple Lie algebras go to infinite dimensional Lie algebras to find useful applications of central extensions There are indeed such Here will be presented affine Kac Moody algebras and Virasoro algebras These are extensions of polynomial loop algebras and the Witt algebra respectively Polynomial loop algebra edit Let g be a polynomial loop algebra background g C l l 1 g 0 displaystyle mathfrak g mathbb C lambda lambda 1 otimes mathfrak g 0 nbsp where g0 is a complex finite dimensional simple Lie algebra The goal is to find a central extension of this algebra Two of the theorems apply On the one hand if there is a 2 cocycle on g then a central extension may be defined On the other hand if this 2 cocycle is acting on the g0 part only then the resulting extension is trivial Moreover derivations acting on g0 only cannot be used for definition of a 2 cocycle either because these derivations are all inner and the same problem results One therefore looks for derivations on C l l 1 One such set of derivations is d k l k 1 d d l k Z displaystyle d k equiv lambda k 1 frac d d lambda quad k in mathbb Z nbsp In order to manufacture a non degenerate bilinear associative antisymmetric form L on g attention is focused first on restrictions on the arguments with m n fixed It is a theorem that every form satisfying the requirements is a multiple of the Killing form K on g0 13 This requires L l m G 1 l n G 2 g l m K G 1 G 2 displaystyle L lambda m otimes G 1 lambda n otimes G 2 gamma lm K G 1 G 2 nbsp Symmetry of K implies g m n g n m displaystyle gamma mn gamma nm nbsp and associativity yields g m k n g m k n displaystyle gamma m k n gamma m k n nbsp With m 0 one sees that gk n g0 k n This last condition implies the former Using this fact define f n g0 n The defining equation then becomes L l m G 1 l n G 2 f m n K G 1 G 2 displaystyle L lambda m otimes G 1 lambda n otimes G 2 f m n K G 1 G 2 nbsp For every i Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp the definition f n d n i g m n d m n i displaystyle f n delta ni Leftrightarrow gamma mn delta m n i nbsp does define a symmetric associative bilinear form L i l m G 1 l n G 2 d m n i K G 1 G 2 displaystyle L i lambda m otimes G 1 lambda n otimes G 2 delta m n i K G 1 G 2 nbsp These span a vector space of forms which have the right properties Returning to the derivations at hand and the condition L i d k l l G 1 l m G 2 L i l l G 1 d k l m G 2 displaystyle L i d k lambda l otimes G 1 lambda m otimes G 2 L i lambda l otimes G 1 d k lambda m otimes G 2 nbsp one sees using the definitions that l d k l m i m d k l m i displaystyle l delta k l m i m delta k l m i nbsp or with n l m n d k n i 0 displaystyle n delta k n i 0 nbsp This and the antisymmetry condition holds if k i in particular it holds when k i 0 Thus choose L L0 and d d0 With these choices the premises in the corollary are satisfied The 2 cocycle f defined by f P l G 1 Q l G 2 L l d P d l G 1 Q l G 2 displaystyle varphi P lambda otimes G 1 Q lambda otimes G 2 L lambda frac dP d lambda otimes G 1 Q lambda otimes G 2 nbsp is finally employed to define a central extension of g e g C C displaystyle mathfrak e mathfrak g oplus mathbb C C nbsp with Lie bracket P l G 1 m C Q l G 2 n C P l Q l G 1 G 2 f P l G 1 Q l G 2 C displaystyle P lambda otimes G 1 mu C Q lambda otimes G 2 nu C P lambda Q lambda otimes G 1 G 2 varphi P lambda otimes G 1 Q lambda otimes G 2 C nbsp For basis elements suitably normalized and with antisymmetric structure constants one has l l G i m C l m G j n C l l m G i G j f l l G i l m G j C l l m C i j k G k L l d l l d l G i l m G j C l l m C i j k G k l L l l G i l m G j C l l m C i j k G k l d l m 0 K G i G j C l l m C i j k G k l d l m 0 C i k m C j m k C l l m C i j k G k l d l m 0 d i j C displaystyle begin aligned lambda l otimes G i mu C lambda m otimes G j nu C amp lambda l m otimes G i G j varphi lambda l otimes G i lambda m otimes G j C amp lambda l m otimes C ij k G k L lambda frac d lambda