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Root system

In mathematics, a root system is a configuration of vectors in a Euclidean space satisfying certain geometrical properties. The concept is fundamental in the theory of Lie groups and Lie algebras, especially the classification and representation theory of semisimple Lie algebras. Since Lie groups (and some analogues such as algebraic groups) and Lie algebras have become important in many parts of mathematics during the twentieth century, the apparently special nature of root systems belies the number of areas in which they are applied. Further, the classification scheme for root systems, by Dynkin diagrams, occurs in parts of mathematics with no overt connection to Lie theory (such as singularity theory). Finally, root systems are important for their own sake, as in spectral graph theory.[1]

Definitions and examples edit

 
The six vectors of the root system A2

As a first example, consider the six vectors in 2-dimensional Euclidean space, R2, as shown in the image at the right; call them roots. These vectors span the whole space. If you consider the line perpendicular to any root, say β, then the reflection of R2 in that line sends any other root, say α, to another root. Moreover, the root to which it is sent equals α + , where n is an integer (in this case, n equals 1). These six vectors satisfy the following definition, and therefore they form a root system; this one is known as A2.

Definition edit

Let E be a finite-dimensional Euclidean vector space, with the standard Euclidean inner product denoted by  . A root system   in E is a finite set of non-zero vectors (called roots) that satisfy the following conditions:[2][3]

  1. The roots span E.
  2. The only scalar multiples of a root   that belong to   are   itself and  .
  3. For every root  , the set   is closed under reflection through the hyperplane perpendicular to  .
  4. (Integrality) If   and   are roots in  , then the projection of   onto the line through   is an integer or half-integer multiple of  .

An equivalent way of writing conditions 3 and 4 is as follows:

  1. For any two roots  , the set   contains the element  
  2. For any two roots  , the number   is an integer.

Some authors only include conditions 1–3 in the definition of a root system.[4] In this context, a root system that also satisfies the integrality condition is known as a crystallographic root system.[5] Other authors omit condition 2; then they call root systems satisfying condition 2 reduced.[6] In this article, all root systems are assumed to be reduced and crystallographic.

In view of property 3, the integrality condition is equivalent to stating that β and its reflection σα(β) differ by an integer multiple of α. Note that the operator

 
defined by property 4 is not an inner product. It is not necessarily symmetric and is linear only in the first argument.
Rank-2 root systems
   
Root system  
   
Root system  
 
   
Root system  
   
Root system  
   
   
Root system  
   
Root system  
   

The rank of a root system Φ is the dimension of E. Two root systems may be combined by regarding the Euclidean spaces they span as mutually orthogonal subspaces of a common Euclidean space. A root system which does not arise from such a combination, such as the systems A2, B2, and G2 pictured to the right, is said to be irreducible.

Two root systems (E1, Φ1) and (E2, Φ2) are called isomorphic if there is an invertible linear transformation E1 → E2 which sends Φ1 to Φ2 such that for each pair of roots, the number   is preserved.[7]

The root lattice of a root system Φ is the Z-submodule of E generated by Φ. It is a lattice in E.

Weyl group edit

 
The Weyl group of the   root system is the symmetry group of an equilateral triangle

The group of isometries of E generated by reflections through hyperplanes associated to the roots of Φ is called the Weyl group of Φ. As it acts faithfully on the finite set Φ, the Weyl group is always finite. The reflection planes are the hyperplanes perpendicular to the roots, indicated for   by dashed lines in the figure below. The Weyl group is the symmetry group of an equilateral triangle, which has six elements. In this case, the Weyl group is not the full symmetry group of the root system (e.g., a 60-degree rotation is a symmetry of the root system but not an element of the Weyl group).

Rank one example edit

There is only one root system of rank 1, consisting of two nonzero vectors  . This root system is called  .

Rank two examples edit

In rank 2 there are four possibilities, corresponding to  , where  .[8] The figure at right shows these possibilities, but with some redundancies:   is isomorphic to   and   is isomorphic to  .

Note that a root system is not determined by the lattice that it generates:   and   both generate a square lattice while   and   both generate a hexagonal lattice.

Whenever Φ is a root system in E, and S is a subspace of E spanned by Ψ = Φ ∩ S, then Ψ is a root system in S. Thus, the exhaustive list of four root systems of rank 2 shows the geometric possibilities for any two roots chosen from a root system of arbitrary rank. In particular, two such roots must meet at an angle of 0, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120, 135, 150, or 180 degrees.

Root systems arising from semisimple Lie algebras edit

If   is a complex semisimple Lie algebra and   is a Cartan subalgebra, we can construct a root system as follows. We say that   is a root of   relative to   if   and there exists some   such that

 
for all  . One can show[9] that there is an inner product for which the set of roots forms a root system. The root system of   is a fundamental tool for analyzing the structure of   and classifying its representations. (See the section below on Root systems and Lie theory.)

History edit

The concept of a root system was originally introduced by Wilhelm Killing around 1889 (in German, Wurzelsystem[10]).[11] He used them in his attempt to classify all simple Lie algebras over the field of complex numbers. Killing originally made a mistake in the classification, listing two exceptional rank 4 root systems, when in fact there is only one, now known as F4. Cartan later corrected this mistake, by showing Killing's two root systems were isomorphic.[12]

Killing investigated the structure of a Lie algebra  , by considering what is now called a Cartan subalgebra  . Then he studied the roots of the characteristic polynomial  , where  . Here a root is considered as a function of  , or indeed as an element of the dual vector space  . This set of roots form a root system inside  , as defined above, where the inner product is the Killing form.[11]

Elementary consequences of the root system axioms edit

 
The integrality condition for   is fulfilled only for β on one of the vertical lines, while the integrality condition for   is fulfilled only for β on one of the red circles. Any β perpendicular to α (on the Y axis) trivially fulfills both with 0, but does not define an irreducible root system.
Modulo reflection, for a given α there are only 5 nontrivial possibilities for β, and 3 possible angles between α and β in a set of simple roots. Subscript letters correspond to the series of root systems for which the given β can serve as the first root and α as the second root (or in F4 as the middle 2 roots).


The cosine of the angle between two roots is constrained to be one-half of the square root of a positive integer. This is because   and   are both integers, by assumption, and

 

Since  , the only possible values for   are   and  , corresponding to angles of 90°, 60° or 120°, 45° or 135°, 30° or 150°, and 0° or 180°. Condition 2 says that no scalar multiples of α other than 1 and −1 can be roots, so 0 or 180°, which would correspond to 2α or −2α, are out. The diagram at right shows that an angle of 60° or 120° corresponds to roots of equal length, while an angle of 45° or 135° corresponds to a length ratio of   and an angle of 30° or 150° corresponds to a length ratio of  .

In summary, here are the only possibilities for each pair of roots.[13]

  • Angle of 90 degrees; in that case, the length ratio is unrestricted.
  • Angle of 60 or 120 degrees, with a length ratio of 1.
  • Angle of 45 or 135 degrees, with a length ratio of  .
  • Angle of 30 or 150 degrees, with a length ratio of  .

Positive roots and simple roots edit

 
The labeled roots are a set of positive roots for the   root system, with   and   being the simple roots

Given a root system   we can always choose (in many ways) a set of positive roots. This is a subset   of   such that

  • For each root   exactly one of the roots  ,   is contained in  .
  • For any two distinct   such that   is a root,  .

If a set of positive roots   is chosen, elements of   are called negative roots. A set of positive roots may be constructed by choosing a hyperplane   not containing any root and setting   to be all the roots lying on a fixed side of  . Furthermore, every set of positive roots arises in this way.[14]

An element of   is called a simple root (also fundamental root) if it cannot be written as the sum of two elements of  . (The set of simple roots is also referred to as a base for  .) The set   of simple roots is a basis of   with the following additional special properties:[15]

  • Every root   is a linear combination of elements of   with integer coefficients.
  • For each  , the coefficients in the previous point are either all non-negative or all non-positive.

For each root system   there are many different choices of the set of positive roots—or, equivalently, of the simple roots—but any two sets of positive roots differ by the action of the Weyl group.[16]

Dual root system, coroots, and integral elements edit

The dual root system edit

If Φ is a root system in E, the coroot α of a root α is defined by

 

The set of coroots also forms a root system Φ in E, called the dual root system (or sometimes inverse root system). By definition, α∨ ∨ = α, so that Φ is the dual root system of Φ. The lattice in E spanned by Φ is called the coroot lattice. Both Φ and Φ have the same Weyl group W and, for s in W,

 

If Δ is a set of simple roots for Φ, then Δ is a set of simple roots for Φ.[17]

In the classification described below, the root systems of type   and   along with the exceptional root systems   are all self-dual, meaning that the dual root system is isomorphic to the original root system. By contrast, the   and   root systems are dual to one another, but not isomorphic (except when  ).

