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Weyl group

In mathematics, in particular the theory of Lie algebras, the Weyl group (named after Hermann Weyl) of a root system Φ is a subgroup of the isometry group of that root system. Specifically, it is the subgroup which is generated by reflections through the hyperplanes orthogonal to the roots, and as such is a finite reflection group. In fact it turns out that most finite reflection groups are Weyl groups.[1] Abstractly, Weyl groups are finite Coxeter groups, and are important examples of these.

The Weyl group of a semisimple Lie group, a semisimple Lie algebra, a semisimple linear algebraic group, etc. is the Weyl group of the root system of that group or algebra.

Definition and examples

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

Let   be a root system in a Euclidean space  . For each root  , let   denote the reflection about the hyperplane perpendicular to  , which is given explicitly as

 ,

where   is the inner product on  . The Weyl group   of   is the subgroup of the orthogonal group   generated by all the  's. By the definition of a root system, each   preserves  , from which it follows that   is a finite group.

In the case of the   root system, for example, the hyperplanes perpendicular to the roots are just lines, and the Weyl group is the symmetry group of an equilateral triangle, as indicated in the figure. As a group,   is isomorphic to the permutation group on three elements, which we may think of as the vertices of the triangle. Note that in this case,   is not the full symmetry group of the root system; a 60-degree rotation preserves   but is not an element of  .

We may consider also the   root system. In this case,   is the space of all vectors in   whose entries sum to zero. The roots consist of the vectors of the form  , where   is the  th standard basis element for  . The reflection associated to such a root is the transformation of   obtained by interchanging the  th and  th entries of each vector. The Weyl group for   is then the permutation group on   elements.

Weyl chambers

 
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 A2 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:[2]

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.

A related result is this one:[3]

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

Coxeter group structure

Generating set

A key result about the Weyl group is this:[4]

Theorem: If   is base for  , then the Weyl group is generated by the reflections   with   in  .

That is to say, the group generated by the reflections   is the same as the group generated by the reflections  .

Relations

Meanwhile, if   and   are in  , then the Dynkin diagram for   relative to the base   tells us something about how the pair   behaves. Specifically, suppose   and   are the corresponding vertices in the Dynkin diagram. Then we have the following results:

  • If there is no bond between   and  , then   and   commute. Since   and   each have order two, this is equivalent to saying that  .
  • If there is one bond between   and  , then  .
  • If there are two bonds between   and  , then  .
  • If there are three bonds between   and  , then  .

The preceding claim is not hard to verify, if we simply remember what the Dynkin diagram tells us about the angle between each pair of roots. If, for example, there is no bond between the two vertices, then   and   are orthogonal, from which it follows easily that the corresponding reflections commute. More generally, the number of bonds determines the angle   between the roots. The product of the two reflections is then a rotation by angle   in the plane spanned by   and  , as the reader may verify, from which the above claim follows easily.

As a Coxeter group

Weyl groups are examples of finite reflection groups, as they are generated by reflections; the abstract groups (not considered as subgroups of a linear group) are accordingly finite Coxeter groups, which allows them to be classified by their Coxeter–Dynkin diagram. Being a Coxeter group means that a Weyl group has a special kind of presentation in which each generator xi is of order two, and the relations other than xi2=1 are of the form (xixj)mij=1. The generators are the reflections given by simple roots, and mij is 2, 3, 4, or 6 depending on whether roots i and j make an angle of 90, 120, 135, or 150 degrees, i.e., whether in the Dynkin diagram they are unconnected, connected by a simple edge, connected by a double edge, or connected by a triple edge. We have already noted these relations in the bullet points above, but to say that   is a Coxeter group, we are saying that those are the only relations in  .

Weyl groups have a Bruhat order and length function in terms of this presentation: the length of a Weyl group element is the length of the shortest word representing that element in terms of these standard generators. There is a unique longest element of a Coxeter group, which is opposite to the identity in the Bruhat order.

