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Special unitary group

In mathematics, the special unitary group of degree n, denoted SU(n), is the Lie group of n × n unitary matrices with determinant 1.

The matrices of the more general unitary group may have complex determinants with absolute value 1, rather than real 1 in the special case.

The group operation is matrix multiplication. The special unitary group is a normal subgroup of the unitary group U(n), consisting of all n×n unitary matrices. As a compact classical group, U(n) is the group that preserves the standard inner product on .[a] It is itself a subgroup of the general linear group,

The SU(n) groups find wide application in the Standard Model of particle physics, especially SU(2) in the electroweak interaction and SU(3) in quantum chromodynamics.[1]

The simplest case, SU(1), is the trivial group, having only a single element. The group SU(2) is isomorphic to the group of quaternions of norm 1, and is thus diffeomorphic to the 3-sphere. Since unit quaternions can be used to represent rotations in 3-dimensional space (up to sign), there is a surjective homomorphism from SU(2) to the rotation group SO(3) whose kernel is {+I, −I}.[b] SU(2) is also identical to one of the symmetry groups of spinors, Spin(3), that enables a spinor presentation of rotations.

Properties edit

The special unitary group SU(n) is a strictly real Lie group (vs. a more general complex Lie group). Its dimension as a real manifold is n2 − 1. Topologically, it is compact and simply connected.[2] Algebraically, it is a simple Lie group (meaning its Lie algebra is simple; see below).[3]

The center of SU(n) is isomorphic to the cyclic group  , and is composed of the diagonal matrices ζ I for ζ an nth root of unity and I the n × n identity matrix.

Its outer automorphism group for n ≥ 3 is   while the outer automorphism group of SU(2) is the trivial group.

A maximal torus of rank n − 1 is given by the set of diagonal matrices with determinant 1. The Weyl group of SU(n) is the symmetric group Sn, which is represented by signed permutation matrices (the signs being necessary to ensure that the determinant is 1).

The Lie algebra of SU(n), denoted by  , can be identified with the set of traceless anti‑Hermitian n × n complex matrices, with the regular commutator as a Lie bracket. Particle physicists often use a different, equivalent representation: The set of traceless Hermitian n × n complex matrices with Lie bracket given by i times the commutator.

Lie algebra edit

The Lie algebra   of   consists of n × n skew-Hermitian matrices with trace zero.[4] This (real) Lie algebra has dimension n2 − 1. More information about the structure of this Lie algebra can be found below in § Lie algebra structure.

Fundamental representation edit

In the physics literature, it is common to identify the Lie algebra with the space of trace-zero Hermitian (rather than the skew-Hermitian) matrices. That is to say, the physicists' Lie algebra differs by a factor of   from the mathematicians'. With this convention, one can then choose generators Ta that are traceless Hermitian complex n × n matrices, where:

 

where the f are the structure constants and are antisymmetric in all indices, while the d-coefficients are symmetric in all indices.

As a consequence, the commutator is:

 

and the corresponding anticommutator is:

 

The factor of i in the commutation relation arises from the physics convention and is not present when using the mathematicians' convention.

The conventional normalization condition is

 

Adjoint representation edit

In the (n2 − 1)-dimensional adjoint representation, the generators are represented by (n2 − 1) × (n2 − 1) matrices, whose elements are defined by the structure constants themselves:

 

The group SU(2) edit

Using matrix multiplication for the binary operation, SU(2) forms a group,[5]

 

where the overline denotes complex conjugation.

Diffeomorphism with the 3-sphere S3 edit

If we consider   as a pair in   where   and  , then the equation   becomes

 

This is the equation of the 3-sphere S3. This can also be seen using an embedding: the map

 

where   denotes the set of 2 by 2 complex matrices, is an injective real linear map (by considering   diffeomorphic to   and   diffeomorphic to  ). Hence, the restriction of φ to the 3-sphere (since modulus is 1), denoted S3, is an embedding of the 3-sphere onto a compact submanifold of  , namely φ(S3) = SU(2).

Therefore, as a manifold, S3 is diffeomorphic to SU(2), which shows that SU(2) is simply connected and that S3 can be endowed with the structure of a compact, connected Lie group.

Isomorphism with group of versors edit

Quaternions of norm 1 are called versors since they generate the rotation group SO(3): The SU(2) matrix:

 

can be mapped to the quaternion

 

This map is in fact a group isomorphism. Additionally, the determinant of the matrix is the squared norm of the corresponding quaternion. Clearly any matrix in SU(2) is of this form and, since it has determinant 1, the corresponding quaternion has norm 1. Thus SU(2) is isomorphic to the group of versors.[6]

Relation to spatial rotations edit

Every versor is naturally associated to a spatial rotation in 3 dimensions, and the product of versors is associated to the composition of the associated rotations. Furthermore, every rotation arises from exactly two versors in this fashion. In short: there is a 2:1 surjective homomorphism from SU(2) to SO(3); consequently SO(3) is isomorphic to the quotient group SU(2)/{±I}, the manifold underlying SO(3) is obtained by identifying antipodal points of the 3-sphere S3, and SU(2) is the universal cover of SO(3).

Lie algebra edit

The Lie algebra of SU(2) consists of 2 × 2 skew-Hermitian matrices with trace zero.[7] Explicitly, this means

 

The Lie algebra is then generated by the following matrices,

 

which have the form of the general element specified above.

This can also be written as   using the Pauli matrices.

These satisfy the quaternion relationships     and   The commutator bracket is therefore specified by

 

The above generators are related to the Pauli matrices by   and   This representation is routinely used in quantum mechanics to represent the spin of fundamental particles such as electrons. They also serve as unit vectors for the description of our 3 spatial dimensions in loop quantum gravity. They also correspond to the Pauli X, Y, and Z gates, which are standard generators for the single qubit gates, corresponding to 3d rotations about the axes of the Bloch sphere.