l d lambda otimes G i lambda m otimes G j C amp lambda l m otimes C ij k G k lL lambda l otimes G i lambda m otimes G j C amp lambda l m otimes C ij k G k l delta l m 0 K G i G j C amp lambda l m otimes C ij k G k l delta l m 0 C ik m C jm k C lambda l m otimes C ij k G k l delta l m 0 delta ij C end aligned nbsp This is a universal central extension of the polynomial loop algebra 14 A note on terminologyIn physics terminology the algebra of above might pass for a Kac Moody algebra whilst it will probably not in mathematics terminology An additional dimension an extension by a derivation is required for this Nonetheless if in a physical application the eigenvalues of g0 or its representative are interpreted as ordinary quantum numbers the additional superscript on the generators is referred to as the level It is an additional quantum number An additional operator whose eigenvalues are precisely the levels is introduced further below Current algebra edit nbsp Murray Gell Mann 1969 Nobel Laureate in physics initiated the field of current algebra in the 1960s It exploits known local symmetries even without knowledge of the underlying dynamics to extract predictions e g the Adler Weisberger sum rule Main article Current algebra As an application of a central extension of polynomial loop algebra a current algebra of a quantum field theory is considered background Suppose one has a current algebra with the interesting commutator being J a 0 t x J b i t y i C a b c J c i t x d x y S a b i j j d x y displaystyle J a 0 t mathbf x J b i t mathbf y i C ab c J c i t mathbf x delta mathbf x mathbf y S ab ij partial j delta mathbf x mathbf y nbsp CA10 with a Schwinger term To construct this algebra mathematically let g be the centrally extended polynomial loop algebra of the previous section with l l G i m C l m G j n C l l m C i j k G k l d l m 0 d i j C displaystyle lambda l otimes G i mu C lambda m otimes G j nu C lambda l m otimes C ij k G k l delta l m 0 delta ij C nbsp as one of the commutation relations or with a switch of notation l m m n i a j b lm Ga Tma with a factor of i under the physics convention nb 3 T a m T b n i C a b c T c m n m d m n 0 d a b C displaystyle T a m T b n i C ab c T c m n m delta m n 0 delta ab C nbsp Define using elements of g J a x ℏ L n e 2 p i n x L T a n x R displaystyle J a x frac hbar L sum n infty infty e frac 2 pi inx L T a n x in mathbb R nbsp One notes that J a x L J a x displaystyle J a x L J a x nbsp so that it is defined on a circle Now compute the commutator J a x J b y ℏ L 2 n e 2 p i n x L T a n m e 2 p i m y L T b m ℏ L 2 m n e 2 p i n x L e 2 p i m y L T a n T b m displaystyle begin aligned J a x J b y amp left frac hbar L right 2 left sum n infty infty e frac 2 pi inx L T a n sum m infty infty e frac 2 pi imy L T b m right amp left frac hbar L right 2 sum m n infty infty e frac 2 pi inx L e frac 2 pi imy L T a n T b m end aligned nbsp For simplicity switch coordinates so that y 0 x x y z and use the commutation relations J a z J b 0 ℏ L 2 m n e 2 p i n z L i C a b c T c m n m d m n 0 d a b C ℏ L 2 m e 2 p i m z L l i e 2 p i l z L C a b c T c l ℏ L 2 m n e 2 p i n z L m d m n 0 d a b C ℏ L m e 2 p i m z L i C a b c J c z ℏ L 2 n e 2 p i n z L n d a b C displaystyle begin aligned J a z J b 0 amp left frac hbar L right 2 sum m n infty infty e frac 2 pi inz L i C ab c T c m n m delta m n 0 delta ab C amp left frac hbar L right 2 sum m infty infty e frac 2 pi i m z L sum l infty infty ie frac 2 pi i l z L C ab c T c l left frac hbar L right 2 sum m n infty infty e frac 2 pi inz L m delta m n 0 delta ab C amp left frac hbar L right sum m infty infty e frac 2 pi imz L i C ab c J c z left frac hbar L right 2 sum n infty infty e frac 2 pi inz L n delta ab C end aligned nbsp Now employ the Poisson summation formula 1 L n e 2 p i n z L 1 L n d z n L d z displaystyle frac 1 L sum n infty infty e frac 2 pi inz L frac 1 L sum n infty infty delta z nL delta z nbsp for z in the interval 