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Plancherel theorem for spherical functions

In mathematics, the Plancherel theorem for spherical functions is an important result in the representation theory of semisimple Lie groups, due in its final form to Harish-Chandra. It is a natural generalisation in non-commutative harmonic analysis of the Plancherel formula and Fourier inversion formula in the representation theory of the group of real numbers in classical harmonic analysis and has a similarly close interconnection with the theory of differential equations. It is the special case for zonal spherical functions of the general Plancherel theorem for semisimple Lie groups, also proved by Harish-Chandra. The Plancherel theorem gives the eigenfunction expansion of radial functions for the Laplacian operator on the associated symmetric space X; it also gives the direct integral decomposition into irreducible representations of the regular representation on L2(X). In the case of hyperbolic space, these expansions were known from prior results of Mehler, Weyl and Fock.

The main reference for almost all this material is the encyclopedic text of Helgason (1984).

History edit

The first versions of an abstract Plancherel formula for the Fourier transform on a unimodular locally compact group G were due to Segal and Mautner.[1] At around the same time, Harish-Chandra[2][3] and Gelfand & Naimark[4][5] derived an explicit formula for SL(2,R) and complex semisimple Lie groups, so in particular the Lorentz groups. A simpler abstract formula was derived by Mautner for a "topological" symmetric space G/K corresponding to a maximal compact subgroup K. Godement gave a more concrete and satisfactory form for positive definite spherical functions, a class of special functions on G/K. Since when G is a semisimple Lie group these spherical functions φλ were naturally labelled by a parameter λ in the quotient of a Euclidean space by the action of a finite reflection group, it became a central problem to determine explicitly the Plancherel measure in terms of this parametrization. Generalizing the ideas of Hermann Weyl from the spectral theory of ordinary differential equations, Harish-Chandra[6][7] introduced his celebrated c-function c(λ) to describe the asymptotic behaviour of the spherical functions φλ and proposed c(λ)−2 dλ as the Plancherel measure. He verified this formula for the special cases when G is complex or real rank one, thus in particular covering the case when G/K is a hyperbolic space. The general case was reduced to two conjectures about the properties of the c-function and the so-called spherical Fourier transform. Explicit formulas for the c-function were later obtained for a large class of classical semisimple Lie groups by Bhanu-Murthy. In turn these formulas prompted Gindikin and Karpelevich to derive a product formula[8] for the c-function, reducing the computation to Harish-Chandra's formula for the rank 1 case. Their work finally enabled Harish-Chandra to complete his proof of the Plancherel theorem for spherical functions in 1966.[9]

In many special cases, for example for complex semisimple group or the Lorentz groups, there are simple methods to develop the theory directly. Certain subgroups of these groups can be treated by techniques generalising the well-known "method of descent" due to Jacques Hadamard. In particular Flensted-Jensen (1978) gave a general method for deducing properties of the spherical transform for a real semisimple group from that of its complexification.

One of the principal applications and motivations for the spherical transform was Selberg's trace formula. The classical Poisson summation formula combines the Fourier inversion formula on a vector group with summation over a cocompact lattice. In Selberg's analogue of this formula, the vector group is replaced by G/K, the Fourier transform by the spherical transform and the lattice by a cocompact (or cofinite) discrete subgroup. The original paper of Selberg (1956) implicitly invokes the spherical transform; it was Godement (1957) who brought the transform to the fore, giving in particular an elementary treatment for SL(2,R) along the lines sketched by Selberg.

Spherical functions edit

Let G be a semisimple Lie group and K a maximal compact subgroup of G. The Hecke algebra Cc(K \G/K), consisting of compactly supported K-biinvariant continuous functions on G, acts by convolution on the Hilbert space H=L2(G / K). Because G / K is a symmetric space, this *-algebra is commutative. The closure of its (the Hecke algebra's) image in the operator norm is a non-unital commutative C* algebra  , so by the Gelfand isomorphism can be identified with the continuous functions vanishing at infinity on its spectrum X.[10] Points in the spectrum are given by continuous *-homomorphisms of   into C, i.e. characters of  .

If S' denotes the commutant of a set of operators S on H, then   can be identified with the commutant of the regular representation of G on H. Now   leaves invariant the subspace H0 of K-invariant vectors in H. Moreover, the abelian von Neumann algebra it generates on H0 is maximal Abelian. By spectral theory, there is an essentially unique[11] measure μ on the locally compact space X and a unitary transformation U between H0 and L2(X, μ) which carries the operators in   onto the corresponding multiplication operators.

The transformation U is called the spherical Fourier transform or sometimes just the spherical transform and μ is called the Plancherel measure. The Hilbert space H0 can be identified with L2(K\G/K), the space of K-biinvariant square integrable functions on G.

The characters χλ of   (i.e. the points of X) can be described by positive definite spherical functions φλ on G, via the formula

 
for f in Cc(K\G/K), where π(f) denotes the convolution operator in   and the integral is with respect to Haar measure on G.

The spherical functions φλ on G are given by Harish-Chandra's formula:

 

In this formula:

  • the integral is with respect to Haar measure on K;
  • λ is an element of A* =Hom(A,T) where A is the Abelian vector subgroup in the Iwasawa decomposition G =KAN of G;
  • λ' is defined on G by first extending λ to a character of the solvable subgroup AN, using the group homomorphism onto A, and then setting
     
    for k in K and x in AN, where ΔAN is the modular function of AN.
  • Two different characters λ1 and λ2 give the same spherical function if and only if λ1 = λ2·s, where s is in the Weyl group of A
     
    the quotient of the normaliser of A in K by its centraliser, a finite reflection group.

It follows that

  • X can be identified with the quotient space A*/W.

Spherical principal series edit

The spherical function φλ can be identified with the matrix coefficient of the spherical principal series of G. If M is the centralizer of A in K, this is defined as the unitary representation πλ of G induced by the character of B = MAN given by the composition of the homomorphism of MAN onto A and the character λ. The induced representation is defined on functions f on G with

 
for b in B by
 
where
 

The functions f can be identified with functions in L2(K / M) and

 

As Kostant (1969) proved, the representations of the spherical principal series are irreducible and two representations πλ and πμ are unitarily equivalent if and only if μ = σ(λ) for some σ in the Weyl group of A.

Example: SL(2, C) edit

The group G = SL(2,C) acts transitively on the quaternionic upper half space

 
by Möbius transformations. The complex matrix
 
acts as
 

The stabiliser of the point j is the maximal compact subgroup K = SU(2), so that   It carries the G-invariant Riemannian metric

 

with associated volume element

 

and Laplacian operator

 

Every point in   can be written as k(etj) with k in SU(2) and t determined up to a sign. The Laplacian has the following form on functions invariant under SU(2), regarded as functions of the real parameter t:

 

The integral of an SU(2)-invariant function is given by

 

Identifying the square integrable SU(2)-invariant functions with L2(R) by the unitary transformation Uf(t) = f(t) sinh t, Δ is transformed into the operator

 

By the Plancherel theorem and Fourier inversion formula for R, any SU(2)-invariant function f can be expressed in terms of the spherical functions

 

by the spherical transform

 

and the spherical inversion formula

 

Taking   with fi in Cc(G / K) and  , and evaluating at i yields the Plancherel formula

 

For biinvariant functions this establishes the Plancherel theorem for spherical functions: the map

 

is unitary and sends the convolution operator defined by   into the multiplication operator defined by  .

The spherical function Φλ is an eigenfunction of the Laplacian:

 

Schwartz functions on R are the spherical transforms of functions f belonging to the Harish-Chandra Schwartz space

 

By the Paley-Wiener theorem, the spherical transforms of smooth SU(2)-invariant functions of compact support are precisely functions on R which are restrictions of holomorphic functions on C satisfying an exponential growth condition

 

As a function on G, Φλ is the matrix coefficient of the spherical principal series defined on L2(C), where C is identified with the boundary of  . The representation is given by the formula

 

The function

 

is fixed by SU(2) and

 

The representations πλ are irreducible and unitarily equivalent only when the sign of λ is changed. The map W of   onto L2([0,∞) × C) (with measure λ2 dλ on the first factor) given by

 

is unitary and gives the decomposition of   as a direct integral of the spherical principal series.