Integral elements edit

A vector   in E is called integral[18] if its inner product with each coroot is an integer:

 
Since the set of   with   forms a base for the dual root system, to verify that   is integral, it suffices to check the above condition for  .

The set of integral elements is called the weight lattice associated to the given root system. This term comes from the representation theory of semisimple Lie algebras, where the integral elements form the possible weights of finite-dimensional representations.

The definition of a root system guarantees that the roots themselves are integral elements. Thus, every integer linear combination of roots is also integral. In most cases, however, there will be integral elements that are not integer combinations of roots. That is to say, in general the weight lattice does not coincide with the root lattice.

Classification of root systems by Dynkin diagrams edit

 
Pictures of all the connected Dynkin diagrams

A root system is irreducible if it cannot be partitioned into the union of two proper subsets  , such that   for all   and   .

Irreducible root systems correspond to certain graphs, the Dynkin diagrams named after Eugene Dynkin. The classification of these graphs is a simple matter of combinatorics, and induces a classification of irreducible root systems.

Constructing the Dynkin diagram edit

Given a root system, select a set Δ of simple roots as in the preceding section. The vertices of the associated Dynkin diagram correspond to the roots in Δ. Edges are drawn between vertices as follows, according to the angles. (Note that the angle between simple roots is always at least 90 degrees.)

  • No edge if the vectors are orthogonal,
  • An undirected single edge if they make an angle of 120 degrees,
  • A directed double edge if they make an angle of 135 degrees, and
  • A directed triple edge if they make an angle of 150 degrees.

The term "directed edge" means that double and triple edges are marked with an arrow pointing toward the shorter vector. (Thinking of the arrow as a "greater than" sign makes it clear which way the arrow is supposed to point.)

Note that by the elementary properties of roots noted above, the rules for creating the Dynkin diagram can also be described as follows. No edge if the roots are orthogonal; for nonorthogonal roots, a single, double, or triple edge according to whether the length ratio of the longer to shorter is 1,  ,  . In the case of the   root system for example, there are two simple roots at an angle of 150 degrees (with a length ratio of  ). Thus, the Dynkin diagram has two vertices joined by a triple edge, with an arrow pointing from the vertex associated to the longer root to the other vertex. (In this case, the arrow is a bit redundant, since the diagram is equivalent whichever way the arrow goes.)

Classifying root systems edit

Although a given root system has more than one possible set of simple roots, the Weyl group acts transitively on such choices.[19] Consequently, the Dynkin diagram is independent of the choice of simple roots; it is determined by the root system itself. Conversely, given two root systems with the same Dynkin diagram, one can match up roots, starting with the roots in the base, and show that the systems are in fact the same.[20]

Thus the problem of classifying root systems reduces to the problem of classifying possible Dynkin diagrams. A root systems is irreducible if and only if its Dynkin diagrams is connected.[21] The possible connected diagrams are as indicated in the figure. The subscripts indicate the number of vertices in the diagram (and hence the rank of the corresponding irreducible root system).

If   is a root system, the Dynkin diagram for the dual root system   is obtained from the Dynkin diagram of   by keeping all the same vertices and edges, but reversing the directions of all arrows. Thus, we can see from their Dynkin diagrams that   and   are dual to each other.

Weyl chambers and the Weyl group edit

 
The shaded region is the fundamental Weyl chamber for the base  

If   is a root system, we may consider the hyperplane perpendicular to each root  . Recall that   denotes the reflection about the hyperplane and that the Weyl group is the group of transformations of   generated by all the  's. The complement of the set of hyperplanes is disconnected, and each connected component is called a Weyl chamber. If we have fixed a particular set Δ of simple roots, we may define the fundamental Weyl chamber associated to Δ as the set of points   such that   for all  .

Since the reflections   preserve  , they also preserve the set of hyperplanes perpendicular to the roots. Thus, each Weyl group element permutes the Weyl chambers.

The figure illustrates the case of the   root system. The "hyperplanes" (in this case, one dimensional) orthogonal to the roots are indicated by dashed lines. The six 60-degree sectors are the Weyl chambers and the shaded region is the fundamental Weyl chamber associated to the indicated base.

A basic general theorem about Weyl chambers is this:[22]

Theorem: The Weyl group acts freely and transitively on the Weyl chambers. Thus, the order of the Weyl group is equal to the number of Weyl chambers.

In the   case, for example, the Weyl group has six elements and there are six Weyl chambers.

A related result is this one:[23]

Theorem: Fix a Weyl chamber  . Then for all  , the Weyl-orbit of   contains exactly one point in the closure   of  .

Root systems and Lie theory edit

Irreducible root systems classify a number of related objects in Lie theory, notably the following:

In each case, the roots are non-zero weights of the adjoint representation.

We now give a brief indication of how irreducible root systems classify simple Lie algebras over  , following the arguments in Humphreys.[24] A preliminary result says that a semisimple Lie algebra is simple if and only if the associated root system is irreducible.[25] We thus restrict attention to irreducible root systems and simple Lie algebras.

  • First, we must establish that for each simple algebra   there is only one root system. This assertion follows from the result that the Cartan subalgebra of   is unique up to automorphism,[26] from which it follows that any two Cartan subalgebras give isomorphic root systems.
  • Next, we need to show that for each irreducible root system, there can be at most one Lie algebra, that is, that the root system determines the Lie algebra up to isomorphism.[27]
  • Finally, we must show that for each irreducible root system, there is an associated simple Lie algebra. This claim is obvious for the root systems of type A, B, C, and D, for which the associated Lie algebras are the classical Lie algebras. It is then possible to analyze the exceptional algebras in a case-by-case fashion. Alternatively, one can develop a systematic procedure for building a Lie algebra from a root system, using Serre's relations.[28]

For connections between the exceptional root systems and their Lie groups and Lie algebras see E8, E7, E6, F4, and G2.

Properties of the irreducible root systems edit

      I D  
An (n ≥ 1) n(n + 1)     n + 1 (n + 1)!
Bn (n ≥ 2) 2n2 2n 2 2 2n n!
Cn (n ≥ 3) 2n2 2n(n − 1) 2n−1 2 2n n!
Dn (n ≥ 4) 2n(n − 1)     4 2n−1 n!
E6 72     3 51840
E7 126     2 2903040
E8 240     1 696729600
F4 48 24 4 1 1152
G2 12 6 3 1 12

Irreducible root systems are named according to their corresponding connected Dynkin diagrams. There are four infinite families (An, Bn, Cn, and Dn, called the classical root systems) and five exceptional cases (the exceptional root systems). The subscript indicates the rank of the root system.

In an irreducible root system there can be at most two values for the length (αα)1/2, corresponding to short and long roots. If all roots have the same length they are taken to be long by definition and the root system is said to be simply laced; this occurs in the cases A, D and E. Any two roots of the same length lie in the same orbit of the Weyl group. In the non-simply laced cases B, C, G and F, the root lattice is spanned by the short roots and the long roots span a sublattice, invariant under the Weyl group, equal to r2/2 times the coroot lattice, where r is the length of a long root.

In the adjacent table, |Φ<| denotes the number of short roots, I denotes the index in the root lattice of the sublattice generated by long roots, D denotes the determinant of the Cartan matrix, and |W| denotes the order of the Weyl group.

Explicit construction of the irreducible root systems edit

An edit

 
Model of the   root system in the Zometool system
Simple roots in A3
e1 e2 e3 e4
α1 1 −1 0 0
α2 0 1 −1 0
α3 0 0 1 −1
     

Let E be the subspace of Rn+1 for which the coordinates sum to 0, and let Φ be the set of vectors in E of length 2 and which are integer vectors, i.e. have integer coordinates in Rn+1. Such a vector must have all but two coordinates equal to 0, one coordinate equal to 1, and one equal to −1, so there are n2 + n roots in all. One choice of simple roots expressed in the standard basis is αi = eiei+1 for 1 ≤ in.