0 L and differentiate it to yield 2 p i L 2 n n e 2 p i n z L d z displaystyle frac 2 pi i L 2 sum n infty infty ne frac 2 pi inz L delta z nbsp and finally J a x y J b 0 i ℏ C a b c J c x y d x y i ℏ 2 2 p d a b C d x y displaystyle J a x y J b 0 i hbar C ab c J c x y delta x y frac i hbar 2 2 pi delta ab C delta x y nbsp or J a x J b y i ℏ C a b c J c x d x y i ℏ 2 2 p d a b C d x y displaystyle J a x J b y i hbar C ab c J c x delta x y frac i hbar 2 2 pi delta ab C delta x y nbsp since the delta functions arguments only ensure that the arguments of the left and right arguments of the commutator are equal formally d z d z 0 d x y 0 d x y By comparison with CA10 this is a current algebra in two spacetime dimensions including a Schwinger term with the space dimension curled up into a circle In the classical setting of quantum field theory this is perhaps of little use but with the advent of string theory where fields live on world sheets of strings and spatial dimensions are curled up there may be relevant applications Kac Moody algebra edit nbsp Robert Moody left Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada is a Canadian mathematician at University of Alberta He is co discoverer of the Kac Moody algebra together with Victor Kac Fellow of the American Mathematical Society a Russian mathematician working at MIT The derivation d0 used in the construction of the 2 cocycle f in the previous section can be extended to a derivation D on the centrally extended polynomial loop algebra here denoted by g in order to realize a Kac Moody algebra 15 16 background Simply set D P l G m C l d P l d l G displaystyle D P lambda otimes G mu C lambda frac dP lambda d lambda otimes G nbsp Next define as a vector space e C d g displaystyle mathfrak e mathbb C d mathfrak g nbsp The Lie bracket on e is according to the standard construction with a derivation given on a basis by l m G 1 m C n D l n G 2 m C n D l m n G 1 G 2 m d m n 0 K G 1 G 2 C n D l n G 1 n D l m G 2 l m n G 1 G 2 m d m n 0 K G 1 G 2 C n n l n G 1 n m l m G 2 displaystyle begin aligned lambda m otimes G 1 mu C nu D lambda n otimes G 2 mu C nu D amp lambda m n otimes G 1 G 2 m delta m n 0 K G 1 G 2 C nu D lambda n otimes G 1 nu D lambda m otimes G 2 amp lambda m n otimes G 1 G 2 m delta m n 0 K G 1 G 2 C nu n lambda n otimes G 1 nu m lambda m otimes G 2 end aligned nbsp For convenience define G i m l m G i displaystyle G i m leftrightarrow lambda m otimes G i nbsp In addition assume the basis on the underlying finite dimensional simple Lie algebra has been chosen so that the structure coefficients are antisymmetric in all indices and that the basis is appropriately normalized Then one immediately through the definitions verifies the following commutation relations G i m G j n C i j k G k m n m d i j d m n 0 C C G i m 0 1 i j N m n Z D G i m m G i m D C 0 displaystyle begin aligned G i m G j n amp C ij k G k m n m delta ij delta m n 0 C C G i m amp 0 quad 1 leq i j N quad m n in mathbb Z D G i m amp mG i m D C amp 0 end aligned nbsp These are precisely the short hand description of an untwisted affine Kac Moody algebra To recapitulate begin with a finite dimensional simple Lie algebra Define a space of formal Laurent polynomials with coefficients in the finite dimensional simple Lie algebra With the support of a symmetric non degenerate alternating bilinear form and a derivation a 2 cocycle is defined subsequently used in the standard prescription for a central extension by a 2 cocycle Extend the derivation to this new space use the standard prescription for a split extension by a derivation and an untwisted affine Kac Moody algebra obtains Virasoro algebra edit Main article Virasoro algebra The purpose is to construct the Virasoro algebra named after Miguel Angel Virasoro nb 4 as a central extension by a 2 cocycle f of the Witt algebra W background The Jacobi identity for 2 cocycles yields l m h n m p m n h m n l n l h l n m 0 h i j f d i d j displaystyle