The Lie algebra serves to work out the representations of SU(2).

SU(3) edit

The group SU(3) is an 8-dimensional simple Lie group consisting of all 3 × 3 unitary matrices with determinant 1.

Topology edit

The group SU(3) is a simply-connected, compact Lie group.[8] Its topological structure can be understood by noting that SU(3) acts transitively on the unit sphere   in  . The stabilizer of an arbitrary point in the sphere is isomorphic to SU(2), which topologically is a 3-sphere. It then follows that SU(3) is a fiber bundle over the base S5 with fiber S3. Since the fibers and the base are simply connected, the simple connectedness of SU(3) then follows by means of a standard topological result (the long exact sequence of homotopy groups for fiber bundles).[9]

The SU(2)-bundles over S5 are classified by   since any such bundle can be constructed by looking at trivial bundles on the two hemispheres   and looking at the transition function on their intersection, which is a copy of S4, so

 

Then, all such transition functions are classified by homotopy classes of maps

 

and as   rather than  , SU(3) cannot be the trivial bundle SU(2) × S5S3 × S5, and therefore must be the unique nontrivial (twisted) bundle. This can be shown by looking at the induced long exact sequence on homotopy groups.

Representation theory edit

The representation theory of SU(3) is well-understood.[10] Descriptions of these representations, from the point of view of its complexified Lie algebra  , may be found in the articles on Lie algebra representations or the Clebsch–Gordan coefficients for SU(3).

Lie algebra edit

The generators, T, of the Lie algebra   of SU(3) in the defining (particle physics, Hermitian) representation, are

 

where λa, the Gell-Mann matrices, are the SU(3) analog of the Pauli matrices for SU(2):

 

These λa span all traceless Hermitian matrices H of the Lie algebra, as required. Note that λ2, λ5, λ7 are antisymmetric.

They obey the relations

 

or, equivalently,

 

The f are the structure constants of the Lie algebra, given by

 

while all other fabc not related to these by permutation are zero. In general, they vanish unless they contain an odd number of indices from the set {2, 5, 7}.[c]

The symmetric coefficients d take the values

 

They vanish if the number of indices from the set {2, 5, 7} is odd.

A generic SU(3) group element generated by a traceless 3×3 Hermitian matrix H, normalized as tr(H2) = 2, can be expressed as a second order matrix polynomial in H:[11]

 

where

 

Lie algebra structure edit

As noted above, the Lie algebra   of SU(n) consists of n × n skew-Hermitian matrices with trace zero.[12]

The complexification of the Lie algebra   is  , the space of all n × n complex matrices with trace zero.[13] A Cartan subalgebra then consists of the diagonal matrices with trace zero,[14] which we identify with vectors in   whose entries sum to zero. The roots then consist of all the n(n − 1) permutations of (1, −1, 0, ..., 0).

A choice of simple roots is

 

So, SU(n) is of rank n − 1 and its Dynkin diagram is given by An−1, a chain of n − 1 nodes:       ...  .[15] Its Cartan matrix is

 

Its Weyl group or Coxeter group is the symmetric group Sn, the symmetry group of the (n − 1)-simplex.

Generalized special unitary group edit

For a field F, the generalized special unitary group over F, SU(p, q; F), is the group of all linear transformations of determinant 1 of a vector space of rank n = p + q over F which leave invariant a nondegenerate, Hermitian form of signature (p, q). This group is often referred to as the special unitary group of signature p q over F. The field F can be replaced by a commutative ring, in which case the vector space is replaced by a free module.

Specifically, fix a Hermitian matrix A of signature p q in  , then all

 

satisfy

 

Often one will see the notation SU(p, q) without reference to a ring or field; in this case, the ring or field being referred to is   and this gives one of the classical Lie groups. The standard choice for A when   is

 

However, there may be better choices for A for certain dimensions which exhibit more behaviour under restriction to subrings of  .

Example edit

An important example of this type of group is the Picard modular group   which acts (projectively) on complex hyperbolic space of degree two, in the same way that   acts (projectively) on real hyperbolic space of dimension two. In 2005 Gábor Francsics and Peter Lax computed an explicit fundamental domain for the action of this group on HC2.[16]

A further example is  , which is isomorphic to  .

Important subgroups edit

In physics the special unitary group is used to represent bosonic symmetries. In theories of symmetry breaking it is important to be able to find the subgroups of the special unitary group. Subgroups of SU(n) that are important in GUT physics are, for p > 1, np > 1,

 

where × denotes the direct product and U(1), known as the circle group, is the multiplicative group of all complex numbers with absolute value 1.

For completeness, there are also the orthogonal and symplectic subgroups,

 

Since the rank of SU(n) is n − 1 and of U(1) is 1, a useful check is that the sum of the ranks of the subgroups is less than or equal to the rank of the original group. SU(n) is a subgroup of various other Lie groups,

 

See Spin group and Simple Lie group for E6, E7, and G2.

There are also the accidental isomorphisms: SU(4) = Spin(6), SU(2) = Spin(3) = Sp(1),[d] and U(1) = Spin(2) = SO(2).

One may finally mention that SU(2) is the double covering group of SO(3), a relation that plays an important role in the theory of rotations of 2-spinors in non-relativistic quantum mechanics.

SU(1, 1) edit

  where   denotes the complex conjugate of the complex number u.

This group is isomorphic to SL(2,ℝ) and Spin(2,1)[17] where the numbers separated by a comma refer to the signature of the quadratic form preserved by the group. The expression   in the definition of SU(1,1) is an Hermitian form which becomes an isotropic quadratic form when u and v are expanded with their real components.