The reflection σi through the hyperplane perpendicular to αi is the same as permutation of the adjacent ith and (i + 1)th coordinates. Such transpositions generate the full permutation group. For adjacent simple roots, σi(αi+1) = αi+1 + αiσi+1(αi) = αi + αi+1, that is, reflection is equivalent to adding a multiple of 1; but reflection of a simple root perpendicular to a nonadjacent simple root leaves it unchanged, differing by a multiple of 0.

The An root lattice – that is, the lattice generated by the An roots – is most easily described as the set of integer vectors in Rn+1 whose components sum to zero.

The A2 root lattice is the vertex arrangement of the triangular tiling.

The A3 root lattice is known to crystallographers as the face-centered cubic (or cubic close packed) lattice.[29] It is the vertex arrangement of the tetrahedral-octahedral honeycomb.

The A3 root system (as well as the other rank-three root systems) may be modeled in the Zometool Construction set.[30]

In general, the An root lattice is the vertex arrangement of the n-dimensional simplectic honeycomb.

Bn edit

Simple roots in B4
e1 e2 e3 e4
α1  1 −1 0 0
α2 0   1 −1 0
α3 0 0  1 −1
α4 0 0 0  1
       

Let E = Rn, and let Φ consist of all integer vectors in E of length 1 or 2. The total number of roots is 2n2. One choice of simple roots is αi = eiei+1 for 1 ≤ in – 1 (the above choice of simple roots for An−1), and the shorter root αn = en.

The reflection σn through the hyperplane perpendicular to the short root αn is of course simply negation of the nth coordinate. For the long simple root αn−1, σn−1(αn) = αn + αn−1, but for reflection perpendicular to the short root, σn(αn−1) = αn−1 + 2αn, a difference by a multiple of 2 instead of 1.

The Bn root lattice—that is, the lattice generated by the Bn roots—consists of all integer vectors.

B1 is isomorphic to A1 via scaling by 2, and is therefore not a distinct root system.

Cn edit

 
Root system B3, C3, and A3 = D3 as points within a cube and octahedron
Simple roots in C4
e1 e2 e3 e4
α1  1 −1 0 0
α2 0  1 −1 0
α3 0 0  1 −1
α4 0 0 0  2
       

Let E = Rn, and let Φ consist of all integer vectors in E of length 2 together with all vectors of the form 2λ, where λ is an integer vector of length 1. The total number of roots is 2n2. One choice of simple roots is: αi = eiei+1, for 1 ≤ in − 1 (the above choice of simple roots for An−1), and the longer root αn = 2en. The reflection σn(αn−1) = αn−1 + αn, but σn−1(αn) = αn + 2αn−1.

The Cn root lattice—that is, the lattice generated by the Cn roots—consists of all integer vectors whose components sum to an even integer.

C2 is isomorphic to B2 via scaling by 2 and a 45 degree rotation, and is therefore not a distinct root system.

Dn edit

Simple roots in D4
e1 e2 e3 e4
α1  1 −1 0 0
α2 0  1 −1 0
α3 0 0  1 −1
α4 0 0  1  1
 

Let E = Rn, and let Φ consist of all integer vectors in E of length 2. The total number of roots is 2n(n − 1). One choice of simple roots is αi = eiei+1 for 1 ≤ in − 1 (the above choice of simple roots for An−1) together with αn = en−1 + en.

Reflection through the hyperplane perpendicular to αn is the same as transposing and negating the adjacent n-th and (n − 1)-th coordinates. Any simple root and its reflection perpendicular to another simple root differ by a multiple of 0 or 1 of the second root, not by any greater multiple.

The Dn root lattice – that is, the lattice generated by the Dn roots – consists of all integer vectors whose components sum to an even integer. This is the same as the Cn root lattice.

The Dn roots are expressed as the vertices of a rectified n-orthoplex, Coxeter–Dynkin diagram:     ...    . The 2n(n − 1) vertices exist in the middle of the edges of the n-orthoplex.

D3 coincides with A3, and is therefore not a distinct root system. The twelve D3 root vectors are expressed as the vertices of    , a lower symmetry construction of the cuboctahedron.

D4 has additional symmetry called triality. The twenty-four D4 root vectors are expressed as the vertices of      , a lower symmetry construction of the 24-cell.

E6, E7, E8 edit

 
72 vertices of 122 represent the root vectors of E6
(Green nodes are doubled in this E6 Coxeter plane projection)
 
126 vertices of 231 represent the root vectors of E7
 
240 vertices of 421 represent the root vectors of E8
     
  • The E8 root system is any set of vectors in R8 that is congruent to the following set:
     

The root system has 240 roots. The set just listed is the set of vectors of length 2 in the E8 root lattice, also known simply as the E8 lattice or Γ8. This is the set of points in R8 such that:

  1. all the coordinates are integers or all the coordinates are half-integers (a mixture of integers and half-integers is not allowed), and
  2. the sum of the eight coordinates is an even integer.

Thus,

 
  • The root system E7 is the set of vectors in E8 that are perpendicular to a fixed root in E8. The root system E7 has 126 roots.
  • The root system E6 is not the set of vectors in E7 that are perpendicular to a fixed root in E7, indeed, one obtains D6 that way. However, E6 is the subsystem of E8 perpendicular to two suitably chosen roots of E8. The root system E6 has 72 roots.
Simple roots in E8: even coordinates
1 −1 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 1 −1 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 1 −1 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 1 −1 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 1 −1 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 1 −1 0
0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0
−1/2 −1/2 −1/2 −1/2 −1/2 −1/2 −1/2 −1/2

An alternative description of the E8 lattice which is sometimes convenient is as the set Γ'8 of all points in R8 such that

  • all the coordinates are integers and the sum of the coordinates is even, or
  • all the coordinates are half-integers and the sum of the coordinates is odd.

The lattices Γ8 and Γ'8 are isomorphic; one may pass from one to the other by changing the signs of any odd number of coordinates. The lattice Γ8 is sometimes called the even coordinate system for E8 while the lattice Γ'8 is called the odd coordinate system.

One choice of simple roots for E8 in the even coordinate system with rows ordered by node order in the alternate (non-canonical) Dynkin diagrams (above) is:

αi = eiei+1, for 1 ≤ i ≤ 6, and
α7 = e7 + e6

(the above choice of simple roots for D7) along with

 
Simple roots in E8: odd coordinates
1 −1 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 1 −1 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 1 −1 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 1 −1 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 1 −1 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 1 −1 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 1 −1
−1/2 −1/2 −1/2 −1/2 −1/2  1/2  1/2  1/2

One choice of simple roots for E8 in the odd coordinate system with rows ordered by node order in alternate (non-canonical) Dynkin diagrams (above) is

αi = eiei+1, for 1 ≤ i ≤ 7

(the above choice of simple roots for A7) along with

α8 = β5, where
βj =  

(Using β3 would give an isomorphic result. Using β1,7 or β2,6 would simply give A8 or D8. As for β4, its coordinates sum to 0, and the same is true for α1...7, so they span only the 7-dimensional subspace for which the coordinates sum to 0; in fact −2β4 has coordinates (1,2,3,4,3,2,1) in the basis (αi).)

Since perpendicularity to α1 means that the first two coordinates are equal, E7 is then the subset of E8 where the first two coordinates are equal, and similarly E6 is the subset of E8 where the first three coordinates are equal. This facilitates explicit definitions of E7 and E6 as

E7 = {αZ7 ∪ (Z+1/2)7 : Σαi2 + α12 = 2, Σαi + α1 ∈ 2Z},
E6 = {αZ6 ∪ (Z+1/2)6 : Σαi2 + 2α12 = 2, Σαi + 2α1 ∈ 2Z}

Note that deleting α1 and then α2 gives sets of simple roots for E7 and E6. However, these sets of simple roots are in different E7 and E6 subspaces of E8 than the ones written above, since they are not orthogonal to α1 or α2.

F4 edit

Simple roots in F4
e1 e2 e3 e4
α1 1 −1 0 0
α2 0 1 −1 0
α3 0 0 1 0
α4 −1/2 −1/2 −1/2 −1/2
       
 
48-root vectors of F4, defined by vertices of the 24-cell and its dual, viewed in the Coxeter plane

For F4, let E = R4, and let Φ denote the set of vectors α of length 1 or 2 such that the coordinates of 2α are all integers and are either all even or all odd. There are 48 roots in this system. One choice of simple roots is: the choice of simple roots given above for B3, plus  .