Weyl groups in algebraic, group-theoretic, and geometric settings

Above, the Weyl group was defined as a subgroup of the isometry group of a root system. There are also various definitions of Weyl groups specific to various group-theoretic and geometric contexts (Lie algebra, Lie group, symmetric space, etc.). For each of these ways of defining Weyl groups, it is a (usually nontrivial) theorem that it is a Weyl group in the sense of the definition at the top of this article, namely the Weyl group of some root system associated with the object. A concrete realization of such a Weyl group usually depends on a choice – e.g. of Cartan subalgebra for a Lie algebra, of maximal torus for a Lie group.[5]

The Weyl group of a connected compact Lie group

Let   be a connected compact Lie group and let   be a maximal torus in  . We then introduce the normalizer of   in  , denoted   and defined as

 .

We also define the centralizer of   in  , denoted   and defined as

 .

The Weyl group   of   (relative to the given maximal torus  ) is then defined initially as

 .

Eventually, one proves that  ,[6] at which point one has an alternative description of the Weyl group as

 .

Now, one can define a root system   associated to the pair  ; the roots are the nonzero weights of the adjoint action of   on the Lie algebra of  . For each  , one can construct an element   of   whose action on   has the form of reflection.[7] With a bit more effort, one can show that these reflections generate all of  .[6] Thus, in the end, the Weyl group as defined as   or   is isomorphic to the Weyl group of the root system  .

In other settings

For a complex semisimple Lie algebra, the Weyl group is simply defined as the reflection group generated by reflections in the roots – the specific realization of the root system depending on a choice of Cartan subalgebra.

For a Lie group G satisfying certain conditions,[note 1] given a torus T < G (which need not be maximal), the Weyl group with respect to that torus is defined as the quotient of the normalizer of the torus N = N(T) = NG(T) by the centralizer of the torus Z = Z(T) = ZG(T),

 

The group W is finite – Z is of finite index in N. If T = T0 is a maximal torus (so it equals its own centralizer:  ) then the resulting quotient N/Z = N/T is called the Weyl group of G, and denoted W(G). Note that the specific quotient set depends on a choice of maximal torus, but the resulting groups are all isomorphic (by an inner automorphism of G), since maximal tori are conjugate.

If G is compact and connected, and T is a maximal torus, then the Weyl group of G is isomorphic to the Weyl group of its Lie algebra, as discussed above.

For example, for the general linear group GL, a maximal torus is the subgroup D of invertible diagonal matrices, whose normalizer is the generalized permutation matrices (matrices in the form of permutation matrices, but with any non-zero numbers in place of the '1's), and whose Weyl group is the symmetric group. In this case the quotient map NN/T splits (via the permutation matrices), so the normalizer N is a semidirect product of the torus and the Weyl group, and the Weyl group can be expressed as a subgroup of G. In general this is not always the case – the quotient does not always split, the normalizer N is not always the semidirect product of W and Z, and the Weyl group cannot always be realized as a subgroup of G.[5]

Bruhat decomposition

If B is a Borel subgroup of G, i.e., a maximal connected solvable subgroup and a maximal torus T = T0 is chosen to lie in B, then we obtain the Bruhat decomposition

 

which gives rise to the decomposition of the flag variety G/B into Schubert cells (see Grassmannian).

The structure of the Hasse diagram of the group is related geometrically to the cohomology of the manifold (rather, of the real and complex forms of the group), which is constrained by Poincaré duality. Thus algebraic properties of the Weyl group correspond to general topological properties of manifolds. For instance, Poincaré duality gives a pairing between cells in dimension k and in dimension n - k (where n is the dimension of a manifold): the bottom (0) dimensional cell corresponds to the identity element of the Weyl group, and the dual top-dimensional cell corresponds to the longest element of a Coxeter group.

Analogy with algebraic groups

There are a number of analogies between algebraic groups and Weyl groups – for instance, the number of elements of the symmetric group is n!, and the number of elements of the general linear group over a finite field is related to the q-factorial  ; thus the symmetric group behaves as though it were a linear group over "the field with one element". This is formalized by the field with one element, which considers Weyl groups to be simple algebraic groups over the field with one element.