l m eta n m p m n eta m n l n l eta l n m 0 quad eta ij varphi d i d j nbsp V10 Letting l 0 displaystyle l 0 nbsp and using antisymmetry of h one obtains m p h m p m p h m p 0 displaystyle m p eta mp m p eta m p 0 nbsp In the extension the commutation relations for the element d0 are d 0 m C d m n C f m d m h 0 m C m d m h 0 m m C displaystyle d 0 mu C d m nu C varphi md m eta 0m C m d m frac eta 0m m C nbsp It is desirable to get rid of the central charge on the right hand side To do this define f W C d m f d 0 d m m h 0 m m displaystyle f W to mathbb C d m to frac varphi d 0 d m m frac eta 0m m nbsp Then using f as a 1 cochain h 0 n f d 0 d n f d 0 d n d f d 0 d n f d 0 d n n h 0 n n 0 displaystyle eta 0n varphi d 0 d n varphi d 0 d n delta f d 0 d n varphi d 0 d n n frac eta 0n n 0 nbsp so with this 2 cocycle equivalent to the previous one one has nb 5 d 0 m C d m n C f m d m displaystyle d 0 mu C d m nu C varphi md m nbsp With this new 2 cocycle skip the prime the condition becomes n p h m p n p h m p 0 0 displaystyle n p eta mp n p eta m p 0 0 nbsp and thus h m p a m d m p a m a m displaystyle eta mp a m delta m p quad a m a m nbsp where the last condition is due to the antisymmetry of the Lie bracket With this and with l m p 0 cutting out a plane in Z 3 displaystyle mathbb Z 3 nbsp V10 yields 2 m p a p m p a m p m 2 p a m 0 displaystyle 2m p a p m p a m p m 2p a m 0 nbsp that with p 1 cutting out a line in Z 2 displaystyle mathbb Z 2 nbsp becomes m 1 a m 1 m 2 a m 2 m 1 a 1 0 displaystyle m 1 a m 1 m 2 a m 2m 1 a 1 0 nbsp This is a difference equation generally solved by a m a m b m 3 displaystyle a m alpha m beta m 3 nbsp The commutator in the extension on elements of W is then d l d m l m d l m a m b m 3 d l m C displaystyle d l d m l m d l m alpha m beta m 3 delta l m C nbsp With b 0 it is possible to change basis or modify the 2 cocycle by a 2 coboundary so that d l d m l m d l m displaystyle d l d m l m d l m nbsp with the central charge absent altogether and the extension is hence trivial This was not generally the case with the previous modification where only d0 obtained the original relations With b 0 the following change of basis d l d l d 0 l a g 2 C displaystyle d l d l delta 0l frac alpha gamma 2 C nbsp the commutation relations take the form d l d m l m d l m g m b m 3 d l m C displaystyle d l d m l m d l m gamma m beta m 3 delta l m C nbsp showing that the part linear in m is trivial It also shows that H2 W C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp is one dimensional corresponding to the choice of b The conventional choice is to take a b 1 12 and still retaining freedom by absorbing an arbitrary factor in the arbitrary object C The Virasoro algebra V is then V W C C displaystyle mathcal V mathcal W mathbb C C nbsp with commutation relations d l m C d m n C l m d l m m m 3 12 d l m C displaystyle d l mu C d m nu C l m d l m frac m m 3 12 delta l m C nbsp Bosonic open strings edit Main article Bosonic string theory The relativistic classical open string background is subject to quantization This roughly amounts to taking the position and the momentum of the string and promoting them to operators on the space of states of open strings Since strings are extended objects this results in a continuum of operators depending on the parameter s The following commutation relations are postulated in the Heisenberg picture 17 X I t s P t J t s i h I J d s s x 0 t p t i displaystyle begin aligned X I tau sigma mathcal P tau J tau sigma amp i eta IJ delta sigma sigma x 0 tau p tau amp i end aligned nbsp All other commutators vanish Because of the continuum of operators and because of the delta functions it is desirable to express these relations instead in terms of the quantized versions of the Virasoro modes the Virasoro operators These are calculated to satisfy a m I a n J m h I J d m n 0 displaystyle alpha m I alpha n J m eta IJ delta m n 0 nbsp They are interpreted as creation and