The F4 root lattice—that is, the lattice generated by the F4 root system—is the set of points in R4 such that either all the coordinates are integers or all the coordinates are half-integers (a mixture of integers and half-integers is not allowed). This lattice is isomorphic to the lattice of Hurwitz quaternions.

G2 edit

Simple roots in G2
e1 e2 e3
α1 1  −1   0
β −1 2 −1
   

The root system G2 has 12 roots, which form the vertices of a hexagram. See the picture above.

One choice of simple roots is (α1, β = α2α1) where αi = eiei+1 for i = 1, 2 is the above choice of simple roots for A2.

The G2 root lattice—that is, the lattice generated by the G2 roots—is the same as the A2 root lattice.

The root poset edit

 
Hasse diagram of E6 root poset with edge labels identifying added simple root position

The set of positive roots is naturally ordered by saying that   if and only if   is a nonnegative linear combination of simple roots. This poset is graded by  , and has many remarkable combinatorial properties, one of them being that one can determine the degrees of the fundamental invariants of the corresponding Weyl group from this poset.[31] The Hasse graph is a visualization of the ordering of the root poset.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Cvetković, Dragoš (2002). "Graphs with least eigenvalue −2; a historical survey and recent developments in maximal exceptional graphs". Linear Algebra and Its Applications. 356 (1–3): 189–210. doi:10.1016/S0024-3795(02)00377-4.
  2. ^ Bourbaki, Ch.VI, Section 1
  3. ^ Humphreys 1972, p. 42
  4. ^ Humphreys 1992, p. 6
  5. ^ Humphreys 1992, p. 39
  6. ^ Humphreys 1992, p. 41
  7. ^ Humphreys 1972, p. 43
  8. ^ Hall 2015 Proposition 8.8
  9. ^ Hall 2015, Section 7.5
  10. ^ Killing 1889
  11. ^ a b Bourbaki 1998, p. 270
  12. ^ Coleman 1989, p. 34
  13. ^ Hall 2015 Proposition 8.6
  14. ^ Hall 2015, Theorems 8.16 and 8.17
  15. ^ Hall 2015, Theorem 8.16
  16. ^ Hall 2015, Proposition 8.28
  17. ^ Hall 2015, Proposition 8.18
  18. ^ Hall 2015, Section 8.7
  19. ^ This follows from Hall 2015, Proposition 8.23
  20. ^ Hall 2015, Proposition 8.32
  21. ^ Hall 2015, Proposition 8.23
  22. ^ Hall 2015, Propositions 8.23 and 8.27
  23. ^ Hall 2015, Proposition 8.29
  24. ^ See various parts of Chapters III, IV, and V of Humphreys 1972, culminating in Section 19 in Chapter V
  25. ^ Hall 2015, Theorem 7.35
  26. ^ Humphreys 1972, Section 16
  27. ^ Humphreys 1972, Part (b) of Theorem 18.4
  28. ^ Humphreys 1972 Section 18.3 and Theorem 18.4
  29. ^ Conway, John; Sloane, Neil J.A. (1998). "Section 6.3". Sphere Packings, Lattices and Groups. Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-98585-5.
  30. ^ Hall 2015 Section 8.9
  31. ^ Humphreys 1992, Theorem 3.20

References edit

  • Adams, J.F. (1983), Lectures on Lie groups, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0-226-00530-5
  • Bourbaki, Nicolas (2002), Lie groups and Lie algebras, Chapters 4–6 (translated from the 1968 French original by Andrew Pressley), Elements of Mathematics, Springer-Verlag, ISBN 3-540-42650-7. The classic reference for root systems.
  • Bourbaki, Nicolas (1998). Elements of the History of Mathematics. Springer. ISBN 3540647678.
  • Coleman, A.J. (Summer 1989), "The greatest mathematical paper of all time", The Mathematical Intelligencer, 11 (3): 29–38, doi:10.1007/bf03025189, S2CID 35487310
  • Hall, Brian C. (2015), Lie groups, Lie algebras, and representations: An elementary introduction, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 222 (2nd ed.), Springer, ISBN 978-3319134666
  • Humphreys, James (1972). Introduction to Lie algebras and Representation Theory. Springer. ISBN 0387900535.
  • Humphreys, James (1992). Reflection Groups and Coxeter Groups. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521436133.
  • Killing, Wilhelm (June 1888). . Mathematische Annalen. 31 (2): 252–290. doi:10.1007/BF01211904. S2CID 120501356. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05.
    • — (March 1888). "Part 2". Math. Ann. 33 (1): 1–48. doi:10.1007/BF01444109. S2CID 124198118.
    • — (March 1889). . Math. Ann. 34 (1): 57–122. doi:10.1007/BF01446792. S2CID 179177899. Archived from the original on 2015-02-21.
    • — (June 1890). "Part 4". Math. Ann. 36 (2): 161–189. doi:10.1007/BF01207837. S2CID 179178061.
  • Kac, Victor G. (1990). Infinite-Dimensional Lie Algebras (3rd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-46693-6.
  • Springer, T.A. (1998). Linear Algebraic Groups (2nd ed.). Birkhäuser. ISBN 0817640215.

Further reading edit

  • Dynkin, E.B. (1947). "The structure of semi-simple algebras". Uspekhi Mat. Nauk. 2 (in Russian). 4 (20): 59–127. MR 0027752.