Example: SL(2, R) edit

The group G = SL(2,R) acts transitively on the Poincaré upper half plane

 

by Möbius transformations. The real matrix

 

acts as

 

The stabiliser of the point i is the maximal compact subgroup K = SO(2), so that   = G / K. It carries the G-invariant Riemannian metric

 

with associated area element

 

and Laplacian operator

 

Every point in   can be written as k( et i ) with k in SO(2) and t determined up to a sign. The Laplacian has the following form on functions invariant under SO(2), regarded as functions of the real parameter t:

 

The integral of an SO(2)-invariant function is given by

 

There are several methods for deriving the corresponding eigenfunction expansion for this ordinary differential equation including:

  1. the classical spectral theory of ordinary differential equations applied to the hypergeometric equation (Mehler, Weyl, Fock);
  2. variants of Hadamard's method of descent, realising 2-dimensional hyperbolic space as the quotient of 3-dimensional hyperbolic space by the free action of a 1-parameter subgroup of SL(2,C);
  3. Abel's integral equation, following Selberg and Godement;
  4. orbital integrals (Harish-Chandra, Gelfand & Naimark).

The second and third technique will be described below, with two different methods of descent: the classical one due Hadamard, familiar from treatments of the heat equation[12] and the wave equation[13] on hyperbolic space; and Flensted-Jensen's method on the hyperboloid.

Hadamard's method of descent edit

If f(x,r) is a function on   and

 

then

 

where Δn is the Laplacian on  .

Since the action of SL(2,C) commutes with Δ3, the operator M0 on S0(2)-invariant functions obtained by averaging M1f by the action of SU(2) also satisfies

 

The adjoint operator M1* defined by

 

satisfies

 

The adjoint M0*, defined by averaging M*f over SO(2), satisfies

 
for SU(2)-invariant functions F and SO(2)-invariant functions f. It follows that
 

The function

 
is SO(2)-invariant and satisfies
 

On the other hand,

 

since the integral can be computed by integrating   around the rectangular indented contour with vertices at ±R and ±R + πi. Thus the eigenfunction

 

satisfies the normalisation condition φλ(i) = 1. There can only be one such solution either because the Wronskian of the ordinary differential equation must vanish or by expanding as a power series in sinh r.[14] It follows that

 

Similarly it follows that

 

If the spherical transform of an SO(2)-invariant function on   is defined by

 

then

 

Taking f=M1*F, the SL(2, C) inversion formula for F immediately yields

 

the spherical inversion formula for SO(2)-invariant functions on  .

As for SL(2,C), this immediately implies the Plancherel formula for fi in Cc(SL(2,R) / SO(2)):

 

The spherical function φλ is an eigenfunction of the Laplacian:

 

Schwartz functions on R are the spherical transforms of functions f belonging to the Harish-Chandra Schwartz space

 

The spherical transforms of smooth SO(2)-invariant functions of compact support are precisely functions on R which are restrictions of holomorphic functions on C satisfying an exponential growth condition

 

Both these results can be deduced by descent from the corresponding results for SL(2,C),[15] by verifying directly that the spherical transform satisfies the given growth conditions[16][17] and then using the relation  .

As a function on G, φλ is the matrix coefficient of the spherical principal series defined on L2(R), where R is identified with the boundary of  . The representation is given by the formula

 

The function

 

is fixed by SO(2) and

 

The representations πλ are irreducible and unitarily equivalent only when the sign of λ is changed. The map   with measure   on the first factor, is given by the formula

 

is unitary and gives the decomposition of   as a direct integral of the spherical principal series.

Flensted–Jensen's method of descent edit

Hadamard's method of descent relied on functions invariant under the action of 1-parameter subgroup of translations in the y parameter in  . Flensted–Jensen's method uses the centraliser of SO(2) in SL(2,C) which splits as a direct product of SO(2) and the 1-parameter subgroup K1 of matrices

 

The symmetric space SL(2,C)/SU(2) can be identified with the space H3 of positive 2×2 matrices A with determinant 1

 
with the group action given by
 

Thus

 

So on the hyperboloid  , gt only changes the coordinates y and a. Similarly the action of SO(2) acts by rotation on the coordinates (b,x) leaving a and y unchanged. The space H2 of real-valued positive matrices A with y = 0 can be identified with the orbit of the identity matrix under SL(2,R). Taking coordinates (b,x,y) in H3 and (b,x) on H2 the volume and area elements are given by

 

where r2 equals b2 + x2 + y2 or b2 + x2, so that r is related to hyperbolic distance from the origin by  .

The Laplacian operators are given by the formula

 

where

 

and

 

For an SU(2)-invariant function F on H3 and an SO(2)-invariant function on H2, regarded as functions of r or t,

 

If f(b,x) is a function on H2, Ef is defined by

 

Thus

 

If f is SO(2)-invariant, then, regarding f as a function of r or t,

 

On the other hand,

 

Thus, setting Sf(t) = f(2t),

 
leading to the fundamental descent relation of Flensted-Jensen for M0 = ES:
 

The same relation holds with M0 by M, where Mf is obtained by averaging M0f over SU(2).

The extension Ef is constant in the y variable and therefore invariant under the transformations gs. On the other hand, for F a suitable function on H3, the function QF defined by

 
is independent of the y variable. A straightforward change of variables shows that
 

Since K1 commutes with SO(2), QF is SO(2)--invariant if F is, in particular if F is SU(2)-invariant. In this case QF is a function of r or t, so that M*F can be defined by

 

The integral formula above then yields

 
and hence, since for f SO(2)-invariant,
 
the following adjoint formula:
 

As a consequence

 

Thus, as in the case of Hadamard's method of descent.

 
with
 
and
 

It follows that

 

Taking f=M*F, the SL(2,C) inversion formula for F then immediately yields

 

Abel's integral equation edit

The spherical function φλ is given by

 
so that
 

Thus

 

so that defining F by

 

the spherical transform can be written

 

The relation between F and f is classically inverted by the Abel integral equation:

 

In fact[18]

 

The relation between F and   is inverted by the Fourier inversion formula:

 

Hence

 

This gives the spherical inversion for the point i. Now for fixed g in SL(2,R) define[19]

 

another rotation invariant function on   with f1(i)=f(g(i)). On the other hand, for biinvariant functions f,

 

so that

 

where w = g(i). Combining this with the above inversion formula for f1 yields the general spherical inversion formula:

 

Other special cases edit

All complex semisimple Lie groups or the Lorentz groups SO0(N,1) with N odd can be treated directly by reduction to the usual Fourier transform.[15][20] The remaining real Lorentz groups can be deduced by Flensted-Jensen's method of descent, as can other semisimple Lie groups of real rank one.[21] Flensted-Jensen's method of descent also applies to the treatment of real semisimple Lie groups for which the Lie algebras are normal real forms of complex semisimple Lie algebras.[15] The special case of SL(N,R) is treated in detail in Jorgenson & Lang (2001); this group is also the normal real form of SL(N,C).

The approach of Flensted-Jensen (1978) applies to a wide class of real semisimple Lie groups of arbitrary real rank and yields the explicit product form of the Plancherel measure on  * without using Harish-Chandra's expansion of the spherical functions φλ in terms of his c-function, discussed below. Although less general, it gives a simpler approach to the Plancherel theorem for this class of groups.

Complex semisimple Lie groups edit

If G is a complex semisimple Lie group, it is the complexification of its maximal compact subgroup U, a compact semisimple Lie group. If   and   are their Lie algebras, then   Let T be a maximal torus in U with Lie algebra   Then setting

 

there is the Cartan decomposition:

 

The finite-dimensional irreducible representations πλ of U are indexed by certain λ in  .[22] The corresponding character formula and dimension formula of Hermann Weyl give explicit formulas for

 

These formulas, initially defined on   and  , extend holomorphic to their complexifications. Moreover,

 

where W is the Weyl group   and δ(eX) is given by a product formula (Weyl's denominator formula) which extends holomorphically to the complexification of  . There is a similar product formula for d(λ), a polynomial in λ.

On the complex group G, the integral of a U-biinvariant function F can be evaluated as

 

where  .

The spherical functions of G are labelled by λ in   and given by the Harish-Chandra-Berezin formula[23]

 

They are the matrix coefficients of the irreducible spherical principal series of G induced from the character of the Borel subgroup of G corresponding to λ; these representations are irreducible and can all be realized on L2(U/T).

The spherical transform of a U-biinvariant function F is given by

 

and the spherical inversion formula by

 

where   is a Weyl chamber. In fact the result follows from the Fourier inversion formula on   since[24]

 
so that   is just the Fourier transform of  .