annihilation operators acting on Hilbert space increasing or decreasing the quantum of their respective modes If the index is negative the operator is a creation operator otherwise it is an annihilation operator If it is zero it is proportional to the total momentum operator In view of the fact that the light cone plus and minus modes were expressed in terms of the transverse Virasoro modes one must consider the commutation relations between the Virasoro operators These were classically defined then modes as L n 1 2 p Z a n p I a p I displaystyle L n frac 1 2 sum p in mathbb Z alpha n p I alpha p I nbsp Since in the quantized theory the alphas are operators the ordering of the factors matter In view of the commutation relation between the mode operators it will only matter for the operator L0 for which m n 0 L0 is chosen normal ordered L 0 1 2 a 0 I a 0 I p 1 a p I a p I a p I p I p 1 p a p I a p I c displaystyle L 0 frac 1 2 alpha 0 I alpha 0 I sum p 1 infty alpha p I alpha p I alpha p I p I sum p 1 infty p alpha p I dagger alpha p I c nbsp where c is a possible ordering constant One obtains after a somewhat lengthy calculation 18 the relations L m L n m n L m n m n 0 displaystyle L m L n m n L m n quad m n neq 0 nbsp If one would allow for m n 0 above then one has precisely the commutation relations of the Witt algebra Instead one has L m L n m n L m n D 2 12 m 3 m d m n 0 m n Z displaystyle L m L n m n L m n frac D 2 12 m 3 m delta m n 0 quad forall m n in mathbb Z nbsp upon identification of the generic central term as D 2 times the identity operator this is the Virasoro algebra the universal central extension of the Witt algebra The operator L0 enters the theory as the Hamiltonian modulo an additive constant Moreover the Virasoro operators enter into the definition of the Lorentz generators of the theory It is perhaps the most important algebra in string theory 19 The consistency of the Lorentz generators by the way fixes the spacetime dimensionality to 26 While this theory presented here for relative simplicity of exposition is unphysical or at the very least incomplete it has for instance no fermions the Virasoro algebra arises in the same way in the more viable superstring theory and M theory Group extension edit Main article Group extension A projective representation P G of a Lie group G background can be used to define a so called group extension Gex In quantum mechanics Wigner s theorem asserts that if G is a symmetry group then it will be represented projectively on Hilbert space by unitary or antiunitary operators This is often dealt with by passing to the universal covering group of G and take it as the symmetry group This works nicely for the rotation group SO 3 and the Lorentz group O 3 1 but it does not work when the symmetry group is the Galilean group In this case one has to pass to its central extension the Bargmann group 20 which is the symmetry group of the Schrodinger equation Likewise if G R 2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 nbsp the group of translations in position and momentum space one has to pass to its central extension the Heisenberg group 21 Let w be the 2 cocycle on G induced by P Define nb 6 G e x C G l g l C g G displaystyle G mathrm ex mathbb C times G lambda g lambda in mathbb C g in G nbsp as a set and let the multiplication be defined by l 1 g 1 l 2 g 2 l 1 l 2 w g 1 g 2 g 1 g 2 displaystyle lambda 1 g 1 lambda 2 g 2 lambda 1 lambda 2 omega g 1 g 2 g 1 g 2 nbsp Associativity holds since w is a 2 cocycle on G One has for the unit element 1 e l g l w e g g l g l g 1 e displaystyle 1 e lambda g lambda omega e g g lambda g lambda g 1 e nbsp and for the inverse l g 1 1 l w g g 1 g 1 displaystyle lambda g 1 left frac 1 lambda omega g g 1 g 1 right nbsp The set C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp e is an abelian subgroup of Gex This means that Gex is not semisimple The center of G Z G z G zg gz g G includes this subgroup The center may be