External links edit

root, system, this, article, about, root, systems, mathematics, plant, root, systems, root, mathematics, root, system, configuration, vectors, euclidean, space, satisfying, certain, geometrical, properties, concept, fundamental, theory, groups, algebras, espec. This article is about root systems in mathematics For plant root systems see Root In mathematics a root system is a configuration of vectors in a Euclidean space satisfying certain geometrical properties The concept is fundamental in the theory of Lie groups and Lie algebras especially the classification and representation theory of semisimple Lie algebras Since Lie groups and some analogues such as algebraic groups and Lie algebras have become important in many parts of mathematics during the twentieth century the apparently special nature of root systems belies the number of areas in which they are applied Further the classification scheme for root systems by Dynkin diagrams occurs in parts of mathematics with no overt connection to Lie theory such as singularity theory Finally root systems are important for their own sake as in spectral graph theory 1 Contents 1 Definitions and examples 1 1 Definition 1 2 Weyl group 1 3 Rank one example 1 4 Rank two examples 1 5 Root systems arising from semisimple Lie algebras 2 History 3 Elementary consequences of the root system axioms 4 Positive roots and simple roots 5 Dual root system coroots and integral elements 5 1 The dual root system 5 2 Integral elements 6 Classification of root systems by Dynkin diagrams 6 1 Constructing the Dynkin diagram 6 2 Classifying root systems 7 Weyl chambers and the Weyl group 8 Root systems and Lie theory 9 Properties of the irreducible root systems 10 Explicit construction of the irreducible root systems 10 1 An 10 2 Bn 10 3 Cn 10 4 Dn 10 5 E6 E7 E8 10 6 F4 10 7 G2 11 The root poset 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksDefinitions and examples edit nbsp The six vectors of the root system A2As a first example consider the six vectors in 2 dimensional Euclidean space R2 as shown in the image at the right call them roots These vectors span the whole space If you consider the line perpendicular to any root say b then the reflection of R2 in that line sends any other root say a to another root Moreover the root to which it is sent equals a nb where n is an integer in this case n equals 1 These six vectors satisfy the following definition and therefore they form a root system this one is known as A2 Definition edit Let E be a finite dimensional Euclidean vector space with the standard Euclidean inner product denoted by displaystyle cdot cdot nbsp A root system F displaystyle Phi nbsp in E is a finite set of non zero vectors called roots that satisfy the following conditions 2 3 The roots span E The only scalar multiples of a root a F displaystyle alpha in Phi nbsp that belong to F displaystyle Phi nbsp are a displaystyle alpha nbsp itself and a displaystyle alpha nbsp For every root a F displaystyle alpha in Phi nbsp the set F displaystyle Phi nbsp is closed under reflection through the hyperplane perpendicular to a displaystyle alpha nbsp Integrality If a displaystyle alpha nbsp and b displaystyle beta nbsp are roots in F displaystyle Phi nbsp then the projection of b displaystyle beta nbsp onto the line through a displaystyle alpha nbsp is an integer or half integer multiple of a displaystyle alpha nbsp An equivalent way of writing conditions 3 and 4 is as follows For any two roots a b F displaystyle alpha beta in Phi nbsp the set F displaystyle Phi nbsp contains the element s a b b 2 a b a a a displaystyle sigma alpha beta beta 2 frac alpha beta alpha alpha alpha nbsp For any two roots a b F displaystyle alpha beta in Phi nbsp the number b a 2 a b a a displaystyle langle beta alpha rangle 2 frac alpha beta alpha alpha nbsp is an integer Some authors only include conditions 1 3 in the definition of a root system 4 In this context a root system that also satisfies the integrality condition is known as a crystallographic root system 5 Other authors omit condition 2 then they call root systems satisfying condition 2 reduced 6 In this article all root systems are assumed to be reduced and crystallographic In view of property 3 the integrality condition is equivalent to stating that b and its reflection sa b differ by an integer multiple of a Note that the operator F F Z displaystyle langle cdot cdot rangle colon Phi times Phi to mathbb Z nbsp defined by property 4 is not an inner product It is not necessarily symmetric and is linear only in the first argument Rank 2 root systems nbsp nbsp Root system A 1 A 1 displaystyle A 1 times A 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Root system D 2 displaystyle D 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Root system A 2 displaystyle A 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Root system G 2 displaystyle G 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Root system B 2 displaystyle B 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Root system C 2 displaystyle C 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp The rank of a root system F is the dimension of E Two root systems may be combined by regarding the Euclidean spaces they span as mutually orthogonal subspaces of a common Euclidean space A root system which does not arise from such a combination such as the systems A2 B2 and G2 pictured to the right is said to be irreducible Two root systems E1 F1 and E2 F2 are called isomorphic if there is an invertible linear transformation E1 E2 which sends F1 to F2 such that for each pair of roots the number x y displaystyle langle x y rangle nbsp is preserved 7 The root lattice of a root system F is the Z submodule of E generated by F It is a lattice in E Weyl group edit Main article Weyl group nbsp The Weyl group of the A 2 displaystyle A 2 nbsp root system is the symmetry group of an equilateral triangleThe group of isometries of E generated by reflections through hyperplanes associated to the roots of F is called the Weyl group of F As it acts faithfully on the finite set F the Weyl group is always finite The reflection planes are the hyperplanes perpendicular to the roots indicated for A 2 displaystyle A 2 nbsp by dashed lines in the figure below The Weyl group is the symmetry group of an equilateral triangle which has six elements In this case the Weyl group is not the full symmetry group of the root system e g a 60 degree rotation is a symmetry of the root system but not an element of the Weyl group Rank one example edit There is only one root system of rank 1 consisting of two nonzero vectors a a displaystyle alpha alpha nbsp This root system is called A 1 displaystyle A 1 nbsp Rank two examples edit In rank 2 there are four possibilities corresponding to s a b b n a displaystyle sigma alpha beta beta n alpha nbsp where n 0 1 2 3 displaystyle n 0 1 2 3 nbsp 8 The figure at right shows these possibilities but with some redundancies A 1 A 1 displaystyle A 1 times A 1 nbsp is isomorphic to D 2 displaystyle D 2 nbsp and B 2 displaystyle B 2 nbsp is isomorphic to C 2 displaystyle C 2 nbsp Note that a root system is not determined by the lattice that it generates A 1 A 1 displaystyle A 1 times A 1 nbsp and B 2 displaystyle B 2 nbsp both generate a square lattice while A 2 displaystyle A 2 nbsp and G 2 displaystyle G 2 nbsp both generate a hexagonal lattice Whenever F is a root system in E and S is a subspace of E spanned by PS F S then PS is a root system in S Thus the exhaustive list of four root systems of rank 2 shows the geometric possibilities for any two roots chosen from a root system of arbitrary rank In particular two such roots must meet at an angle of 0 30 45 60 90 120 135 150 or 180 degrees Root systems arising from semisimple Lie algebras edit See also Semisimple Lie algebra Cartan subalgebras and root systems and Root system of a semi simple Lie algebra If g displaystyle mathfrak g nbsp is a complex semisimple Lie algebra and h displaystyle mathfrak h nbsp is a Cartan subalgebra we can construct a root system as follows We say that a h displaystyle alpha in mathfrak h nbsp is a root of g displaystyle mathfrak g nbsp relative to h displaystyle mathfrak h nbsp if a 0 displaystyle alpha neq 0 nbsp and there exists some X 0 g displaystyle X neq 0 in mathfrak g nbsp such that H X a H X displaystyle H X alpha H X nbsp for all H h displaystyle H in mathfrak h nbsp One can show 9 that there is an inner product for which the set of roots forms a root system The root system of g displaystyle mathfrak g nbsp is a fundamental tool for analyzing the structure of g displaystyle mathfrak g nbsp and classifying its representations See the section below on Root systems and Lie theory History editThe concept of a root system was originally introduced by Wilhelm Killing around 1889 in German Wurzelsystem 10 11 He used them in his attempt to classify all simple Lie algebras over the field of complex numbers Killing originally made a mistake in the classification listing two exceptional rank 4 root systems when in fact there is only one now known as F4 Cartan later corrected this mistake by showing Killing s two root systems were isomorphic 12 Killing investigated the structure of a Lie algebra L displaystyle L nbsp by considering what is now called a Cartan subalgebra h displaystyle mathfrak h nbsp Then he studied the roots of the characteristic polynomial det ad L x t displaystyle det operatorname ad L x t nbsp where x h displaystyle x in mathfrak h nbsp Here a root is considered as a function of h displaystyle mathfrak h nbsp or indeed as an element of the dual vector space h displaystyle mathfrak h nbsp This set of roots form a root system inside h displaystyle mathfrak h nbsp as defined above where the inner product is the Killing form 11 Elementary consequences of the root system axioms edit nbsp