Note that the symmetric space G/U has as compact dual[25] the compact symmetric space U x U / U, where U is the diagonal subgroup. The spherical functions for the latter space, which can be identified with U itself, are the normalized characters χλ/d(λ) indexed by lattice points in the interior of   and the role of A is played by T. The spherical transform of f of a class function on U is given by

 

and the spherical inversion formula now follows from the theory of Fourier series on T:

 

There is an evident duality between these formulas and those for the non-compact dual.[26]

Real semisimple Lie groups edit

Let G0 be a normal real form of the complex semisimple Lie group G, the fixed points of an involution σ, conjugate linear on the Lie algebra of G. Let τ be a Cartan involution of G0 extended to an involution of G, complex linear on its Lie algebra, chosen to commute with σ. The fixed point subgroup of τσ is a compact real form U of G, intersecting G0 in a maximal compact subgroup K0. The fixed point subgroup of τ is K, the complexification of K0. Let G0= K0·P0 be the corresponding Cartan decomposition of G0 and let A be a maximal Abelian subgroup of P0. Flensted-Jensen (1978) proved that

 
where A+ is the image of the closure of a Weyl chamber in   under the exponential map. Moreover,
 

Since

 

it follows that there is a canonical identification between K \ G / U, K0 \ G0 /K0 and A+. Thus K0-biinvariant functions on G0 can be identified with functions on A+ as can functions on G that are left invariant under K and right invariant under U. Let f be a function in   and define Mf in   by

 

Here a third Cartan decomposition of G = UAU has been used to identify U \ G / U with A+.

Let Δ be the Laplacian on G0/K0 and let Δc be the Laplacian on G/U. Then

 

For F in  , define M*F in   by

 

Then M and M* satisfy the duality relations

 

In particular

 

There is a similar compatibility for other operators in the center of the universal enveloping algebra of G0. It follows from the eigenfunction characterisation of spherical functions that   is proportional to φλ on G0, the constant of proportionality being given by

 

Moreover, in this case[27]

 

If f = M*F, then the spherical inversion formula for F on G implies that for f on G0:[28][29]

 
since
 

The direct calculation of the integral for b(λ), generalising the computation of Godement (1957) for SL(2,R), was left as an open problem by Flensted-Jensen (1978).[30] An explicit product formula for b(λ) was known from the prior determination of the Plancherel measure by Harish-Chandra (1966), giving[31][32]

 

where α ranges over the positive roots of the root system in   and C is a normalising constant, given as a quotient of products of Gamma functions.

Harish-Chandra's Plancherel theorem edit

Let G be a noncompact connected real semisimple Lie group with finite center. Let   denote its Lie algebra. Let K be a maximal compact subgroup given as the subgroup of fixed points of a Cartan involution σ. Let   be the ±1 eigenspaces of σ in  , so that   is the Lie algebra of K and   give the Cartan decomposition

 

Let   be a maximal Abelian subalgebra of   and for α in   let

 

If α ≠ 0 and  , then α is called a restricted root and   is called its multiplicity. Let A = exp  , so that G = KAK.The restriction of the Killing form defines an inner product on   and hence  , which allows   to be identified with  . With respect to this inner product, the restricted roots Σ give a root system. Its Weyl group can be identified with  . A choice of positive roots defines a Weyl chamber  . The reduced root system Σ0 consists of roots α such that α/2 is not a root.

Defining the spherical functions φ λ as above for λ in  , the spherical transform of f in Cc(K \ G / K) is defined by

 

The spherical inversion formula states that

 
where Harish-Chandra's c-function c(λ) is defined by[33]
 
with   and the constant c0 chosen so that c(−) = 1 where
 

The Plancherel theorem for spherical functions states that the map

 
is unitary and transforms convolution by   into multiplication by  .

Harish-Chandra's spherical function expansion edit

Since G = KAK, functions on G/K that are invariant under K can be identified with functions on A, and hence  , that are invariant under the Weyl group W. In particular since the Laplacian Δ on G/K commutes with the action of G, it defines a second order differential operator L on  , invariant under W, called the radial part of the Laplacian. In general if X is in  , it defines a first order differential operator (or vector field) by

 

L can be expressed in terms of these operators by the formula[34]

 
where Aα in   is defined by
 
and
 
is the Laplacian on  , corresponding to any choice of orthonormal basis (Xi).

Thus

 
where
 
so that L can be regarded as a perturbation of the constant-coefficient operator L0.

Now the spherical function φλ is an eigenfunction of the Laplacian:

 
and therefore of L, when viewed as a W-invariant function on  .

Since eρ and its transforms under W are eigenfunctions of L0 with the same eigenvalue, it is natural look for a formula for φλ in terms of a perturbation series

 
with Λ the cone of all non-negative integer combinations of positive roots, and the transforms of fλ under W. The expansion
 

leads to a recursive formula for the coefficients aμ(λ). In particular they are uniquely determined and the series and its derivatives converges absolutely on  , a fundamental domain for W. Remarkably it turns out that fλ is also an eigenfunction of the other G-invariant differential operators on G/K, each of which induces a W-invariant differential operator on  .

It follows that φλ can be expressed in terms as a linear combination of fλ and its transforms under W:[35]

 

Here c(λ) is Harish-Chandra's c-function. It describes the asymptotic behaviour of φλ in  , since[36]

 
for X in   and t > 0 large.

Harish-Chandra obtained a second integral formula for φλ and hence c(λ) using the Bruhat decomposition of G:[37]

 

where B = MAN and the union is disjoint. Taking the Coxeter element s0 of W, the unique element mapping   onto  , it follows that σ(N) has a dense open orbit G/B = K/M whose complement is a union of cells of strictly smaller dimension and therefore has measure zero. It follows that the integral formula for φλ initially defined over K/M

 

can be transferred to σ(N):[38]

 
for X in  .