larger At the level of Lie algebras it can be shown that the Lie algebra gex of Gex is given by g e x C C g displaystyle mathfrak g mathrm ex mathbb C C oplus mathfrak g nbsp as a vector space and endowed with the Lie bracket m C G 1 n C G 2 G 1 G 2 h G 1 G 2 C displaystyle mu C G 1 nu C G 2 G 1 G 2 eta G 1 G 2 C nbsp Here h is a 2 cocycle on g This 2 cocycle can be obtained from w albeit in a highly nontrivial way nb 7 Now by using the projective representation P one may define a map Pex by P e x l g l P g displaystyle Pi mathrm ex lambda g lambda Pi g nbsp It has the properties P e x l 1 g 1 P e x l 2 g 2 l 1 l 2 P g 1 P g 2 l 1 l 2 w g 1 g 2 P g 1 g 2 P e x l 1 l 2 w g 1 g 2 g 1 g 2 P e x l 1 g 1 l 2 g 2 displaystyle Pi mathrm ex lambda 1 g 1 Pi mathrm ex lambda 2 g 2 lambda 1 lambda 2 Pi g 1 Pi g 2 lambda 1 lambda 2 omega g 1 g 2 Pi g 1 g 2 Pi mathrm ex lambda 1 lambda 2 omega g 1 g 2 g 1 g 2 Pi mathrm ex lambda 1 g 1 lambda 2 g 2 nbsp so Pex Gex is a bona fide representation of Gex In the context of Wigner s theorem the situation may be depicted as such replace C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp by U 1 let SH denote the unit sphere in Hilbert space H and let be its inner product Let PH denote ray space and the ray product Let moreover a wiggly arrow denote a group action Then the diagram nbsp commutes i e p 2 P e x l g ps P p g p 1 ps ps S H displaystyle pi 2 circ Pi mathrm ex lambda g psi Pi circ pi g pi 1 psi quad psi in S mathcal H nbsp Moreover in the same way that G is a symmetry of PH preserving Gex is a symmetry of SH preserving The fibers of p2 are all circles These circles are left invariant under the action of U 1 The action of U 1 on these fibers is transitive with no fixed point The conclusion is that SH is a principal fiber bundle over PH with structure group U 1 21 Background material editIn order to adequately discuss extensions structure that goes beyond the defining properties of a Lie algebra is needed Rudimentary facts about these are collected here for quick reference Derivations edit A derivation d on a Lie algebra g is a map d g g displaystyle delta mathfrak g rightarrow mathfrak g nbsp such that the Leibniz rule d G 1 G 2 d G 1 G 2 G 1 d G 2 displaystyle delta G 1 G 2 delta G 1 G 2 G 1 delta G 2 nbsp holds The set of derivations on a Lie algebra g is denoted der g It is itself a Lie algebra under the Lie bracket d 1 d 2 d 1 d 2 d 2 d 1 displaystyle delta 1 delta 2 delta 1 circ delta 2 delta 2 circ delta 1 nbsp It is the Lie algebra of the group Aut g of automorphisms of g 22 One has to show d G 1 G 1 d G 1 G 2 G 1 d G 2 e t d G 1 G 2 e t d G 1 e t d G 2 t R displaystyle delta G 1 G 1 delta G 1 G 2 G 1 delta G 2 Leftrightarrow e t delta G 1 G 2 e t delta G 1 e t delta G 2 quad forall t in mathbb R nbsp If the rhs holds differentiate and set t 0 implying that the lhs holds If the lhs holds A write the rhs as G 1 G 2 e t d e t d G 1 e t d G 2 displaystyle G 1 G 2 overset e t delta e t delta G 1 e t delta G 2 nbsp and differentiate the rhs of this expression It is using A identically zero Hence the rhs of this expression is independent of t and equals its value for t 0 which is the lhs of this expression If G g then adG acting by adG1 G2 G1 G2 is a derivation The set adG G g is the set of inner derivations on g For finite dimensional simple Lie algebras all derivations are inner derivations 23 Semidirect product groups edit Main article Semidirect product Consider two Lie groups G and H and Aut H the automorphism group of H The latter is the group of isomorphisms of H If there is a Lie group homomorphism F G Aut H then for each g G there is a F g Fg Aut H with the property Fgg FgFg g g G Denote with E the set H G and define multiplication by h g h g h ϕ g h g g g g G h h H displaystyle h g h g h phi g h gg quad g g in G h h in H nbsp 4 Then E is a group with identity eH eG and the inverse is given by h g 1 Fg 1 h 1 g 1 Using the expression for the inverse and equation 