The integrality condition for b a displaystyle langle beta alpha rangle nbsp is fulfilled only for b on one of the vertical lines while the integrality condition for a b displaystyle langle alpha beta rangle nbsp is fulfilled only for b on one of the red circles Any b perpendicular to a on the Y axis trivially fulfills both with 0 but does not define an irreducible root system Modulo reflection for a given a there are only 5 nontrivial possibilities for b and 3 possible angles between a and b in a set of simple roots Subscript letters correspond to the series of root systems for which the given b can serve as the first root and a as the second root or in F4 as the middle 2 roots The cosine of the angle between two roots is constrained to be one half of the square root of a positive integer This is because b a displaystyle langle beta alpha rangle nbsp and a b displaystyle langle alpha beta rangle nbsp are both integers by assumption and b a a b 2 a b a a 2 a b b b 4 a b 2 a 2 b 2 4 cos 2 8 2 cos 8 2 Z displaystyle begin aligned langle beta alpha rangle langle alpha beta rangle amp 2 frac alpha beta alpha alpha cdot 2 frac alpha beta beta beta amp 4 frac alpha beta 2 vert alpha vert 2 vert beta vert 2 amp 4 cos 2 theta 2 cos theta 2 in mathbb Z end aligned nbsp Since 2 cos 8 2 2 displaystyle 2 cos theta in 2 2 nbsp the only possible values for cos 8 displaystyle cos theta nbsp are 0 1 2 2 2 3 2 displaystyle 0 pm tfrac 1 2 pm tfrac sqrt 2 2 pm tfrac sqrt 3 2 nbsp and 4 2 1 displaystyle pm tfrac sqrt 4 2 pm 1 nbsp corresponding to angles of 90 60 or 120 45 or 135 30 or 150 and 0 or 180 Condition 2 says that no scalar multiples of a other than 1 and 1 can be roots so 0 or 180 which would correspond to 2a or 2a are out The diagram at right shows that an angle of 60 or 120 corresponds to roots of equal length while an angle of 45 or 135 corresponds to a length ratio of 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 nbsp and an angle of 30 or 150 corresponds to a length ratio of 3 displaystyle sqrt 3 nbsp In summary here are the only possibilities for each pair of roots 13 Angle of 90 degrees in that case the length ratio is unrestricted Angle of 60 or 120 degrees with a length ratio of 1 Angle of 45 or 135 degrees with a length ratio of 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 nbsp Angle of 30 or 150 degrees with a length ratio of 3 displaystyle sqrt 3 nbsp Positive roots and simple roots edit nbsp The labeled roots are a set of positive roots for the G 2 displaystyle G 2 nbsp root system with a 1 displaystyle alpha 1 nbsp and a 2 displaystyle alpha 2 nbsp being the simple rootsGiven a root system F displaystyle Phi nbsp we can always choose in many ways a set of positive roots This is a subset F displaystyle Phi nbsp of F displaystyle Phi nbsp such that For each root a F displaystyle alpha in Phi nbsp exactly one of the roots a displaystyle alpha nbsp a displaystyle alpha nbsp is contained in F displaystyle Phi nbsp For any two distinct a b F displaystyle alpha beta in Phi nbsp such that a b displaystyle alpha beta nbsp is a root a b F displaystyle alpha beta in Phi nbsp If a set of positive roots F displaystyle Phi nbsp is chosen elements of F displaystyle Phi nbsp are called negative roots A set of positive roots may be constructed by choosing a hyperplane V displaystyle V nbsp not containing any root and setting F displaystyle Phi nbsp to be all the roots lying on a fixed side of V displaystyle V nbsp Furthermore every set of positive roots arises in this way 14 An element of F displaystyle Phi nbsp is called a simple root also fundamental root if it cannot be written as the sum of two elements of F displaystyle Phi nbsp The set of simple roots is also referred to as a base for F displaystyle Phi nbsp The set D displaystyle Delta nbsp of simple roots is a basis of E displaystyle E nbsp with the following additional special properties 15 Every root a F displaystyle alpha in Phi nbsp is a linear combination of elements of D displaystyle Delta nbsp with integer coefficients For each a F displaystyle alpha in Phi nbsp the coefficients in the previous point are either all non negative or all non positive For each root system F displaystyle Phi nbsp there are many different choices of the set of positive roots or equivalently of the simple roots but any two sets of positive roots differ by the action of the Weyl group 16 Dual root system coroots and integral elements editSee also Langlands dual group The dual root system edit If F is a root system in E the coroot a of a root a is defined bya 2 a a a displaystyle alpha vee 2 over alpha alpha alpha nbsp The set of coroots also forms a root system F in E called the dual root system or sometimes inverse root system By definition a a so that F is the dual root system of F The lattice in E spanned by F is called the coroot lattice Both F and F have the same Weyl group W and for s in W s a s a displaystyle s alpha vee s alpha vee nbsp If D is a set of simple roots for F then D is a set of simple roots for F 17 In the classification described below the root systems of type A n displaystyle A n nbsp and D n displaystyle D n nbsp along with the exceptional root systems E 6 E 7 E 8 F 4 G 2 displaystyle E 6 E 7 E 8 F 4 G 2 nbsp are all self dual meaning that the dual root system is isomorphic to the original root system By contrast the B n displaystyle B n nbsp and C n displaystyle C n nbsp root systems are dual to one another but not isomorphic except when n 2 displaystyle n 2 nbsp Integral elements edit See also Weight representation theory Weights in the representation theory of semisimple Lie algebras A vector l displaystyle lambda nbsp in E is called integral 18 if its inner product with each coroot is an integer 2 l a a a Z a F displaystyle 2 frac lambda alpha alpha alpha in mathbb Z quad alpha in Phi nbsp Since the set of a displaystyle alpha vee nbsp with a D displaystyle alpha in Delta nbsp forms a base for the dual root system to verify that l displaystyle lambda nbsp is integral it suffices to check the above condition for a D displaystyle alpha in Delta nbsp The set of integral elements is called the weight lattice associated to the given root system This term comes from the representation theory of semisimple Lie algebras where the integral elements form the possible weights of finite dimensional representations The definition of a root system guarantees that the roots themselves are integral elements Thus every integer linear combination of roots is also integral In most cases however there will be integral elements that are not integer combinations of roots That is to say in general the weight lattice does not coincide with the root lattice Classification of root systems by Dynkin diagrams editSee also Dynkin diagram nbsp Pictures of all the connected Dynkin diagramsA root system is irreducible if it cannot be partitioned into the union of two proper subsets F F 1 F 2 displaystyle Phi Phi 1 cup Phi 2 nbsp such that a b 0 displaystyle alpha beta 0 nbsp for all a F 1 displaystyle alpha in Phi 1 nbsp and b F 2 displaystyle beta in Phi 2 nbsp Irreducible root systems correspond to certain graphs the Dynkin diagrams named after Eugene Dynkin The classification of these graphs is a simple matter of combinatorics and induces a classification of irreducible root systems Constructing the Dynkin diagram edit Given a root system select a set D of simple roots as in the preceding section The vertices of the associated Dynkin diagram correspond to the roots in D Edges are drawn between vertices as follows according to the angles Note that the angle between simple roots is always at least 90 degrees No edge if the vectors are orthogonal An undirected single edge if they make an angle of 120 degrees A directed double edge if they make an angle of 135 degrees and A directed triple edge if they make an angle of 150 degrees The term directed edge means that double and triple edges are marked with an arrow pointing toward the shorter vector Thinking of the arrow as a greater than sign makes it clear which way the arrow is supposed to point Note that by the elementary properties of roots noted above the rules for creating the Dynkin diagram can also be described as follows No edge if the roots are orthogonal for nonorthogonal roots a single double or triple edge according to whether the length ratio of the longer to shorter is 1 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 nbsp 3 displaystyle sqrt 3 nbsp In the case of the G 2 displaystyle G 2 nbsp root system for example there are two simple roots at an angle of 150 degrees with a length ratio of 3 displaystyle sqrt 3 nbsp Thus the Dynkin diagram has two vertices joined by a triple edge with an arrow pointing from the vertex associated to the longer root to the other vertex In this case the arrow is a bit redundant since the diagram is equivalent whichever way the arrow goes Classifying root systems edit Although a given root system has more than one possible set of simple roots the Weyl group acts transitively on such choices 19 Consequently the Dynkin diagram is independent of the choice of simple roots it is determined by the root system itself Conversely given two root systems with the same Dynkin diagram one can match up roots starting with the roots in the base and show that the systems are in fact the same 20 Thus the problem of classifying root systems reduces to the problem of classifying possible Dynkin diagrams A root systems is irreducible if and only if its Dynkin diagrams is connected 21 The possible connected diagrams are as indicated in the figure The subscripts indicate the number of vertices in the diagram and hence the rank of the corresponding irreducible root system If F displaystyle Phi nbsp is a root system the Dynkin diagram for the dual root system F displaystyle Phi vee nbsp is obtained from the Dynkin diagram of