Since

plancherel, theorem, spherical, functions, mathematics, important, result, representation, theory, semisimple, groups, final, form, harish, chandra, natural, generalisation, commutative, harmonic, analysis, plancherel, formula, fourier, inversion, formula, rep. In mathematics the Plancherel theorem for spherical functions is an important result in the representation theory of semisimple Lie groups due in its final form to Harish Chandra It is a natural generalisation in non commutative harmonic analysis of the Plancherel formula and Fourier inversion formula in the representation theory of the group of real numbers in classical harmonic analysis and has a similarly close interconnection with the theory of differential equations It is the special case for zonal spherical functions of the general Plancherel theorem for semisimple Lie groups also proved by Harish Chandra The Plancherel theorem gives the eigenfunction expansion of radial functions for the Laplacian operator on the associated symmetric space X it also gives the direct integral decomposition into irreducible representations of the regular representation on L2 X In the case of hyperbolic space these expansions were known from prior results of Mehler Weyl and Fock The main reference for almost all this material is the encyclopedic text of Helgason 1984 Contents 1 History 2 Spherical functions 3 Spherical principal series 4 Example SL 2 C 5 Example SL 2 R 5 1 Hadamard s method of descent 5 2 Flensted Jensen s method of descent 5 3 Abel s integral equation 6 Other special cases 6 1 Complex semisimple Lie groups 6 2 Real semisimple Lie groups 7 Harish Chandra s Plancherel theorem 8 Harish Chandra s spherical function expansion 9 Harish Chandra s c function 10 Paley Wiener theorem 11 Rosenberg s proof of inversion formula 12 Schwartz functions 13 Notes 14 ReferencesHistory editThe first versions of an abstract Plancherel formula for the Fourier transform on a unimodular locally compact group G were due to Segal and Mautner 1 At around the same time Harish Chandra 2 3 and Gelfand amp Naimark 4 5 derived an explicit formula for SL 2 R and complex semisimple Lie groups so in particular the Lorentz groups A simpler abstract formula was derived by Mautner for a topological symmetric space G K corresponding to a maximal compact subgroup K Godement gave a more concrete and satisfactory form for positive definite spherical functions a class of special functions on G K Since when G is a semisimple Lie group these spherical functions fl were naturally labelled by a parameter l in the quotient of a Euclidean space by the action of a finite reflection group it became a central problem to determine explicitly the Plancherel measure in terms of this parametrization Generalizing the ideas of Hermann Weyl from the spectral theory of ordinary differential equations Harish Chandra 6 7 introduced his celebrated c function c l to describe the asymptotic behaviour of the spherical functions fl and proposed c l 2 dl as the Plancherel measure He verified this formula for the special cases when G is complex or real rank one thus in particular covering the case when G K is a hyperbolic space The general case was reduced to two conjectures about the properties of the c function and the so called spherical Fourier transform Explicit formulas for the c function were later obtained for a large class of classical semisimple Lie groups by Bhanu Murthy In turn these formulas prompted Gindikin and Karpelevich to derive a product formula 8 for the c function reducing the computation to Harish Chandra s formula for the rank 1 case Their work finally enabled Harish Chandra to complete his proof of the Plancherel theorem for spherical functions in 1966 9 In many special cases for example for complex semisimple group or the Lorentz groups there are simple methods to develop the theory directly Certain subgroups of these groups can be treated by techniques generalising the well known method of descent due to Jacques Hadamard In particular Flensted Jensen 1978 gave a general method for deducing properties of the spherical transform for a real semisimple group from that of its complexification One of the principal applications and motivations for the spherical transform was Selberg s trace formula The classical Poisson summation formula combines the Fourier inversion formula on a vector group with summation over a cocompact lattice In Selberg s analogue of this formula the vector group is replaced by G K the Fourier transform by the spherical transform and the lattice by a cocompact or cofinite discrete subgroup The original paper of Selberg 1956 implicitly invokes the spherical transform it was Godement 1957 who brought the transform to the fore giving in particular an elementary treatment for SL 2 R along the lines sketched by Selberg Spherical functions editMain article Zonal spherical function Let G be a semisimple Lie group and K a maximal compact subgroup of G The Hecke algebra Cc K G K consisting of compactly supported K biinvariant continuous functions on G acts by convolution on the Hilbert space H L2 G K Because G K is a symmetric space this algebra is commutative The closure of its the Hecke algebra s image in the operator norm is a non unital commutative C algebra A displaystyle mathfrak A nbsp so by the Gelfand isomorphism can be identified with the continuous functions vanishing at infinity on its spectrum X 10 Points in the spectrum are given by continuous homomorphisms of A displaystyle mathfrak A nbsp into C i e characters of A displaystyle mathfrak A nbsp If S denotes the commutant of a set of operators S on H then A displaystyle mathfrak A prime nbsp can be identified with the commutant of the regular representation of G on H Now A displaystyle mathfrak A nbsp leaves invariant the subspace H0 of K invariant vectors in H Moreover the abelian von Neumann algebra it generates on H0 is maximal Abelian By spectral theory there is an essentially unique 11 measure m on the locally compact space X and a unitary transformation U between H0 and L2 X m which carries the operators in A displaystyle mathfrak A nbsp onto the corresponding multiplication operators The transformation U is called the spherical Fourier transform or sometimes just the spherical transform and m is called the Plancherel measure The Hilbert space H0 can be identified with L2 K G K the space of K biinvariant square integrable functions on G The characters xl of A displaystyle mathfrak A nbsp i e the points of X can be described by positive definite spherical functions fl on G via the formulax l p f G f g f l g d g displaystyle chi lambda pi f int G f g cdot varphi lambda g dg nbsp for f in Cc K G K where p f denotes the convolution operator in A displaystyle mathfrak A nbsp and the integral is with respect to Haar measure on G The spherical functions fl on G are given by Harish Chandra s formula f l g K l g k 1 d k displaystyle varphi lambda g int K lambda prime gk 1 dk nbsp In this formula the integral is with respect to Haar measure on K l is an element of A Hom A T where A is the Abelian vector subgroup in the Iwasawa decomposition G KAN of G l is defined on G by first extending l to a character of the solvable subgroup AN using the group homomorphism onto A and then setting l k x D A N x 1 2 l x displaystyle lambda kx Delta AN x 1 2 lambda x nbsp for k in K and x in AN where DAN is the modular function of AN Two different characters l1 and l2 give the same spherical function if and only if l1 l2 s where s is in the Weyl group of A W N K A C K A displaystyle W N K A C K A nbsp the quotient of the normaliser of A in K by its centraliser a finite reflection group It follows that X can be identified with the quotient space A W Spherical principal series editSee also Principal series representation The spherical function fl can be identified with the matrix coefficient of the spherical principal series of G If M is the centralizer of A in K this is defined as the unitary representation pl of G induced by the character of B MAN given by the composition of the homomorphism of MAN onto A and the character l The induced representation is defined on functions f on G withf g b D b 1 2 l b f g displaystyle f gb Delta b 1 2 lambda b f g nbsp for b in B by p g f x f g 1 x displaystyle pi g f x f g 1 x nbsp where f 2 K f k 2 d k lt displaystyle f 2 int K f k 2 dk lt infty nbsp The functions f can be identified with functions in L2 K M andx l g p g 1 1 displaystyle chi lambda g pi g 1 1 nbsp As Kostant 1969 proved the representations of the spherical principal series are irreducible and two representations pl and pm are unitarily equivalent