An early appearance of this group was as the "unit sphere" of coquaternions, introduced by James Cockle in 1852. Let

 

Then     the 2×2 identity matrix,   and   and the elements i, j, and k all anticommute, as in quaternions. Also   is still a square root of I2 (negative of the identity matrix), whereas   are not, unlike in quaternions. For both quaternions and coquaternions, all scalar quantities are treated as implicit multiples of I2 and notated as 1.

The coquaternion   with scalar w, has conjugate   similar to Hamilton's quaternions. The quadratic form is  

Note that the 2-sheet hyperboloid   corresponds to the imaginary units in the algebra so that any point p on this hyperboloid can be used as a pole of a sinusoidal wave according to Euler's formula.

The hyperboloid is stable under SU(1, 1), illustrating the isomorphism with Spin(2, 1). The variability of the pole of a wave, as noted in studies of polarization, might view elliptical polarization as an exhibit of the elliptical shape of a wave with pole  . The Poincaré sphere model used since 1892 has been compared to a 2-sheet hyperboloid model,[18] and the practice of SU(1, 1) interferometry has been introduced.

When an element of SU(1, 1) is interpreted as a Möbius transformation, it leaves the unit disk stable, so this group represents the motions of the Poincaré disk model of hyperbolic plane geometry. Indeed, for a point [z, 1] in the complex projective line, the action of SU(1,1) is given by

 

since in projective coordinates  

Writing   complex number arithmetic shows

 

where   Therefore,   so that their ratio lies in the open disk.[19]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ For a characterization of U(n) and hence SU(n) in terms of preservation of the standard inner product on  , see Classical group.
  2. ^ For an explicit description of the homomorphism SU(2) → SO(3), see Connection between SO(3) and SU(2).
  3. ^ So fewer than 16 of all fabcs are non-vanishing.
  4. ^ Sp(n) is the compact real form of  . It is sometimes denoted USp(2n). The dimension of the Sp(n)-matrices is 2n × 2n.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Halzen, Francis; Martin, Alan (1984). Quarks & Leptons: An Introductory Course in Modern Particle Physics. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-88741-2.
  2. ^ Hall 2015, Proposition 13.11
  3. ^ Wybourne, B.G. (1974). Classical Groups for Physicists. Wiley-Interscience. ISBN 0471965057.
  4. ^ Hall 2015 Proposition 3.24
  5. ^ Hall 2015 Exercise 1.5
  6. ^ Savage, Alistair. "LieGroups" (PDF). MATH 4144 notes.
  7. ^ Hall 2015 Proposition 3.24
  8. ^ Hall 2015 Proposition 13.11
  9. ^ Hall 2015 Section 13.2
  10. ^ Hall 2015 Chapter 6
  11. ^ Rosen, S P (1971). "Finite Transformations in Various Representations of SU(3)". Journal of Mathematical Physics. 12 (4): 673–681. Bibcode:1971JMP....12..673R. doi:10.1063/1.1665634.; Curtright, T L; Zachos, C K (2015). "Elementary results for the fundamental representation of SU(3)". Reports on Mathematical Physics. 76 (3): 401–404. arXiv:1508.00868. Bibcode:2015RpMP...76..401C. doi:10.1016/S0034-4877(15)30040-9. S2CID 119679825.
  12. ^ Hall 2015 Proposition 3.24
  13. ^ Hall 2015 Section 3.6
  14. ^ Hall 2015 Section 7.7.1
  15. ^ Hall 2015 Section 8.10.1
  16. ^ Francsics, Gabor; Lax, Peter D. (September 2005). "An explicit fundamental domain for the Picard modular group in two complex dimensions". arXiv:math/0509708.
  17. ^ Gilmore, Robert (1974). Lie Groups, Lie Algebras and some of their Applications. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 52, 201−205. MR 1275599.
  18. ^ Mota, R.D.; Ojeda-Guillén, D.; Salazar-Ramírez, M.; Granados, V.D. (2016). "SU(1,1) approach to Stokes parameters and the theory of light polarization". Journal of the Optical Society of America B. 33 (8): 1696–1701. arXiv:1602.03223. Bibcode:2016JOSAB..33.1696M. doi:10.1364/JOSAB.33.001696. S2CID 119146980.
  19. ^ Siegel, C.L. (1971). Topics in Complex Function Theory. Vol. 2. Translated by Shenitzer, A.; Tretkoff, M. Wiley-Interscience. pp. 13–15. ISBN 0-471-79080 X.

References edit

  • 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
  • Iachello, Francesco (2006), Lie Algebras and Applications, Lecture Notes in Physics, vol. 708, Springer, ISBN 3540362363