F displaystyle Phi nbsp by keeping all the same vertices and edges but reversing the directions of all arrows Thus we can see from their Dynkin diagrams that B n displaystyle B n nbsp and C n displaystyle C n nbsp are dual to each other Weyl chambers and the Weyl group editSee also Coxeter group Affine Coxeter groups nbsp The shaded region is the fundamental Weyl chamber for the base a 1 a 2 displaystyle alpha 1 alpha 2 nbsp If F E displaystyle Phi subset E nbsp is a root system we may consider the hyperplane perpendicular to each root a displaystyle alpha nbsp Recall that s a displaystyle sigma alpha nbsp denotes the reflection about the hyperplane and that the Weyl group is the group of transformations of E displaystyle E nbsp generated by all the s a displaystyle sigma alpha nbsp s The complement of the set of hyperplanes is disconnected and each connected component is called a Weyl chamber If we have fixed a particular set D of simple roots we may define the fundamental Weyl chamber associated to D as the set of points v E displaystyle v in E nbsp such that a v gt 0 displaystyle alpha v gt 0 nbsp for all a D displaystyle alpha in Delta nbsp Since the reflections s a a F displaystyle sigma alpha alpha in Phi nbsp preserve F displaystyle Phi nbsp they also preserve the set of hyperplanes perpendicular to the roots Thus each Weyl group element permutes the Weyl chambers The figure illustrates the case of the A 2 displaystyle A 2 nbsp root system The hyperplanes in this case one dimensional orthogonal to the roots are indicated by dashed lines The six 60 degree sectors are the Weyl chambers and the shaded region is the fundamental Weyl chamber associated to the indicated base A basic general theorem about Weyl chambers is this 22 Theorem The Weyl group acts freely and transitively on the Weyl chambers Thus the order of the Weyl group is equal to the number of Weyl chambers In the A 2 displaystyle A 2 nbsp case for example the Weyl group has six elements and there are six Weyl chambers A related result is this one 23 Theorem Fix a Weyl chamber C displaystyle C nbsp Then for all v E displaystyle v in E nbsp the Weyl orbit of v displaystyle v nbsp contains exactly one point in the closure C displaystyle bar C nbsp of C displaystyle C nbsp Root systems and Lie theory editIrreducible root systems classify a number of related objects in Lie theory notably the following simple complex Lie algebras see the discussion above on root systems arising from semisimple Lie algebras simply connected complex Lie groups which are simple modulo centers and simply connected compact Lie groups which are simple modulo centers In each case the roots are non zero weights of the adjoint representation We now give a brief indication of how irreducible root systems classify simple Lie algebras over C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp following the arguments in Humphreys 24 A preliminary result says that a semisimple Lie algebra is simple if and only if the associated root system is irreducible 25 We thus restrict attention to irreducible root systems and simple Lie algebras First we must establish that for each simple algebra g displaystyle mathfrak g nbsp there is only one root system This assertion follows from the result that the Cartan subalgebra of g displaystyle mathfrak g nbsp is unique up to automorphism 26 from which it follows that any two Cartan subalgebras give isomorphic root systems Next we need to show that for each irreducible root system there can be at most one Lie algebra that is that the root system determines the Lie algebra up to isomorphism 27 Finally we must show that for each irreducible root system there is an associated simple Lie algebra This claim is obvious for the root systems of type A B C and D for which the associated Lie algebras are the classical Lie algebras It is then possible to analyze the exceptional algebras in a case by case fashion Alternatively one can develop a systematic procedure for building a Lie algebra from a root system using Serre s relations 28 For connections between the exceptional root systems and their Lie groups and Lie algebras see E8 E7 E6 F4 and G2 Properties of the irreducible root systems editF displaystyle Phi nbsp F displaystyle Phi nbsp F lt displaystyle Phi lt nbsp I D W displaystyle W nbsp An n 1 n n 1 n 1 n 1 Bn n 2 2n2 2n 2 2 2n n Cn n 3 2n2 2n n 1 2n 1 2 2n n Dn n 4 2n n 1 4 2n 1 n E6 72 3 51840E7 126 2 2903040E8 240 1 696729600F4 48 24 4 1 1152G2 12 6 3 1 12Irreducible root systems are named according to their corresponding connected Dynkin diagrams There are four infinite families An Bn Cn and Dn called the classical root systems and five exceptional cases the exceptional root systems The subscript indicates the rank of the root system In an irreducible root system there can be at most two values for the length a a 1 2 corresponding to short and long roots If all roots have the same length they are taken to be long by definition and the root system is said to be simply laced this occurs in the cases A D and E Any two roots of the same length lie in the same orbit of the Weyl group In the non simply laced cases B C G and F the root lattice is spanned by the short roots and the long roots span a sublattice invariant under the Weyl group equal to r2 2 times the coroot lattice where r is the length of a long root In the adjacent table F lt denotes the number of short roots I denotes the index in the root lattice of the sublattice generated by long roots D denotes the determinant of the Cartan matrix and W denotes the order of the Weyl group Explicit construction of the irreducible root systems editAn edit nbsp Model of the A 3 displaystyle A 3 nbsp root system in the Zometool systemSimple roots in A3 e1 e2 e3 e4a1 1 1 0 0a2 0 1 1 0a3 0 0 1 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Let E be the subspace of Rn 1 for which the coordinates sum to 0 and let F be the set of vectors in E of length 2 and which are integer vectors i e have integer coordinates in Rn 1 Such a vector must have all but two coordinates equal to 0 one coordinate equal to 1 and one equal to 1 so there are n2 n roots in all One choice of simple roots expressed in the standard basis is ai ei ei 1 for 1 i n The reflection si through the hyperplane perpendicular to ai is the same as permutation of the adjacent ith and i 1 th coordinates Such transpositions generate the full permutation group For adjacent simple roots si ai 1 ai 1 ai si 1 ai ai ai 1 that is reflection is equivalent to adding a multiple of 1 but reflection of a simple root perpendicular to a nonadjacent simple root leaves it unchanged differing by a multiple of 0 The An root lattice that is the lattice generated by the An roots is most easily described as the set of integer vectors in Rn 1 whose components sum to zero The A2 root lattice is the vertex arrangement of the triangular tiling The A3 root lattice is known to crystallographers as the face centered cubic or cubic close packed lattice 29 It is the vertex arrangement of the tetrahedral octahedral honeycomb The A3 root system as well as the other rank three root systems may be modeled in the Zometool Construction set 30 In general the An root lattice is the vertex arrangement of the n dimensional simplectic honeycomb Bn edit Simple roots in B4 e1 e2 e3 e4a1 1 1 0 0a2 0 1 1 0a3 0 0 1 1a4 0 0 0 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Let E Rn and let F consist of all integer vectors in E of length 1 or 2 The total number of roots is 2n2 One choice of simple roots is ai ei ei 1 for 1 i n 1 the above choice of simple roots for An 1 and the shorter root an en The reflection sn through the hyperplane perpendicular to the short root an is of course simply negation of the nth coordinate For the long simple root an 1 sn 1 an an an 1 but for reflection perpendicular to the short root sn an 1 an 1 2an a difference by a multiple of 2 instead of 1 The Bn root lattice that is the lattice generated by the Bn roots consists of all integer vectors B1 is isomorphic to A1 via scaling by 2 and is therefore not a distinct root system Cn edit nbsp Root system B3 C3 and A3 D3 as points within a cube and octahedronSimple roots in C4 e1 e2 e3 e4a1 1 1 0 0a2 0 1 1 0a3 0 0 1 1a4 0 0 0 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Let E Rn and let F consist of all integer vectors in E of length 2 together with all vectors of the form 2l where l is an integer vector of length 1 The total number of roots is 2n2 One choice of simple roots is ai ei ei 1 for 1 i n 1 the above choice of simple roots for An 1 and the longer root an 2en The reflection sn an 1 an 1 an but sn 1 an an 2an 1 The Cn root lattice that is the lattice generated by the Cn roots consists of all integer vectors whose components sum to an even integer C2 is isomorphic to B2 via scaling by 2 and a 45 degree rotation and is therefore not a distinct root system Dn edit Simple roots in D4 e1 e2 e3 e4a1 1 1 0 0a2 0 1 1 0a3 0 0 1 1a4 0 0 1 1 nbsp Let E Rn and let F consist of all integer vectors in E of length 2 The total number of roots is 2n n 1 One choice of simple roots is ai ei ei 1 for 1 i n 1 the above choice of simple roots for An 1 together with an en 1 en Reflection through the hyperplane perpendicular to an is the same as transposing and negating the adjacent n th and n 1 th coordinates Any simple root and its reflection perpendicular to another simple root differ by a multiple of 0 or 1 of the second root not by any greater multiple The Dn root lattice that is the lattice generated by the Dn roots consists of all integer vectors whose components sum to an even integer This is the same as the Cn root lattice The Dn roots are expressed as the vertices of a rectified n orthoplex Coxeter Dynkin diagram nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp The 2n n 1 vertices exist in the middle of the edges of the n orthoplex