if and only if m s l for some s in the Weyl group of A Example SL 2 C editThe group G SL 2 C acts transitively on the quaternionic upper half spaceH 3 x y i t j t gt 0 displaystyle mathfrak H 3 x yi tj mid t gt 0 nbsp by Mobius transformations The complex matrix g a b c d displaystyle g begin pmatrix a amp b c amp d end pmatrix nbsp acts as g w a w b c w d 1 displaystyle g w aw b cw d 1 nbsp The stabiliser of the point j is the maximal compact subgroup K SU 2 so that H 3 G K displaystyle mathfrak H 3 G K nbsp It carries the G invariant Riemannian metricd s 2 r 2 d x 2 d y 2 d r 2 displaystyle ds 2 r 2 left dx 2 dy 2 dr 2 right nbsp with associated volume elementd V r 3 d x d y d r displaystyle dV r 3 dx dy dr nbsp and Laplacian operatorD r 2 x 2 y 2 r 2 r r displaystyle Delta r 2 partial x 2 partial y 2 partial r 2 r partial r nbsp Every point in H 3 displaystyle mathfrak H 3 nbsp can be written as k etj with k in SU 2 and t determined up to a sign The Laplacian has the following form on functions invariant under SU 2 regarded as functions of the real parameter t D t 2 2 coth t t displaystyle Delta partial t 2 2 coth t partial t nbsp The integral of an SU 2 invariant function is given by f d V f t sinh 2 t d t displaystyle int f dV int infty infty f t sinh 2 t dt nbsp Identifying the square integrable SU 2 invariant functions with L2 R by the unitary transformation Uf t f t sinh t D is transformed into the operatorU D U d 2 d t 2 1 displaystyle U Delta U d 2 over dt 2 1 nbsp By the Plancherel theorem and Fourier inversion formula for R any SU 2 invariant function f can be expressed in terms of the spherical functionsF l t sin l t l sinh t displaystyle Phi lambda t sin lambda t over lambda sinh t nbsp by the spherical transformf l f F l d V displaystyle tilde f lambda int f Phi lambda dV nbsp and the spherical inversion formulaf x f l F l x l 2 d l displaystyle f x int tilde f lambda Phi lambda x lambda 2 d lambda nbsp Taking f f 2 f 1 displaystyle f f 2 star f 1 nbsp with fi in Cc G K and f g f g 1 displaystyle f g overline f g 1 nbsp and evaluating at i yields the Plancherel formula G f 1 f 2 d g f 1 l f 2 l l 2 d l displaystyle int G f 1 overline f 2 dg int tilde f 1 lambda overline tilde f 2 lambda lambda 2 d lambda nbsp For biinvariant functions this establishes the Plancherel theorem for spherical functions the map U L 2 K G K L 2 R l 2 d l U f f displaystyle begin cases U L 2 K backslash G K to L 2 mathbb R lambda 2 d lambda U f longmapsto tilde f end cases nbsp is unitary and sends the convolution operator defined by f L 1 K G K displaystyle f in L 1 K backslash G K nbsp into the multiplication operator defined by f displaystyle tilde f nbsp The spherical function Fl is an eigenfunction of the Laplacian D F l l 2 1 F l displaystyle Delta Phi lambda lambda 2 1 Phi lambda nbsp Schwartz functions on R are the spherical transforms of functions f belonging to the Harish Chandra Schwartz spaceS f sup t 1 t 2 N I D M f t sinh t lt displaystyle mathcal S left f left sup t left 1 t 2 N I Delta M f t sinh t right lt infty right right nbsp By the Paley Wiener theorem the spherical transforms of smooth SU 2 invariant functions of compact support are precisely functions on R which are restrictions of holomorphic functions on C satisfying an exponential growth condition F l C e R Im l displaystyle F lambda leq Ce R left operatorname Im lambda right nbsp As a function on G Fl is the matrix coefficient of the spherical principal series defined on L2 C where C is identified with the boundary of H 3 displaystyle mathfrak H 3 nbsp The representation is given by the formulap l g 1 3 z c z d 2 i l 3 g z displaystyle pi lambda g 1 xi z cz d 2 i lambda xi g z nbsp The function3 0 z p 1 1 z 2 2 displaystyle xi 0 z pi 1 left 1 z 2 right 2 nbsp is fixed by SU 2 andF l g p l g 3 0 3 0 displaystyle Phi lambda g pi lambda g xi 0 xi 0 nbsp The representations pl are irreducible and unitarily equivalent only when the sign of l is changed The map W of L 2 H 3 displaystyle L 2 mathfrak H 3 nbsp onto L2 0 C with measure l2 dl on the first factor given byW f l z G K f g p l g 3 0 z d g displaystyle Wf lambda z int G K f g pi lambda g xi 0 z dg nbsp is unitary and gives the decomposition of L 2 H 3 displaystyle L 2 mathfrak H 3 nbsp as a direct integral of the spherical principal series Example SL 2 R editThe group G SL 2 R acts transitively on the Poincare upper half planeH 2 x r i r gt 0 displaystyle mathfrak H 2 x ri mid r gt 0 nbsp by Mobius transformations The real matrixg a b c d displaystyle g begin pmatrix a amp b c amp d end pmatrix nbsp acts asg w a w b c w d 1 displaystyle g w aw b cw d 1 nbsp The stabiliser of the point i is the maximal compact subgroup K SO 2 so that H 2 displaystyle mathfrak H 2 nbsp G K It carries the G invariant Riemannian metricd s 2 r 2 d x 2 d r 2 displaystyle ds 2 r 2 left dx 2 dr 2 right nbsp with associated area elementd A r 2 d x d r displaystyle dA r 2 dx dr nbsp and Laplacian operatorD r 2 x 2 r 2 displaystyle Delta r 2 partial x 2 partial r 2 nbsp Every point in H 2 displaystyle mathfrak H 2 nbsp can be written as k et i with k in SO 2 and t determined up to a sign The Laplacian has the following form on functions invariant under SO 2 regarded as functions of the real parameter t D t 2 coth t t displaystyle Delta partial t 2 coth t partial t nbsp The integral of an SO 2 invariant function is given by f d A f t sinh t d t displaystyle int f dA int infty infty f t left sinh t right dt nbsp There are several methods for deriving the corresponding eigenfunction expansion for this ordinary differential equation including the classical spectral theory of ordinary differential equations applied to the hypergeometric equation Mehler Weyl Fock variants of Hadamard s method of descent realising 2 dimensional hyperbolic space as the quotient of 3 dimensional hyperbolic space by the free action of a 1 parameter subgroup of SL 2 C Abel s integral equation following Selberg and Godement orbital integrals Harish Chandra Gelfand amp Naimark The second and third technique will be described below with two different methods of descent the classical one due Hadamard familiar from treatments of the heat equation 12 and the wave equation 13 on hyperbolic space and Flensted Jensen s method on the hyperboloid Hadamard s method of descent edit If f x r is a function on H 2 displaystyle mathfrak H 2 nbsp andM 1 f x y r r 1 2 f x r displaystyle M 1 f x y r r 1 2 cdot f x r nbsp thenD 3 M 1 f M 1 D 2 3 4 f displaystyle Delta 3 M 1 f M 1 left Delta 2 tfrac 3 4 right f nbsp where Dn is the Laplacian on H n displaystyle mathfrak H n nbsp Since the action of SL 2 C commutes with D3 the operator M0 on S0 2 invariant functions obtained by averaging M1f by the action of SU 2 also satisfiesD 3 M 0 M 0 D 2 3 4 displaystyle Delta 3 M 0 M 0 left Delta 2 tfrac 3 4 right nbsp The adjoint operator M1 defined byM 1 F x r r 1 2 F x y r d y displaystyle M 1 F x r r 1 2 int infty infty F x y r dy nbsp satisfies H 3 M 1 f F d V H 2 f M 1 F d A displaystyle int mathfrak H 3 M 1 f cdot F dV int mathfrak H 2 f cdot M 1 F dA nbsp The adjoint M0 defined by averaging M f over SO 2 satisfies H 3 M 0 f F d V H 2 f M 0 F d A displaystyle int mathfrak H 3 M 0 f cdot F dV int mathfrak H 2 f cdot M 0 F dA nbsp for SU 2 invariant functions F and SO 2 invariant functions f It follows that M i D 3 D 2 3 4 M i displaystyle M i Delta 3 left Delta 2 tfrac 3 4 right M i nbsp The functionf l M 1 F l displaystyle f lambda M 1 Phi lambda nbsp is SO 2 invariant and satisfies D 2 f l l 2 1 4 f l displaystyle Delta 2 f lambda left lambda 2 tfrac 1 4 right f lambda nbsp On the other hand b l f l i sin l t l sinh t d t p l tanh p l 2 displaystyle b lambda f lambda i int sin lambda t over lambda sinh t dt pi over lambda tanh pi lambda over 2 nbsp since the integral can be computed by integrating e i l t sinh t displaystyle e i lambda t sinh t nbsp around the rectangular indented contour with vertices at R and R pi Thus the eigenfunctionϕ l b l 1 M 1 F l displaystyle phi lambda b lambda 1 M 1 Phi lambda nbsp satisfies the normalisation condition fl i 1 There can only be one such solution either because the Wronskian of the ordinary differential equation must vanish or by expanding as a power series in sinh r 14 It follows thatf l e t i 1 2 p 0 2 p cosh t sinh t cos 8 1 i l d 8 displaystyle varphi lambda e t i frac 1 2 pi int 0 2 pi left cosh t sinh t cos theta right 1 i lambda d theta nbsp Similarly it follows thatF l M 1 ϕ l displaystyle Phi lambda M 1 phi lambda nbsp If the spherical transform of an SO 2 invariant function on H 2 displaystyle mathfrak H 2 nbsp is defined byf l f f l d A