special, unitary, group, redirects, here, specific, grand, unification, theory, georgi, glashow, model, mathematics, special, unitary, group, degree, denoted, group, unitary, matrices, with, determinant, matrices, more, general, unitary, group, have, complex, . SU 5 redirects here For the specific grand unification theory see Georgi Glashow model In mathematics the special unitary group of degree n denoted SU n is the Lie group of n n unitary matrices with determinant 1 The matrices of the more general unitary group may have complex determinants with absolute value 1 rather than real 1 in the special case The group operation is matrix multiplication The special unitary group is a normal subgroup of the unitary group U n consisting of all n n unitary matrices As a compact classical group U n is the group that preserves the standard inner product on Cn displaystyle mathbb C n a It is itself a subgroup of the general linear group SU n U n GL n C displaystyle operatorname SU n subset operatorname U n subset operatorname GL n mathbb C The SU n groups find wide application in the Standard Model of particle physics especially SU 2 in the electroweak interaction and SU 3 in quantum chromodynamics 1 The simplest case SU 1 is the trivial group having only a single element The group SU 2 is isomorphic to the group of quaternions of norm 1 and is thus diffeomorphic to the 3 sphere Since unit quaternions can be used to represent rotations in 3 dimensional space up to sign there is a surjective homomorphism from SU 2 to the rotation group SO 3 whose kernel is I I b SU 2 is also identical to one of the symmetry groups of spinors Spin 3 that enables a spinor presentation of rotations Contents 1 Properties 2 Lie algebra 2 1 Fundamental representation 2 2 Adjoint representation 3 The group SU 2 3 1 Diffeomorphism with the 3 sphere S3 3 2 Isomorphism with group of versors 3 3 Relation to spatial rotations 3 4 Lie algebra 4 SU 3 4 1 Topology 4 2 Representation theory 4 3 Lie algebra 5 Lie algebra structure 6 Generalized special unitary group 6 1 Example 7 Important subgroups 8 SU 1 1 9 See also 10 Footnotes 11 Citations 12 ReferencesProperties editThe special unitary group SU n is a strictly real Lie group vs a more general complex Lie group Its dimension as a real manifold is n2 1 Topologically it is compact and simply connected 2 Algebraically it is a simple Lie group meaning its Lie algebra is simple see below 3 The center of SU n is isomorphic to the cyclic group Z nZ displaystyle mathbb Z n mathbb Z nbsp and is composed of the diagonal matrices z I for z an n th root of unity and I the n n identity matrix Its outer automorphism group for n 3 is Z 2Z displaystyle mathbb Z 2 mathbb Z nbsp while the outer automorphism group of SU 2 is the trivial group A maximal torus of rank n 1 is given by the set of diagonal matrices with determinant 1 The Weyl group of SU n is the symmetric group Sn which is represented by signed permutation matrices the signs being necessary to ensure that the determinant is 1 The Lie algebra of SU n denoted by su n displaystyle mathfrak su n nbsp can be identified with the set of traceless anti Hermitian n n complex matrices with the regular commutator as a Lie bracket Particle physicists often use a different equivalent representation The set of traceless Hermitian n n complex matrices with Lie bracket given by i times the commutator Lie algebra editMain article Classical group U p q and U n the unitary groups The Lie algebra su n displaystyle mathfrak su n nbsp of SU n displaystyle operatorname SU n nbsp consists of n n skew Hermitian matrices with trace zero 4 This real Lie algebra has dimension n2 1 More information about the structure of this Lie algebra can be found below in Lie algebra structure Fundamental representation edit In the physics literature it is common to identify the Lie algebra with the space of trace zero Hermitian rather than the skew Hermitian matrices That is to say the physicists Lie algebra differs by a factor of i displaystyle i nbsp from the mathematicians With this convention one can then choose generators Ta that are traceless Hermitian complex n n matrices where TaTb 12ndabIn 12 c 1n2 1 ifabc dabc Tc displaystyle T a T b tfrac 1 2n delta ab I n tfrac 1 2 sum c 1 n 2 1 left if abc d abc right T c nbsp where the f are the structure constants and are antisymmetric in all indices while the d coefficients are symmetric in all indices As a consequence the commutator is Ta Tb i c 1n2 1fabcTc displaystyle left T a T b right i sum c 1 n 2 1 f abc T c nbsp and the corresponding anticommutator is Ta Tb 1ndabIn c 1n2 1dabcTc displaystyle left T a T b right tfrac 1 n delta ab I n sum c 1 n 2 1 d abc T c nbsp The factor of i in the commutation relation arises from the physics convention and is not present when using the mathematicians convention The conventional normalization condition is c e 1n2 1dacedbce n2 4ndab displaystyle sum c e 1 n 2 1 d ace d bce frac n 2 4 n delta ab nbsp Adjoint representation edit In the n2 1 dimensional adjoint representation the generators are represented by n2 1 n2 1 matrices whose elements are defined by the structure constants themselves Ta jk ifajk displaystyle left T a right jk if ajk nbsp The group SU 2 editSee also Versor Pauli matrices 3D rotation group A note on Lie algebras and Representation theory of SU 2 Using matrix multiplication for the binary operation SU 2 forms a group 5 SU 2 a b ba a b C a 2 b 2 1 displaystyle operatorname