4 it is seen that H is normal in E Denote the group with this semidirect product as E H S G Conversely if E H S G is a given semidirect product expression of the group E then by definition H is normal in E and Cg Aut H for each g G where Cg h ghg 1 and the map F g Cg is a homomorphism Now make use of the Lie correspondence The maps Fg H H g G each induce at the level of Lie algebras a map PSg h h This map is computed by PS g G d d t ϕ g e t G t 0 G g g G displaystyle Psi g G left frac d dt phi g e tG right t 0 quad G in mathfrak g g in G nbsp 5 For instance if G and H are both subgroups of a larger group E and Fg ghg 1 then PS g G d d t g e t G g 1 t 0 g G g 1 A d g G displaystyle Psi g G left frac d dt ge tG g 1 right t 0 gGg 1 mathrm Ad g G nbsp 5 and one recognizes PS as the adjoint action Ad of E on h restricted to G Now PS G Aut h GL h if h is finite dimensional is a homomorphism nb 8 and appealing once more to the Lie correspondence there is a unique Lie algebra homomorphism ps g Lie Aut h Der h gl h nb 9 This map is formally given by ps G d d t PS e t G t 0 G g displaystyle psi G left frac d dt Psi e tG right t 0 quad G in mathfrak g nbsp 6 for example if PS Ad then formally ps G d d t A d e t G t 0 d d t e a d t G t 0 a d G displaystyle psi G left frac d dt mathrm Ad e tG right t 0 left frac d dt e mathrm ad tG right t 0 mathrm ad G nbsp 6 where a relationship between Ad and the adjoint action ad rigorously proved in here is used Lie algebra The Lie algebra is as a vector space e h g This is clear since GH generates E and G H eH eG The Lie bracket is given by 24 H 1 G 1 H 2 G 2 e H 1 H 2 h ps G 1 H 2 ps G 2 H 1 G 1 G 2 g displaystyle H 1 G 1 H 2 G 2 mathfrak e H 1 H 2 mathfrak h psi G 1 H 2 psi G 2 H 1 G 1 G 2 mathfrak g nbsp Computation of Lie bracketTo compute the Lie bracket begin with a surface in E parametrized by s and t Elements of h in e h g are decorated with a bar and likewise for g e e t G s H e t G e t G e s H e t G 1 e t G e s H 1 1 e t G ϕ e t G e s H e t G 1 e t G ϕ e t G e s H ϕ e t G 1 1 ϕ e t G e s H 1 displaystyle begin aligned e e t overline G s overline H e t overline G amp e t overline G e s overline H e t overline G 1 e tG e sH 1 1 e tG amp phi e tG e sH e tG 1 e tG phi e tG e sH phi e tG 1 1 amp phi e tG e sH 1 end aligned nbsp One has d d s e A d e t G s H s 0 A d e t G H displaystyle frac d ds left e Ad e t overline G s overline H right s 0 Ad e t overline G overline H nbsp and d d s ϕ e t G e s H 1 s 0 PS e t G H 0 displaystyle frac d ds left phi e tG e sH 1 right s 0 Psi e tG H 0 nbsp by 5 and thus A d e t G H PS e t G H 0 displaystyle Ad e t overline G overline H Psi e tG H 0 nbsp Now differentiate this relationship with respect to t and evaluate at t 0 d d t e t G H e t G t 0 G H displaystyle frac d dt left e t overline G overline H e t overline G right t 0 overline G overline H nbsp and d d t PS e t G H 0 t 0 ps G H 0 displaystyle frac d dt left Psi e tG H 0 right t 0 psi G H 0 nbsp by 6 and thus H 1 G 1 H 2 G 2 e H 1 H 2 h G 1 H 2 H 1 G 2 G 1 G 2 g H 1 H 2 h ps G 1 H 2 ps G 2 H 1 G 1 G 2 g displaystyle H 1 G 1 H 2 G 2 mathfrak e H 1 H 2 mathfrak h G 1 H 2 H 1 G 2 G 1 G 2 mathfrak g H 1 H 2 mathfrak h psi G 1 H 2 psi G 2 H 1 G 1 G 2 mathfrak g nbsp Cohomology edit Main articles Algebraic topology Cohomology and Lie algebra cohomology For the present purposes consideration of a limited portion of the theory Lie algebra cohomology suffices The definitions are not the most general possible or even the most common ones but the objects they refer to are authentic instances of more the general definitions 2 cocycles The objects of primary interest are the 2 cocycles on g defined as bilinear alternating functions ϕ g g F displaystyle phi mathfrak g times mathfrak g rightarrow F nbsp that are alternating ϕ G 1 G 2 ϕ G 2 G 1 displaystyle phi G 1 G 2 phi G 2 G 1 nbsp and having a property resembling the Jacobi identity called the Jacobi identity for 2 cycles ϕ G 1 G 2 G 3 ϕ G 2 G 