displaystyle tilde f lambda int f varphi lambda dA nbsp then M 1 F l F l displaystyle M 1 F sim lambda tilde F lambda nbsp Taking f M1 F the SL 2 C inversion formula for F immediately yieldsf x f l x f l l p 2 tanh p l 2 d l displaystyle f x int infty infty varphi lambda x tilde f lambda lambda pi over 2 tanh left pi lambda over 2 right d lambda nbsp the spherical inversion formula for SO 2 invariant functions on H 2 displaystyle mathfrak H 2 nbsp As for SL 2 C this immediately implies the Plancherel formula for fi in Cc SL 2 R SO 2 H 2 f 1 f 2 d A f 1 f 2 l p 2 tanh p l 2 d l displaystyle int mathfrak H 2 f 1 overline f 2 dA int infty infty tilde f 1 overline tilde f 2 lambda pi over 2 tanh left pi lambda over 2 right d lambda nbsp The spherical function fl is an eigenfunction of the Laplacian D 2 f l l 2 1 4 f l displaystyle Delta 2 varphi lambda left lambda 2 tfrac 1 4 right varphi lambda nbsp Schwartz functions on R are the spherical transforms of functions f belonging to the Harish Chandra Schwartz spaceS f sup t 1 t 2 N I D M f t f 0 t lt displaystyle mathcal S left f left sup t left 1 t 2 N I Delta M f t varphi 0 t right lt infty right right nbsp The spherical transforms of smooth SO 2 invariant functions of compact support are precisely functions on R which are restrictions of holomorphic functions on C satisfying an exponential growth condition F l C e R ℑ l displaystyle F lambda leq Ce R Im lambda nbsp Both these results can be deduced by descent from the corresponding results for SL 2 C 15 by verifying directly that the spherical transform satisfies the given growth conditions 16 17 and then using the relation M 1 F F displaystyle M 1 F sim tilde F nbsp As a function on G fl is the matrix coefficient of the spherical principal series defined on L2 R where R is identified with the boundary of H 2 displaystyle mathfrak H 2 nbsp The representation is given by the formulap l g 1 3 x c x d 1 i l 3 g x displaystyle pi lambda g 1 xi x cx d 1 i lambda xi g x nbsp The function3 0 x p 1 1 x 2 1 displaystyle xi 0 x pi 1 left 1 x 2 right 1 nbsp is fixed by SO 2 andF l g p l g 3 0 3 0 displaystyle Phi lambda g pi lambda g xi 0 xi 0 nbsp The representations pl are irreducible and unitarily equivalent only when the sign of l is changed The map W L 2 H 2 L 2 0 R displaystyle W L 2 mathfrak H 2 to L 2 0 infty times mathbb R nbsp with measure l p 2 tanh p l 2 d l textstyle frac lambda pi 2 tanh left frac pi lambda 2 right d lambda nbsp on the first factor is given by the formulaW f l x G K f g p l g 3 0 x d g displaystyle Wf lambda x int G K f g pi lambda g xi 0 x dg nbsp is unitary and gives the decomposition of L 2 H 2 displaystyle L 2 mathfrak H 2 nbsp as a direct integral of the spherical principal series Flensted Jensen s method of descent edit Hadamard s method of descent relied on functions invariant under the action of 1 parameter subgroup of translations in the y parameter in H 3 displaystyle mathfrak H 3 nbsp Flensted Jensen s method uses the centraliser of SO 2 in SL 2 C which splits as a direct product of SO 2 and the 1 parameter subgroup K1 of matricesg t cosh t i sinh t i sinh t cosh t displaystyle g t begin pmatrix cosh t amp i sinh t i sinh t amp cosh t end pmatrix nbsp The symmetric space SL 2 C SU 2 can be identified with the space H3 of positive 2 2 matrices A with determinant 1A a b x i y x i y a b displaystyle A begin pmatrix a b amp x iy x iy amp a b end pmatrix nbsp with the group action given by g A g A g displaystyle g cdot A gAg nbsp Thusg t A a cosh 2 t y sinh 2 t b x i y cosh 2 t a sinh 2 t x i y cosh 2 t a sinh 2 t a cosh 2 t y sinh 2 t b displaystyle g t cdot A begin pmatrix a cosh 2t y sinh 2t b amp x i y cosh 2t a sinh 2t x i y cosh 2t a sinh 2t amp a cosh 2t y sinh 2t b end pmatrix nbsp So on the hyperboloid a 2 1 b 2 x 2 y 2 displaystyle a 2 1 b 2 x 2 y 2 nbsp gt only changes the coordinates y and a Similarly the action of SO 2 acts by rotation on the coordinates b x leaving a and y unchanged The space H2 of real valued positive matrices A with y 0 can be identified with the orbit of the identity matrix under SL 2 R Taking coordinates b x y in H3 and b x on H2 the volume and area elements are given byd V 1 r 2 1 2 d b d x d y d A 1 r 2 1 2 d b d x displaystyle dV 1 r 2 1 2 db dx dy dA 1 r 2 1 2 db dx nbsp where r2 equals b2 x2 y2 or b2 x2 so that r is related to hyperbolic distance from the origin by r sinh t displaystyle r sinh t nbsp The Laplacian operators are given by the formulaD n L n R n 2 n 1 R n displaystyle Delta n L n R n 2 n 1 R n nbsp whereL 2 b 2 x 2 R 2 b b x x displaystyle L 2 partial b 2 partial x 2 R 2 b partial b x partial x nbsp andL 3 b 2 x 2 y 2 R 3 b b x x y y displaystyle L 3 partial b 2 partial x 2 partial y 2 R 3 b partial b x partial x y partial y nbsp For an SU 2 invariant function F on H3 and an SO 2 invariant function on H2 regarded as functions of r or t H 3 F d V 4 p F t sinh 2 t d t H 2 f d V 2 p f t sinh t d t displaystyle int H 3 F dV 4 pi int infty infty F t sinh 2 t dt int H 2 f dV 2 pi int infty infty f t sinh t dt nbsp If f b x is a function on H2 Ef is defined byE f b x y f b x displaystyle Ef b x y f b x nbsp ThusD 3 E f E D 2 R 2 f displaystyle Delta 3 Ef E Delta 2 R 2 f nbsp If f is SO 2 invariant then regarding f as a function of r or t D 2 R 2 f t 2 f coth t t f r r f t 2 f coth t tanh t t f displaystyle Delta 2 R 2 f partial t 2 f coth t partial t f r partial r f partial t 2 f coth t tanh t partial t f nbsp On the other hand t 2 coth t tanh t t t 2 2 coth 2 t t displaystyle partial t 2 coth t tanh t partial t partial t 2 2 coth 2t partial t nbsp Thus setting Sf t f 2t D 2 R 2 S f 4 S D 2 f displaystyle Delta 2 R 2 Sf 4S Delta 2 f nbsp leading to the fundamental descent relation of Flensted Jensen for M0 ES D 3 M 0 f 4 M 0 D 2 f displaystyle Delta 3 M 0 f 4M 0 Delta 2 f nbsp The same relation holds with M0 by M where Mf is obtained by averaging M0f over SU 2 The extension Ef is constant in the y variable and therefore invariant under the transformations gs On the other hand for F a suitable function on H3 the function QF defined byQ F K 1 F g s d s displaystyle QF int K 1 F circ g s ds nbsp is independent of the y variable A straightforward change of variables shows that H 3 F d V H 2 1 b 2 x 2 1 2 Q F d A displaystyle int H 3 F dV int H 2 1 b 2 x 2 1 2 QF dA nbsp Since K1 commutes with SO 2 QF is SO 2 invariant if F is in particular if F is SU 2 invariant In this case QF is a function of r or t so that M F can be defined byM F t Q F t 2 displaystyle M F t QF t 2 nbsp The integral formula above then yields H 3 F d V H 2 M F d A displaystyle int H 3 F dV int H 2 M F dA nbsp and hence since for f SO 2 invariant M M f F f M F displaystyle M Mf cdot F f cdot M F nbsp the following adjoint formula H 3 M f F d V H 2 f M F d V displaystyle int H 3 Mf cdot F dV int H 2 f cdot M F dV nbsp As a consequenceM D 3 4 D 2 M displaystyle M Delta 3 4 Delta 2 M nbsp Thus as in the case of Hadamard s method of descent M F 2 l b l f l displaystyle M Phi 2 lambda b lambda varphi lambda nbsp with b l M F 2 l 0 p tanh p l displaystyle b lambda M Phi 2 lambda 0 pi tanh pi lambda nbsp and F 2 l M f l displaystyle Phi 2 lambda M varphi lambda nbsp It follows that M F l F 2 l displaystyle M F sim lambda tilde F 2 lambda nbsp Taking f M F the SL 2 C inversion formula for F then immediately yieldsf x f l x f l l p 2 tanh p l 2 d l displaystyle f x int infty infty varphi lambda x tilde f lambda lambda pi over 2 tanh left frac pi lambda 2 right d lambda nbsp Abel s integral equation edit The spherical function fl is given byf l g K a k g d k displaystyle varphi lambda g int K alpha kg dk nbsp so that f l S f s a s d s displaystyle tilde f lambda int S f s alpha s ds nbsp Thusf l 0 f a 2 a 2 b 2 2 a i l 2 d a d b displaystyle tilde f lambda int infty infty int 0 infty f left frac a 2 a 2 b 2 2 right a i lambda 2 da db nbsp so that defining F byF u f u t 2 2 d t displaystyle F u int infty infty f left u frac t 2 2 right dt nbsp the spherical transform can be writtenf l 0 F a 2 a 2 2 a i l d a 0 F cosh t e i t l d t displaystyle tilde f lambda int 0 infty F left frac a 2 a 2 2 right a i lambda da int 0 infty F cosh t e it lambda dt nbsp The relation between F and f is classically inverted by the Abel integral equation f x 1 2 p F x t 2 2 d t displaystyle f x frac 1 2 pi int infty infty F left x t 2 over 2 right dt nbsp In fact 18 F x t 2 2 d t f x t 2 u 2 2 d t d u 2 p 0 f x r 2 2 r d r 2 p f x displaystyle int infty infty F left x frac t 2 2 right dt int infty infty int infty infty f left x frac t 2 u 2 2 right dt du 2 pi int 0 infty f left x frac r 2 2 right r dr 2 pi f x nbsp The relation between