D3 coincides with A3 and is therefore not a distinct root system The twelve D3 root vectors are expressed as the vertices of nbsp nbsp nbsp a lower symmetry construction of the cuboctahedron D4 has additional symmetry called triality The twenty four D4 root vectors are expressed as the vertices of nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp a lower symmetry construction of the 24 cell E6 E7 E8 edit nbsp 72 vertices of 122 represent the root vectors of E6 Green nodes are doubled in this E6 Coxeter plane projection nbsp 126 vertices of 231 represent the root vectors of E7 nbsp 240 vertices of 421 represent the root vectors of E8 nbsp nbsp nbsp The E8 root system is any set of vectors in R8 that is congruent to the following set D 8 1 2 i 1 8 e i e i e i 1 e 1 e 8 1 displaystyle D 8 cup left frac 1 2 left sum i 1 8 varepsilon i mathbf e i right varepsilon i pm 1 varepsilon 1 cdots varepsilon 8 1 right nbsp The root system has 240 roots The set just listed is the set of vectors of length 2 in the E8 root lattice also known simply as the E8 lattice or G8 This is the set of points in R8 such that all the coordinates are integers or all the coordinates are half integers a mixture of integers and half integers is not allowed and the sum of the eight coordinates is an even integer Thus E 8 a Z 8 Z 1 2 8 a 2 a i 2 2 a i 2 Z displaystyle E 8 left alpha in mathbb Z 8 cup left mathbb Z tfrac 1 2 right 8 alpha 2 sum alpha i 2 2 sum alpha i in 2 mathbb Z right nbsp The root system E7 is the set of vectors in E8 that are perpendicular to a fixed root in E8 The root system E7 has 126 roots The root system E6 is not the set of vectors in E7 that are perpendicular to a fixed root in E7 indeed one obtains D6 that way However E6 is the subsystem of E8 perpendicular to two suitably chosen roots of E8 The root system E6 has 72 roots Simple roots in E8 even coordinates 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 00 1 1 0 0 0 0 00 0 1 1 0 0 0 00 0 0 1 1 0 0 00 0 0 0 1 1 0 00 0 0 0 0 1 1 00 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2An alternative description of the E8 lattice which is sometimes convenient is as the set G 8 of all points in R8 such that all the coordinates are integers and the sum of the coordinates is even or all the coordinates are half integers and the sum of the coordinates is odd The lattices G8 and G 8 are isomorphic one may pass from one to the other by changing the signs of any odd number of coordinates The lattice G8 is sometimes called the even coordinate system for E8 while the lattice G 8 is called the odd coordinate system One choice of simple roots for E8 in the even coordinate system with rows ordered by node order in the alternate non canonical Dynkin diagrams above is ai ei ei 1 for 1 i 6 and a7 e7 e6 the above choice of simple roots for D7 along witha 8 b 0 1 2 i 1 8 e i 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 displaystyle mathbf alpha 8 mathbf beta 0 frac 1 2 left sum i 1 8 e i right 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 nbsp Simple roots in E8 odd coordinates 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 00 1 1 0 0 0 0 00 0 1 1 0 0 0 00 0 0 1 1 0 0 00 0 0 0 1 1 0 00 0 0 0 0 1 1 00 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2One choice of simple roots for E8 in the odd coordinate system with rows ordered by node order in alternate non canonical Dynkin diagrams above is ai ei ei 1 for 1 i 7 the above choice of simple roots for A7 along with a8 b5 where bj 1 2 i 1 j e i i j 1 8 e i textstyle frac 1 2 left sum i 1 j e i sum i j 1 8 e i right nbsp Using b3 would give an isomorphic result Using b1 7 or b2 6 would simply give A8 or D8 As for b4 its coordinates sum to 0 and the same is true for a1 7 so they span only the 7 dimensional subspace for which the coordinates sum to 0 in fact 2b4 has coordinates 1 2 3 4 3 2 1 in the basis ai Since perpendicularity to a1 means that the first two coordinates are equal E7 is then the subset of E8 where the first two coordinates are equal and similarly E6 is the subset of E8 where the first three coordinates are equal This facilitates explicit definitions of E7 and E6 as E7 a Z7 Z 1 2 7 Sai2 a12 2 Sai a1 2Z E6 a Z6 Z 1 2 6 Sai2 2a12 2 Sai 2a1 2Z Note that deleting a1 and then a2 gives sets of simple roots for E7 and E6 However these sets of simple roots are in different E7 and E6 subspaces of E8 than the ones written above since they are not orthogonal to a1 or a2 F4 edit Simple roots in F4 e1 e2 e3 e4a1 1 1 0 0a2 0 1 1 0a3 0 0 1 0a4 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 48 root vectors of F4 defined by vertices of the 24 cell and its dual viewed in the Coxeter planeFor F4 let E R4 and let F denote the set of vectors a of length 1 or 2 such that the coordinates of 2a are all integers and are either all even or all odd There are 48 roots in this system One choice of simple roots is the choice of simple roots given above for B3 plus a 4 1 2 i 1 4 e i textstyle boldsymbol alpha 4 frac 1 2 sum i 1 4 e i nbsp The F4 root lattice that is the lattice generated by the F4 root system is the set of points in R4 such that either all the coordinates are integers or all the coordinates are half integers a mixture of integers and half integers is not allowed This lattice is isomorphic to the lattice of Hurwitz quaternions G2 edit Simple roots in G2 e1 e2 e3a1 1 1 0b 1 2 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp The root system G2 has 12 roots which form the vertices of a hexagram See the picture above One choice of simple roots is a1 b a2 a1 where ai ei ei 1 for i 1 2 is the above choice of simple roots for A2 The G2 root lattice that is the lattice generated by the G2 roots is the same as the A2 root lattice The root poset edit nbsp Hasse diagram of E6 root poset with edge labels identifying added simple root positionThe set of positive roots is naturally ordered by saying that a b displaystyle alpha leq beta nbsp if and only if b a displaystyle beta alpha nbsp is a nonnegative linear combination of simple roots This poset is graded by deg a D l a a a D l a textstyle deg left sum alpha in Delta lambda alpha alpha right sum alpha in Delta lambda alpha nbsp and has many remarkable combinatorial properties one of them being that one can determine the degrees of the fundamental invariants of the corresponding Weyl group from this poset 31 The Hasse graph is a visualization of the ordering of the root poset See also editADE classification Affine root system Coxeter Dynkin diagram Coxeter group Coxeter matrix Dynkin diagram root datum Semisimple Lie algebra Weights in the representation theory of semisimple Lie algebras Root system of a semi simple Lie algebra Weyl groupNotes edit Cvetkovic Dragos 2002 Graphs with least eigenvalue 2 a historical survey and recent developments in maximal exceptional graphs Linear Algebra and Its Applications 356 1 3 189 210 doi 10 1016 S0024 3795 02 00377 4 Bourbaki Ch VI Section 1 Humphreys 1972 p 42 Humphreys 1992 p 6 Humphreys 1992 p 39 Humphreys 1992 p 41 Humphreys 1972 p 43 Hall 2015 Proposition 8 8 Hall 2015 Section 7 5 Killing 1889 a b Bourbaki 1998 p 270 Coleman 1989 p 34 Hall 2015 Proposition 8 6 Hall 2015 Theorems 8 16 and 8 17 Hall 2015 Theorem 8 16 Hall 2015 Proposition 8 28 Hall 2015 Proposition 8 18 Hall 2015 Section 8 7 This follows from Hall 2015 Proposition 8 23 Hall 2015 Proposition 8 32 Hall 2015 Proposition 8 23 Hall 2015 Propositions 8 23 and 8 27 Hall 2015 Proposition 8 29 See various parts of Chapters III IV and V of Humphreys 1972 culminating in Section 19 in Chapter V Hall 2015 Theorem 7 35 Humphreys 1972 Section 16 Humphreys 1972 Part b of Theorem 18 4 Humphreys 1972 Section 18 3 and Theorem 18 4 Conway John Sloane Neil J A 1998 Section 6 3 Sphere Packings Lattices and Groups Springer ISBN 978 0 387 98585 5 Hall 2015 Section 8 9 Humphreys 1992 Theorem 3 20References editAdams J F 1983 Lectures on Lie groups University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 00530 5 Bourbaki Nicolas 2002 Lie groups and Lie algebras Chapters 4 6 translated from the 1968 French original by Andrew Pressley Elements of Mathematics Springer Verlag ISBN 3 540 42650 7 The classic reference for root systems Bourbaki Nicolas 1998 Elements of the History of Mathematics Springer ISBN 3540647678 Coleman A J Summer 1989 The greatest mathematical paper of all time The Mathematical Intelligencer 11 3 29 38 doi 10 1007 bf03025189 S2CID 35487310 Hall Brian C 2015 Lie groups Lie algebras and representations An elementary introduction Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 222 2nd ed Springer ISBN 978 3319134666 Humphreys James 1972 Introduction to Lie algebras and Representation Theory Springer ISBN 0387900535 Humphreys James 1992 Reflection Groups and Coxeter Groups Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521436133 Killing Wilhelm June 1888 Die Zusammensetzung der stetigen endlichen Transformationsgruppen Mathematische Annalen 31 2 252 290 doi 10 1007 BF01211904 S2CID 120501356 Archived from the original on 2016 03 05 March 1888 Part 2 Math Ann 33 1 1 48 doi 10 1007 BF01444109 S2CID 124198118 March 1889 Part 3 Math Ann 34 1 57 122 doi 10 1007 BF01446792 S2CID 179177899 Archived from the original on 2015 02 21 June 1890 Part 4 Math Ann 36 2 161 189 doi 10 1007 BF01207837 S2CID 179178061 Kac Victor G 1990 Infinite Dimensional Lie Algebras 3rd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 46693 6 Springer T A 1998 Linear Algebraic Groups 2nd ed Birkhauser ISBN 0817640215 Further reading editDynkin E B 1947 The structure of semi simple algebras Uspekhi Mat Nauk 2 in Russian 4 20 59 127 MR 0027752 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Root systems Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Root system amp oldid 1175329305, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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