3 G 1 ϕ G 3 G 1 G 2 0 displaystyle phi G 1 G 2 G 3 phi G 2 G 3 G 1 phi G 3 G 1 G 2 0 nbsp The set of all 2 cocycles on g is denoted Z2 g F 2 cocycles from 1 cochains Some 2 cocycles can be obtained from 1 cochains A 1 cochain on g is simply a linear map f g F displaystyle f mathfrak g rightarrow F nbsp The set of all such maps is denoted C1 g F and of course in at least the finite dimensional case C1 g F g Using a 1 cochain f a 2 cocycle df may be defined by d f G 1 G 2 f G 1 G 2 displaystyle delta f G 1 G 2 f G 1 G 2 nbsp The alternating property is immediate and the Jacobi identity for 2 cocycles is as usual shown by writing it out and using the definition and properties of the ingredients here the Jacobi identity on g and the linearity of f The linear map d C1 g F Z2 g F is called the coboundary operator here restricted to C1 g F The second cohomology group Denote the image of C1 g F of d by B2 g F The quotient H 2 g F Z 2 g F B 2 g F displaystyle H 2 mathfrak g mathbb F Z 2 mathfrak g mathbb F B 2 mathfrak g mathbb F nbsp is called the second cohomology group of g Elements of H2 g F are equivalence classes of 2 cocycles and two 2 cocycles f1 and f2 are called equivalent cocycles if they differ by a 2 coboundary i e if f1 f2 df for some f C1 g F Equivalent 2 cocycles are called cohomologous The equivalence class of f Z2 g F is denoted f H2 These notions generalize in several directions For this see the main articles Structure constants edit Main article Structure constants Let B be a Hamel basis for g Then each G g has a unique expression as G a A c a G a c a F G a B displaystyle G sum alpha in A c alpha G alpha quad c alpha in F G alpha in B nbsp for some indexing set A of suitable size In this expansion only finitely many ca are nonzero In the sequel it is for simplicity assumed that the basis is countable and Latin letters are used for the indices and the indexing set can be taken to be N displaystyle mathbb N nbsp 1 2 One immediately has G i G j C i j k G k displaystyle G i G j C ij k G k nbsp for the basis elements where the summation symbol has been rationalized away the summation convention applies The placement of the indices in the structure constants up or down is immaterial The following theorem is useful Theorem There is a basis such that the structure constants are antisymmetric in all indices if and only if the Lie algebra is a direct sum of simple compact Lie algebras and u 1 Lie algebras This is the case if and only if there is a real positive definite metric g on g satisfying the invariance condition g a b C b g d g g b C b a d displaystyle g alpha beta C beta gamma delta g gamma beta C beta alpha delta nbsp in any basis This last condition is necessary on physical grounds for non Abelian gauge theories in quantum field theory Thus one can produce an infinite list of possible gauge theories using the Cartan catalog of simple Lie algebras on their compact form i e sl n C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp su n etc One such gauge theory is the U 1 SU 2 SU 3 gauge theory of the standard model with Lie algebra u 1 su 2 su 3 25 Killing form edit Main article Killing form The Killing form is a symmetric bilinear form on g defined by K G 1 G 2 t r a c e a d G 1 a d G 2 displaystyle K G 1 G 2 mathrm trace mathrm ad G 1 mathrm ad G 2 nbsp Here adG is viewed as a matrix operating on the vector space g The key fact needed is that if g is semisimple then by Cartan s criterion K is non degenerate In such a case K may be used to identify g and g If l g then there is a n l Gl g such that l G K G l G G g displaystyle langle lambda G rangle K G lambda G quad forall G in mathfrak g nbsp This resembles the Riesz representation theorem and the proof is virtually the same The Killing form has the property K G 1 G 2 G 3 K G 1 G 2 G 3 displaystyle K G 1 G 2 G 3 K G 1 G 2 G 3 nbsp which is referred to as associativity By defining gab K Ga Gb, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.