SU 2 left begin pmatrix alpha amp overline beta beta amp overline alpha end pmatrix alpha beta in mathbb C alpha 2 beta 2 1 right nbsp where the overline denotes complex conjugation Diffeomorphism with the 3 sphere S3 edit If we consider a b displaystyle alpha beta nbsp as a pair in C2 displaystyle mathbb C 2 nbsp where a a bi displaystyle alpha a bi nbsp and b c di displaystyle beta c di nbsp then the equation a 2 b 2 1 displaystyle alpha 2 beta 2 1 nbsp becomes a2 b2 c2 d2 1 displaystyle a 2 b 2 c 2 d 2 1 nbsp This is the equation of the 3 sphere S3 This can also be seen using an embedding the map f C2 M 2 C f a b a b ba displaystyle begin aligned varphi colon mathbb C 2 to amp operatorname M 2 mathbb C 5pt varphi alpha beta amp begin pmatrix alpha amp overline beta beta amp overline alpha end pmatrix end aligned nbsp where M 2 C displaystyle operatorname M 2 mathbb C nbsp denotes the set of 2 by 2 complex matrices is an injective real linear map by considering C2 displaystyle mathbb C 2 nbsp diffeomorphic to R4 displaystyle mathbb R 4 nbsp and M 2 C displaystyle operatorname M 2 mathbb C nbsp diffeomorphic to R8 displaystyle mathbb R 8 nbsp Hence the restriction of f to the 3 sphere since modulus is 1 denoted S3 is an embedding of the 3 sphere onto a compact submanifold of M 2 C displaystyle operatorname M 2 mathbb C nbsp namely f S3 SU 2 Therefore as a manifold S3 is diffeomorphic to SU 2 which shows that SU 2 is simply connected and that S3 can be endowed with the structure of a compact connected Lie group Isomorphism with group of versors edit Quaternions of norm 1 are called versors since they generate the rotation group SO 3 The SU 2 matrix a bic di c dia bi a b c d R displaystyle begin pmatrix a bi amp c di c di amp a bi end pmatrix quad a b c d in mathbb R nbsp can be mapped to the quaternion a1 bi cj dk displaystyle a hat 1 b hat i c hat j d hat k nbsp This map is in fact a group isomorphism Additionally the determinant of the matrix is the squared norm of the corresponding quaternion Clearly any matrix in SU 2 is of this form and since it has determinant 1 the corresponding quaternion has norm 1 Thus SU 2 is isomorphic to the group of versors 6 Relation to spatial rotations edit Main articles 3D rotation group Connection between SO 3 and SU 2 and Quaternions and spatial rotation Every versor is naturally associated to a spatial rotation in 3 dimensions and the product of versors is associated to the composition of the associated rotations Furthermore every rotation arises from exactly two versors in this fashion In short there is a 2 1 surjective homomorphism from SU 2 to SO 3 consequently SO 3 is isomorphic to the quotient group SU 2 I the manifold underlying SO 3 is obtained by identifying antipodal points of the 3 sphere S3 and SU 2 is the universal cover of SO 3 Lie algebra edit The Lie algebra of SU 2 consists of 2 2 skew Hermitian matrices with trace zero 7 Explicitly this means su 2 i a z z i a a R z C displaystyle mathfrak su 2 left begin pmatrix i a amp overline z z amp i a end pmatrix a in mathbb R z in mathbb C right nbsp The Lie algebra is then generated by the following matrices u1 0ii0 u2 0 110 u3 i00 i displaystyle u 1 begin pmatrix 0 amp i i amp 0 end pmatrix quad u 2 begin pmatrix 0 amp 1 1 amp 0 end pmatrix quad u 3 begin pmatrix i amp 0 0 amp i end pmatrix nbsp which have the form of the general element specified above This can also be written as su 2 span is1 is2 is3 displaystyle mathfrak su 2 operatorname span left i sigma 1 i sigma 2 i sigma 3 right nbsp using the Pauli matrices These satisfy the quaternion relationships u2 u3 u3 u2 u1 displaystyle u 2 u 3 u 3 u 2 u 1 nbsp u3 u1 u1 u3 u2 displaystyle u 3 u 1 u 1 u 3 u 2 nbsp and u1u2 u2 u1 u3 displaystyle u 1 u 2 u 2 u 1 u 3 nbsp The commutator bracket is therefore specified by u3 u1 2 u2 u1 u2 2 u3 u2 u3 2 u1 displaystyle left u 3 u 1 right 2 u 2 quad left u 1 u 2 right 2 u 3 quad left u 2 u 3 right 2 u 1 nbsp The above generators are related to the Pauli matrices by u1 i s1 u2 i s2 displaystyle u 1 i sigma 1 u 2 i sigma 2 nbsp and u3 i s3 displaystyle u 3 i sigma 3 nbsp This representation is routinely used in quantum mechanics to represent the spin of fundamental particles such as electrons They also serve as unit vectors for the description of our 3 spatial dimensions in loop quantum gravity They also correspond to the Pauli X Y and Z gates which are standard generators for the single qubit gates corresponding to 3d rotations about the axes of the Bloch sphere The Lie algebra serves to work out the representations of SU 2 SU 3 editSee also Clebsch Gordan coefficients for SU 3 The group SU 3 is an 8 dimensional simple Lie group consisting of all 3 3 unitary matrices with determinant 1 Topology edit The group SU 3 is a simply connected compact Lie group 8 Its topological structure can be understood by noting that SU 3 acts transitively on the unit sphere S5 displaystyle S 5 nbsp in C3 R6 displaystyle mathbb C 3 cong mathbb R 6 nbsp The stabilizer of an arbitrary point in the sphere is isomorphic to SU 2 which topologically is a 3 sphere It then follows that SU 3 is a fiber bundle over the base S5 with fiber S3 Since the fibers and the base are simply connected the simple connectedness of SU 3 then follows by means of a standard topological result the long exact sequence of homotopy groups for fiber bundles 9 The SU 2 bundles over S5 are classified by p4 S3 Z2 displaystyle pi 4 mathord left S 3 right mathbb