F and f displaystyle tilde f nbsp is inverted by the Fourier inversion formula F cosh t 2 p 0 f i l cos l t d l displaystyle F cosh t 2 over pi int 0 infty tilde f i lambda cos lambda t d lambda nbsp Hencef i 1 2 p 2 0 f l l d l sin l t 2 sinh t cosh t 2 d t 1 2 p 2 f l l p 2 tanh p l 2 d l displaystyle f i 1 over 2 pi 2 int 0 infty tilde f lambda lambda d lambda int infty infty sin lambda t 2 over sinh t cosh t over 2 dt 1 over 2 pi 2 int infty infty tilde f lambda lambda pi over 2 tanh left pi lambda over 2 right d lambda nbsp This gives the spherical inversion for the point i Now for fixed g in SL 2 R define 19 f 1 w K f g k w d k displaystyle f 1 w int K f gkw dk nbsp another rotation invariant function on H 2 displaystyle mathfrak H 2 nbsp with f1 i f g i On the other hand for biinvariant functions f p l f 3 0 f l 3 0 displaystyle pi lambda f xi 0 tilde f lambda xi 0 nbsp so thatf 1 l f l f l w displaystyle tilde f 1 lambda tilde f lambda cdot varphi lambda w nbsp where w g i Combining this with the above inversion formula for f1 yields the general spherical inversion formula f w 1 p 2 0 f l f l w l p 2 tanh p l 2 d l displaystyle f w 1 over pi 2 int 0 infty tilde f lambda varphi lambda w lambda pi over 2 tanh left pi lambda over 2 right d lambda nbsp Other special cases editAll complex semisimple Lie groups or the Lorentz groups SO0 N 1 with N odd can be treated directly by reduction to the usual Fourier transform 15 20 The remaining real Lorentz groups can be deduced by Flensted Jensen s method of descent as can other semisimple Lie groups of real rank one 21 Flensted Jensen s method of descent also applies to the treatment of real semisimple Lie groups for which the Lie algebras are normal real forms of complex semisimple Lie algebras 15 The special case of SL N R is treated in detail in Jorgenson amp Lang 2001 this group is also the normal real form of SL N C The approach of Flensted Jensen 1978 applies to a wide class of real semisimple Lie groups of arbitrary real rank and yields the explicit product form of the Plancherel measure on a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp without using Harish Chandra s expansion of the spherical functions fl in terms of his c function discussed below Although less general it gives a simpler approach to the Plancherel theorem for this class of groups Complex semisimple Lie groups edit If G is a complex semisimple Lie group it is the complexification of its maximal compact subgroup U a compact semisimple Lie group If g displaystyle mathfrak g nbsp and u displaystyle mathfrak u nbsp are their Lie algebras then g u i u displaystyle mathfrak g mathfrak u oplus i mathfrak u nbsp Let T be a maximal torus in U with Lie algebra t displaystyle mathfrak t nbsp Then settingA exp i t P exp i u displaystyle A exp i mathfrak t qquad P exp i mathfrak u nbsp there is the Cartan decomposition G P U U A U displaystyle G P cdot U UAU nbsp The finite dimensional irreducible representations pl of U are indexed by certain l in t displaystyle mathfrak t nbsp 22 The corresponding character formula and dimension formula of Hermann Weyl give explicit formulas forx l e X Tr p l e X X t d l dim p l displaystyle chi lambda e X operatorname Tr pi lambda e X X in mathfrak t qquad d lambda dim pi lambda nbsp These formulas initially defined on t t displaystyle mathfrak t times mathfrak t nbsp and t displaystyle mathfrak t nbsp extend holomorphic to their complexifications Moreover x l e X s W s i g n s e i l s X d e X displaystyle chi lambda e X sum sigma in W rm sign sigma e i lambda sigma X over delta e X nbsp where W is the Weyl group W N U T T displaystyle W N U T T nbsp and d eX is given by a product formula Weyl s denominator formula which extends holomorphically to the complexification of t displaystyle mathfrak t nbsp There is a similar product formula for d l a polynomial in l On the complex group G the integral of a U biinvariant function F can be evaluated as G F g d g 1 W a F e X d e X 2 d X displaystyle int G F g dg 1 over W int mathfrak a F e X delta e X 2 dX nbsp where a i t displaystyle mathfrak a i mathfrak t nbsp The spherical functions of G are labelled by l in a i t displaystyle mathfrak a i mathfrak t nbsp and given by the Harish Chandra Berezin formula 23 F l e X x l e X d l displaystyle Phi lambda e X chi lambda e X over d lambda nbsp They are the matrix coefficients of the irreducible spherical principal series of G induced from the character of the Borel subgroup of G corresponding to l these representations are irreducible and can all be realized on L2 U T The spherical transform of a U biinvariant function F is given byF l G F g F l g d g displaystyle tilde F lambda int G F g Phi lambda g dg nbsp and the spherical inversion formula byF g 1 W a F l F l g d l 2 d l a F l F l g d l 2 d l displaystyle F g 1 over W int mathfrak a tilde F lambda Phi lambda g d lambda 2 d lambda int mathfrak a tilde F lambda Phi lambda g d lambda 2 d lambda nbsp where a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp is a Weyl chamber In fact the result follows from the Fourier inversion formula on a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp since 24 d l d e X F l e X s W s i g n s e i l X displaystyle d lambda delta e X Phi lambda e X sum sigma in W rm sign sigma e i lambda X nbsp so that d l F l displaystyle overline d lambda tilde F lambda nbsp is just the Fourier transform of F e X d e X displaystyle F e X delta e X nbsp Note that the symmetric space G U has as compact dual 25 the compact symmetric space U x U U where U is the diagonal subgroup The spherical functions for the latter space which can be identified with U itself are the normalized characters xl d l indexed by lattice points in the interior of a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp and the role of A is played by T The spherical transform of f of a class function on U is given byf l U f u x l u d l d u displaystyle tilde f lambda int U f u overline chi lambda u over d lambda du nbsp and the spherical inversion formula now follows from the theory of Fourier series on T f u l f l x l u d l d l 2 displaystyle f u sum lambda tilde f lambda chi lambda u over d lambda d lambda 2 nbsp There is an evident duality between these formulas and those for the non compact dual 26 Real semisimple Lie groups edit Let G0 be a normal real form of the complex semisimple Lie group G the fixed points of an involution s conjugate linear on the Lie algebra of G Let t be a Cartan involution of G0 extended to an involution of G complex linear on its Lie algebra chosen to commute with s The fixed point subgroup of ts is a compact real form U of G intersecting G0 in a maximal compact subgroup K0 The fixed point subgroup of t is K the complexification of K0 Let G0 K0 P0 be the corresponding Cartan decomposition of G0 and let A be a maximal Abelian subgroup of P0 Flensted Jensen 1978 proved thatG K A U displaystyle G KA U nbsp where A is the image of the closure of a Weyl chamber in a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp under the exponential map Moreover K G U A displaystyle K backslash G U A nbsp SinceK 0 G 0 K 0 A displaystyle K 0 backslash G 0 K 0 A nbsp it follows that there is a canonical identification between K G U K0 G0 K0 and A Thus K0 biinvariant functions on G0 can be identified with functions on A as can functions on G that are left invariant under K and right invariant under U Let f be a function in C c K 0 G 0 K 0 displaystyle C c infty K 0 backslash G 0 K 0 nbsp and define Mf in C c U G U displaystyle C c infty U backslash G U nbsp byM f a U f u a 2 d u displaystyle Mf a int U f ua 2 du nbsp Here a third Cartan decomposition of G UAU has been used to identify U G U with A Let D be the Laplacian on G0 K0 and let Dc be the Laplacian on G U Then4 M D D c M displaystyle 4M Delta Delta c M nbsp For F in C c U G U displaystyle C c infty U backslash G U nbsp define M F in C c K 0 G 0 K 0 displaystyle C c infty K 0 backslash G 0 K 0 nbsp byM F a 2 K F g a d g displaystyle M F a 2 int K F ga dg nbsp Then M and M satisfy the duality relations G U M f F G 0 K 0 f M F displaystyle int G U Mf cdot F int G 0 K 0 f cdot M F nbsp In particularM D c 4 D M displaystyle M Delta c 4 Delta M nbsp There is a similar compatibility for other operators in the center of the universal enveloping algebra of G0 It follows from the eigenfunction characterisation of spherical functions that M F 2 l displaystyle M Phi 2 lambda nbsp is proportional to fl on G0 the constant of proportionality being given byb l M F 2 l 1 K F 2 l k d k displaystyle b lambda M Phi 2 lambda 1 int K Phi 2 lambda k dk nbsp Moreover in this case 27 M