Z 2 nbsp since any such bundle can be constructed by looking at trivial bundles on the two hemispheres SN5 SS5 displaystyle S text N 5 S text S 5 nbsp and looking at the transition function on their intersection which is a copy of S4 so SN5 SS5 S4 displaystyle S text N 5 cap S text S 5 simeq S 4 nbsp Then all such transition functions are classified by homotopy classes of maps S4 SU 2 S4 S3 p4 S3 Z 2 displaystyle left S 4 mathrm SU 2 right cong left S 4 S 3 right pi 4 mathord left S 3 right cong mathbb Z 2 nbsp and as p4 SU 3 0 displaystyle pi 4 mathrm SU 3 0 nbsp rather than Z 2 displaystyle mathbb Z 2 nbsp SU 3 cannot be the trivial bundle SU 2 S5 S3 S5 and therefore must be the unique nontrivial twisted bundle This can be shown by looking at the induced long exact sequence on homotopy groups Representation theory edit The representation theory of SU 3 is well understood 10 Descriptions of these representations from the point of view of its complexified Lie algebra sl 3 C displaystyle mathfrak sl 3 mathbb C nbsp may be found in the articles on Lie algebra representations or the Clebsch Gordan coefficients for SU 3 Lie algebra edit The generators T of the Lie algebra su 3 displaystyle mathfrak su 3 nbsp of SU 3 in the defining particle physics Hermitian representation are Ta la2 displaystyle T a frac lambda a 2 nbsp where la the Gell Mann matrices are the SU 3 analog of the Pauli matrices for SU 2 l1 010100000 l2 0 i0i00000 l3 1000 10000 l4 001000100 l5 00 i000i00 l6 000001010 l7 00000 i0i0 l8 13 10001000 2 displaystyle begin aligned lambda 1 amp begin pmatrix 0 amp 1 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 0 end pmatrix amp lambda 2 amp begin pmatrix 0 amp i amp 0 i amp 0 amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 0 end pmatrix amp lambda 3 amp begin pmatrix 1 amp 0 amp 0 0 amp 1 amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 0 end pmatrix 6pt lambda 4 amp begin pmatrix 0 amp 0 amp 1 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 0 amp 0 end pmatrix amp lambda 5 amp begin pmatrix 0 amp 0 amp i 0 amp 0 amp 0 i amp 0 amp 0 end pmatrix 6pt lambda 6 amp begin pmatrix 0 amp 0 amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 1 0 amp 1 amp 0 end pmatrix amp lambda 7 amp begin pmatrix 0 amp 0 amp 0 0 amp 0 amp i 0 amp i amp 0 end pmatrix amp lambda 8 frac 1 sqrt 3 amp begin pmatrix 1 amp 0 amp 0 0 amp 1 amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 2 end pmatrix end aligned nbsp These la span all traceless Hermitian matrices H of the Lie algebra as required Note that l2 l5 l7 are antisymmetric They obey the relations Ta Tb i c 18fabcTc Ta Tb 13dabI3 c 18dabcTc displaystyle begin aligned left T a T b right amp i sum c 1 8 f abc T c left T a T b right amp frac 1 3 delta ab I 3 sum c 1 8 d abc T c end aligned nbsp or equivalently la lb 2i c 18fabclc la lb 43dabI3 2 c 18dabclc displaystyle begin aligned left lambda a lambda b right amp 2i sum c 1 8 f abc lambda c lambda a lambda b amp frac 4 3 delta ab I 3 2 sum c 1 8 d abc lambda c end aligned nbsp The f are the structure constants of the Lie algebra given by f123 1 f147 f156 f246 f257 f345 f367 12 f458 f678 32 displaystyle begin aligned f 123 amp 1 f 147 f 156 f 246 f 257 f 345 f 367 amp frac 1 2 f 458 f 678 amp frac sqrt 3 2 end aligned nbsp while all other fabc not related to these by permutation are zero In general they vanish unless they contain an odd number of indices from the set 2 5 7 c The symmetric coefficients d take the values d118 d228 d338 d888 13d448 d558 d668 d778 123d344 d355 d366 d377 d247 d146 d157 d256 12 displaystyle begin aligned d 118 d 228 d 338 d 888 amp frac 1 sqrt 3 d 448 d 558 d 668 d 778 amp frac 1 2 sqrt 3 d 344 d 355 d 366 d 377 d 247 d 146 d 157 d 256 amp frac 1 2 end aligned nbsp They vanish if the number of indices from the set 2 5 7 is odd A generic SU 3 group element generated by a traceless 3 3 Hermitian matrix H normalized as tr H2 2 can be expressed as a second order matrix polynomial in H 11 exp i8H 13Isin f 2p3 sin f 2p3 123 Hsin f 14 H2 exp 23 i8sin f cos f 2p3 cos f 2p3 13 Isin f sin f 2p3 123 Hsin f 2p3 14 H2 exp 23 i8sin f 2p3 cos f cos f 2p3 13 Isin f sin f 2p3 123 Hsin f 2p3 14 H2 exp 23 i8sin f 2p3 cos f cos f 2p3 displaystyle begin aligned exp i theta H amp left frac 1 3 I sin left varphi frac 2 pi 3 right sin left varphi frac 2 pi 3 right frac 1 2 sqrt 3 H sin varphi frac 1 4 H 2 right frac exp left frac 2 sqrt 3 i theta sin varphi right cos left varphi frac 2 pi 3 right cos left varphi frac 2 pi 3 right 6pt amp left frac 1 3 I sin varphi sin left varphi frac 2 pi 3 right frac 1 2 sqrt 3 H sin left varphi frac 2 pi 3 right frac 1 4 H 2 right frac exp left frac 2 sqrt 3 i theta sin left varphi frac 2 pi 3 right right cos varphi cos left varphi frac 2 pi 3 right 6pt amp left frac 1 3 I sin varphi sin left varphi frac 2 pi 3 right frac 1 2 sqrt 3 H sin left varphi frac 2 pi 3 right frac 1 4 H 2 right frac exp left frac 2 sqrt 3 i theta sin left varphi frac 2 pi 3 right right cos varphi cos left varphi frac 2 pi 3 right end aligned nbsp where f 13 arccos 332detH p2 displaystyle varphi equiv frac 1 3 left arccos left frac 3 sqrt 3 2 det H right frac pi 2 right nbsp Lie algebra structure editAs noted above the Lie algebra su n displaystyle mathfrak su n nbsp of SU n consists of n n skew Hermitian matrices with trace zero 12 The complexification of the Lie algebra su n displaystyle mathfrak su n nbsp is sl n C displaystyle mathfrak sl n mathbb C nbsp the space of all n n complex matrices with trace zero 13 A Cartan subalgebra then consists of the diagonal matrices with trace zero 14 which we identify with vectors in Cn displaystyle mathbb C n nbsp whose entries sum to zero The roots then consist of all the n n 1 permutations of 1 1 0 0 A choice of simple roots is 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 displaystyle begin aligned amp 1 1 0 dots 0 0 amp 0 1 1 dots 0 0 amp vdots amp 0 0 0 dots 1 1 end aligned nbsp So SU n is of rank n 1 and its Dynkin diagram is given by An 1 a chain of n 1 nodes nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 15 Its Cartan matrix is 2 10 0 12 1 00 12 0 000 2 displaystyle begin pmatrix 2 amp 1 amp 0 amp dots amp 0 1 amp 2 amp 1 amp dots amp 0 0 amp 1 amp 2 amp dots amp 0 vdots amp vdots amp vdots amp ddots amp vdots 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp dots amp 2 end pmatrix nbsp Its Weyl group or Coxeter group is the symmetric group Sn the symmetry group of the n 1 simplex Generalized special unitary group editFor a field F the generalized special unitary group over F SU p q F is the group of all linear transformations of determinant 1 of a vector space of rank n p q over F which leave invariant a nondegenerate Hermitian form of signature p q This group is often referred to as the special unitary group of signature p q over F The field F can be replaced by a commutative ring in which case the vector space is replaced by a free module Specifically fix a Hermitian matrix A of signature p q in GL n R displaystyle operatorname GL n mathbb R nbsp then all M SU p q R displaystyle M in operatorname SU p q mathbb R nbsp satisfy M AM AdetM 1 displaystyle begin aligned M AM amp A det M amp 1 end aligned nbsp Often one will see the notation SU p q without reference to a ring or field in this case the ring or field being referred to is C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp and this gives one of the classical Lie groups The standard choice for A when F C displaystyle operatorname F mathbb C nbsp is A 00i0In 20 i00 displaystyle A begin bmatrix 0 amp 0 amp i 0 amp I n 2 amp 0 i amp 0 amp 0 end bmatrix nbsp However there may be better choices for A for certain dimensions which exhibit more behaviour under restriction to subrings of C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp Example edit An important example of this type of group is the Picard modular group SU 2 1 Z i displaystyle operatorname SU 2 1 mathbb Z i nbsp which acts projectively on complex hyperbolic space of degree two in the same way that SL 2 9 Z displaystyle operatorname SL 2 9 mathbb Z nbsp acts projectively on real hyperbolic space of dimension two In 2005 Gabor Francsics and Peter Lax computed an explicit fundamental domain for the action of this group on HC2 16 A further example is SU 1 1 C displaystyle operatorname SU 1 1 mathbb C nbsp which is isomorphic to SL 2 R displaystyle operatorname SL 2 mathbb R nbsp Important subgroups editIn physics the special unitary group is used to represent bosonic symmetries In theories of symmetry breaking it is important to be able to find the subgroups of the special unitary group Subgroups of SU n that are important in GUT physics are for p gt 1 n p gt 1 SU n SU p SU n p U 1 displaystyle operatorname SU n supset operatorname SU p times operatorname SU n p times operatorname U 1 nbsp where denotes the direct product and U 1 known as the circle group is the multiplicative group of all complex numbers with absolute value 1 For completeness there are also the orthogonal and symplectic subgroups SU n SO n SU 2n Sp n displaystyle begin aligned operatorname SU n amp supset operatorname SO n operatorname SU 2n amp supset operatorname Sp n end aligned nbsp Since the rank of SU n is n 1 and of U 1 is 1 a useful check is that the sum of the ranks of the subgroups is less than or equal to the rank of the original group SU n is a subgroup of various other Lie groups SO 2n SU n Sp n SU n Spin 4 SU 2 SU 2 E6 SU 6 E7 SU 8 G2 SU 3 displaystyle begin aligned operatorname SO 2n amp supset operatorname SU n operatorname Sp n amp supset operatorname SU n operatorname Spin 4 amp operatorname SU 2 times operatorname SU 2 operatorname E 6 amp supset operatorname SU 6 operatorname E 7 amp supset operatorname SU 8 operatorname G 2 amp supset operatorname SU 3 end aligned nbsp See Spin group and Simple Lie group for E6 E7 and G2 There are also the accidental isomorphisms SU 4 Spin 6 SU 2 Spin 3 Sp 1 d and U 1 Spin 2 SO 2 One may finally mention that SU 2 is the double covering group of SO 3 a relation that plays an important role in the theory of rotations of 2 spinors in non relativistic quantum mechanics SU 1 1 editSU 1 1 uvv u M 2 C uu vv 1 displaystyle mathrm SU 1 1 left begin pmatrix u amp v v amp u end pmatrix in M 2 mathbb C uu vv 1 right nbsp where u displaystyle u nbsp denotes the complex conjugate of the complex number u This group is isomorphic to SL 2 ℝ and Spin 2 1 17 where the numbers separated by a comma refer to the signature of the quadratic form preserved by the group The expression uu vv displaystyle uu vv nbsp in the definition of SU 1 1 is an Hermitian form which becomes an isotropic quadratic form when u and v are expanded with their real components An early appearance of this group was as the unit sphere of coquaternions introduced by James Cockle in 1852 Let j 0110 k 1 00 1 i 01 10 displaystyle j begin bmatrix 0 amp 1 1 amp 0 end bmatrix quad k begin bmatrix 