F l F 2 l displaystyle M F sim lambda tilde F 2 lambda nbsp If f M F then the spherical inversion formula for F on G implies that for f on G0 28 29 f g a f l f l g 2 d i m A b l d 2 l 2 d l displaystyle f g int mathfrak a tilde f lambda varphi lambda g 2 rm dim A cdot b lambda cdot d 2 lambda 2 d lambda nbsp since f g M F g a F 2 l M F 2 l g 2 d i m A d 2 l 2 d l a f l f l g b l 2 d i m A d 2 l 2 d l displaystyle f g M F g int mathfrak a tilde F 2 lambda M Phi 2 lambda g 2 rm dim A d 2 lambda 2 d lambda int mathfrak a tilde f lambda varphi lambda g b lambda 2 rm dim A d 2 lambda 2 d lambda nbsp The direct calculation of the integral for b l generalising the computation of Godement 1957 for SL 2 R was left as an open problem by Flensted Jensen 1978 30 An explicit product formula for b l was known from the prior determination of the Plancherel measure by Harish Chandra 1966 giving 31 32 b l C d 2 l 1 a gt 0 tanh p a l a a displaystyle b lambda C cdot d 2 lambda 1 cdot prod alpha gt 0 tanh pi alpha lambda over alpha alpha nbsp where a ranges over the positive roots of the root system in a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp and C is a normalising constant given as a quotient of products of Gamma functions Harish Chandra s Plancherel theorem editLet G be a noncompact connected real semisimple Lie group with finite center Let g displaystyle mathfrak g nbsp denote its Lie algebra Let K be a maximal compact subgroup given as the subgroup of fixed points of a Cartan involution s Let g displaystyle mathfrak g pm nbsp be the 1 eigenspaces of s in g displaystyle mathfrak g nbsp so that k g displaystyle mathfrak k mathfrak g nbsp is the Lie algebra of K and p g displaystyle mathfrak p mathfrak g nbsp give the Cartan decompositiong k p G exp p K displaystyle mathfrak g mathfrak k mathfrak p G exp mathfrak p cdot K nbsp Let a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp be a maximal Abelian subalgebra of p displaystyle mathfrak p nbsp and for a in a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp letg a X g H X a H X H a displaystyle mathfrak g alpha X in mathfrak g H X alpha H X H in mathfrak a nbsp If a 0 and g a 0 displaystyle mathfrak g alpha neq 0 nbsp then a is called a restricted root and m a dim g a displaystyle m alpha dim mathfrak g alpha nbsp is called its multiplicity Let A exp a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp so that G KAK The restriction of the Killing form defines an inner product on p displaystyle mathfrak p nbsp and hence a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp which allows a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp to be identified with a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp With respect to this inner product the restricted roots S give a root system Its Weyl group can be identified with W N K A C K A displaystyle W N K A C K A nbsp A choice of positive roots defines a Weyl chamber a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp The reduced root system S0 consists of roots a such that a 2 is not a root Defining the spherical functions fl as above for l in a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp the spherical transform of f in Cc K G K is defined byf l G f g f l g d g displaystyle tilde f lambda int G f g varphi lambda g dg nbsp The spherical inversion formula states thatf g a f l f l g c l 2 d l displaystyle f g int mathfrak a tilde f lambda varphi lambda g c lambda 2 d lambda nbsp where Harish Chandra s c function c l is defined by 33 c l c 0 a S 0 2 i l a 0 G i l a 0 G 1 2 1 2 m a 1 i l a 0 G 1 2 1 2 m a m 2 a i l a 0 displaystyle c lambda c 0 cdot prod alpha in Sigma 0 frac 2 i lambda alpha 0 Gamma i lambda alpha 0 Gamma left frac 1 2 left frac 1 2 m alpha 1 i lambda alpha 0 right right Gamma left frac 1 2 left frac 1 2 m alpha m 2 alpha i lambda alpha 0 right right nbsp with a 0 a a 1 a displaystyle alpha 0 alpha alpha 1 alpha nbsp and the constant c0 chosen so that c ir 1 where r 1 2 a S m a a displaystyle rho frac 1 2 sum alpha in Sigma m alpha alpha nbsp The Plancherel theorem for spherical functions states that the mapW f f L 2 K G K L 2 a c l 2 d l displaystyle W f mapsto tilde f L 2 K backslash G K rightarrow L 2 mathfrak a c lambda 2 d lambda nbsp is unitary and transforms convolution by f L 1 K G K displaystyle f in L 1 K backslash G K nbsp into multiplication by f displaystyle tilde f nbsp Harish Chandra s spherical function expansion editSince G KAK functions on G K that are invariant under K can be identified with functions on A and hence a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp that are invariant under the Weyl group W In particular since the Laplacian D on G K commutes with the action of G it defines a second order differential operator L on a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp invariant under W called the radial part of the Laplacian In general if X is in a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp it defines a first order differential operator or vector field byX f y d d t f y t X t 0 displaystyle Xf y left frac d dt f y tX right t 0 nbsp L can be expressed in terms of these operators by the formula 34 L D a a gt 0 m a coth a A a displaystyle L Delta mathfrak a sum alpha gt 0 m alpha coth alpha A alpha nbsp where Aa in a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp is defined by A a X a X displaystyle A alpha X alpha X nbsp and D a X i 2 displaystyle Delta mathfrak a sum X i 2 nbsp is the Laplacian on a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp corresponding to any choice of orthonormal basis Xi ThusL L 0 a gt 0 m a coth a 1 A a displaystyle L L 0 sum alpha gt 0 m alpha coth alpha 1 A alpha nbsp where L 0 D a a gt 0 A a displaystyle L 0 Delta mathfrak a sum alpha gt 0 A alpha nbsp so that L can be regarded as a perturbation of the constant coefficient operator L0 Now the spherical function fl is an eigenfunction of the Laplacian D f l l 2 r 2 f l displaystyle Delta varphi lambda left left lambda right 2 left rho right 2 right varphi lambda nbsp and therefore of L when viewed as a W invariant function on a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp Since eil r and its transforms under W are eigenfunctions of L0 with the same eigenvalue it is natural look for a formula for fl in terms of a perturbation seriesf l e i l r m L a m l e m displaystyle f lambda e i lambda rho sum mu in Lambda a mu lambda e mu nbsp with L the cone of all non negative integer combinations of positive roots and the transforms of fl under W The expansion coth x 1 2 m gt 0 e 2 m x displaystyle coth x 1 2 sum m gt 0 e 2mx nbsp leads to a recursive formula for the coefficients am l In particular they are uniquely determined and the series and its derivatives converges absolutely on a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp a fundamental domain for W Remarkably it turns out that fl is also an eigenfunction of the other G invariant differential operators on G K each of which induces a W invariant differential operator on a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp It follows that fl can be expressed in terms as a linear combination of fl and its transforms under W 35 f l s W c s l f s l displaystyle varphi lambda sum s in W c s lambda f s lambda nbsp Here c l is Harish Chandra s c function It describes the asymptotic behaviour of fl in a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp since 36 f l e t X c l e i l r X t displaystyle varphi lambda e t X sim c lambda e i lambda rho Xt nbsp for X in a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp and t gt 0 large Harish Chandra obtained a second integral formula for fl and hence c l using the Bruhat decomposition of G 37 G s W B s B displaystyle G bigcup s in W BsB nbsp where B MAN and the union is disjoint Taking the Coxeter element s0 of W the unique element mapping a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp onto a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp it follows that s N has a dense open orbit G B K M whose complement is a union of cells of strictly smaller dimension and therefore has measure zero It follows that the integral formula for fl initially defined over K Mf l g K M l g k 1 d k displaystyle varphi lambda g int K M lambda gk 1 dk nbsp can be transferred to s N 38 f l e X e i l r s N l n l e X n e X d n displaystyle varphi lambda e X e i lambda rho int sigma N overline lambda n over lambda e X ne X dn nbsp for X in a displaystyle mathfrak a nbsp Sincelim t e t X n e t X 1 displaystyle lim t to infty e tX ne tX 1 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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