1 amp 0 0 amp 1 end bmatrix quad i begin bmatrix 0 amp 1 1 amp 0 end bmatrix nbsp Then jk 0 11 0 i displaystyle j k begin bmatrix 0 amp 1 1 amp 0 end bmatrix i nbsp ijk I2 1001 displaystyle i j k I 2 equiv begin bmatrix 1 amp 0 0 amp 1 end bmatrix nbsp the 2 2 identity matrix ki j displaystyle k i j nbsp and ij k displaystyle i j k nbsp and the elements i j and k all anticommute as in quaternions Also i displaystyle i nbsp is still a square root of I2 negative of the identity matrix whereas j2 k2 I2 displaystyle j 2 k 2 I 2 nbsp are not unlike in quaternions For both quaternions and coquaternions all scalar quantities are treated as implicit multiples of I 2 and notated as 1 The coquaternion q w xi yj zk displaystyle q w x i y j z k nbsp with scalar w has conjugate q w xi yj zk displaystyle q w x i y j z k nbsp similar to Hamilton s quaternions The quadratic form is qq w2 x2 y2 z2 displaystyle q q w 2 x 2 y 2 z 2 nbsp Note that the 2 sheet hyperboloid xi yj zk x2 y2 z2 1 displaystyle left xi yj zk x 2 y 2 z 2 1 right nbsp corresponds to the imaginary units in the algebra so that any point p on this hyperboloid can be used as a pole of a sinusoidal wave according to Euler s formula The hyperboloid is stable under SU 1 1 illustrating the isomorphism with Spin 2 1 The variability of the pole of a wave as noted in studies of polarization might view elliptical polarization as an exhibit of the elliptical shape of a wave with pole p i displaystyle p neq pm i nbsp The Poincare sphere model used since 1892 has been compared to a 2 sheet hyperboloid model 18 and the practice of SU 1 1 interferometry has been introduced When an element of SU 1 1 is interpreted as a Mobius transformation it leaves the unit disk stable so this group represents the motions of the Poincare disk model of hyperbolic plane geometry Indeed for a point z 1 in the complex projective line the action of SU 1 1 is given by z 1 uvv u uz v vz u uz v vz u 1 displaystyle bigl z 1 bigr begin pmatrix u amp v v amp u end pmatrix u z v v z u left frac uz v vz u 1 right nbsp since in projective coordinates uz v vz u uz v vz u 1 displaystyle u z v v z u thicksim left frac u z v v z u 1 right nbsp Writing suv suv 2ℜ suv displaystyle suv overline suv 2 Re mathord bigl suv bigr nbsp complex number arithmetic shows uz v 2 S zz and vz u 2 S 1 displaystyle bigl u z v bigr 2 S z z quad text and quad bigl v z u bigr 2 S 1 nbsp where S vv zz 1 2ℜ uvz displaystyle S v v left z z 1 right 2 Re mathord bigl uvz bigr nbsp Therefore zz lt 1 uz v lt vz u displaystyle z z lt 1 implies bigl uz v bigr lt bigl v z u bigr nbsp so that their ratio lies in the open disk 19 See also edit nbsp Mathematics portalUnitary group Projective special unitary group PSU n Orthogonal group Generalizations of Pauli matrices Representation theory of SU 2 Footnotes edit For a characterization of U n and hence SU n in terms of preservation of the standard inner product on Cn displaystyle mathbb C n nbsp see Classical group For an explicit description of the homomorphism SU 2 SO 3 see Connection between SO 3 and SU 2 So fewer than 1 6 of all fabc s are non vanishing Sp n is the compact real form of Sp 2n C displaystyle operatorname Sp 2n mathbb C nbsp It is sometimes denoted USp 2n The dimension of the Sp n matrices is 2n 2n Citations edit Halzen Francis Martin Alan 1984 Quarks amp Leptons An Introductory Course in Modern Particle Physics John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 88741 2 Hall 2015 Proposition 13 11 Wybourne B G 1974 Classical Groups for Physicists Wiley Interscience ISBN 0471965057 Hall 2015 Proposition 3 24 Hall 2015 Exercise 1 5 Savage Alistair LieGroups PDF MATH 4144 notes Hall 2015 Proposition 3 24 Hall 2015 Proposition 13 11 Hall 2015 Section 13 2 Hall 2015 Chapter 6 Rosen S P 1971 Finite Transformations in Various Representations of SU 3 Journal of Mathematical Physics 12 4 673 681 Bibcode 1971JMP 12 673R doi 10 1063 1 1665634 Curtright T L Zachos C K 2015 Elementary results for the fundamental representation of SU 3 Reports on Mathematical Physics 76 3 401 404 arXiv 1508 00868 Bibcode 2015RpMP 76 401C doi 10 1016 S0034 4877 15 30040 9 S2CID 119679825 Hall 2015 Proposition 3 24 Hall 2015 Section 3 6 Hall 2015 Section 7 7 1 Hall 2015 Section 8 10 1 Francsics Gabor Lax Peter D September 2005 An explicit fundamental domain for the Picard modular group in two complex dimensions arXiv math 0509708 Gilmore Robert 1974 Lie Groups Lie Algebras and some of their Applications John Wiley amp Sons pp 52 201 205 MR 1275599 Mota R D Ojeda Guillen D Salazar Ramirez M Granados V D 2016 SU 1 1 approach to Stokes parameters and the theory of light polarization Journal of the Optical Society of America B 33 8 1696 1701 arXiv 1602 03223 Bibcode 2016JOSAB 33 1696M doi 10 1364 JOSAB 33 001696 S2CID 119146980 Siegel C L 1971 Topics in Complex Function Theory Vol 2 Translated by Shenitzer A Tretkoff M Wiley Interscience pp 13 15 ISBN 0 471 79080 X References editHall Brian C 2015 Lie Groups Lie Algebras and Representations An Elementary Introduction Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 222 2nd ed Springer ISBN 978 3319134666 Iachello Francesco 2006 Lie Algebras and Applications Lecture Notes in Physics vol 708 Springer ISBN 3540362363 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Special unitary group amp oldid 1217089404 The group SU 1 1, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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