Cohomology

For a non-abelian connected compact Lie group G, the first group cohomology of the Weyl group W with coefficients in the maximal torus T used to define it,[note 2] is related to the outer automorphism group of the normalizer   as:[8]

 

The outer automorphisms of the group Out(G) are essentially the diagram automorphisms of the Dynkin diagram, while the group cohomology is computed in Hämmerli, Matthey & Suter 2004 and is a finite elementary abelian 2-group ( ); for simple Lie groups it has order 1, 2, or 4. The 0th and 2nd group cohomology are also closely related to the normalizer.[8]

See also

Footnotes

Notes

  1. ^ Different conditions are sufficient – most simply if G is connected and either compact, or an affine algebraic group. The definition is simpler for a semisimple (or more generally reductive) Lie group over an algebraically closed field, but a relative Weyl group can be defined for a split Lie group.
  2. ^ W acts on T – that is how it is defined – and the group   means "with respect to this action".

Citations

  1. ^ Humphreys 1992, p. 6.
  2. ^ Hall 2015 Propositions 8.23 and 8.27
  3. ^ Hall 2015 Proposition 8.29
  4. ^ Hall 2015 Propositions 8.24
  5. ^ a b Popov & Fedenko 2001
  6. ^ a b Hall 2015 Theorem 11.36
  7. ^ Hall 2015 Propositions 11.35
  8. ^ a b Hämmerli, Matthey & Suter 2004

References

  • Hall, Brian C. (2015), Lie Groups, Lie Algebras, and Representations: An Elementary Introduction, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 222 (2nd ed.), Springer, ISBN 978-3-319-13466-6
  • Knapp, Anthony W. (2002), Lie Groups: Beyond an Introduction, Progress in Mathematics, vol. 140 (2nd ed.), Birkhaeuser, ISBN 978-0-8176-4259-4
  • Popov, V.L.; Fedenko, A.S. (2001) [1994], "Weyl group", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
  • Hämmerli, J.-F.; Matthey, M.; Suter, U. (2004), "Automorphisms of Normalizers of Maximal Tori and First Cohomology of Weyl Groups" (PDF), Journal of Lie Theory, Heldermann Verlag, 14: 583–617, Zbl 1092.22004

Further reading

  • Bourbaki, Nicolas (2002), Lie Groups and Lie Algebras: Chapters 4-6, Elements of Mathematics, Springer, ISBN 978-3-540-42650-9, Zbl 0983.17001
  • Björner, Anders; Brenti, Francesco (2005), Combinatorics of Coxeter Groups, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 231, Springer, ISBN 978-3-540-27596-1, Zbl 1110.05001
  • Coxeter, H. S. M. (1934), "Discrete groups generated by reflections", Ann. of Math., 35 (3): 588–621, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.128.471, doi:10.2307/1968753, JSTOR 1968753
  • Coxeter, H. S. M. (1935), "The complete enumeration of finite groups of the form  ", J. London Math. Soc., 1, 10 (1): 21–25, doi:10.1112/jlms/s1-10.37.21
  • Davis, Michael W. (2007), The Geometry and Topology of Coxeter Groups (PDF), ISBN 978-0-691-13138-2, Zbl 1142.20020
  • Grove, Larry C.; Benson, Clark T. (1985), Finite Reflection Groups, Graduate texts in mathematics, vol. 99, Springer, ISBN 978-0-387-96082-1
  • Hiller, Howard (1982), Geometry of Coxeter groups, Research Notes in Mathematics, vol. 54, Pitman, ISBN 978-0-273-08517-1, Zbl 0483.57002
  • Howlett, Robert B. (1988), "On the Schur Multipliers of Coxeter Groups", J. London Math. Soc., 2, 38 (2): 263–276, doi:10.1112/jlms/s2-38.2.263, Zbl 0627.20019
  • Humphreys, James E. (1992) [1990], Reflection Groups and Coxeter Groups, Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics, vol. 29, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-43613-7, Zbl 0725.20028
  • Ihara, S.; Yokonuma, Takeo (1965), "On the second cohomology groups (Schur-multipliers) of finite reflection groups" (PDF), J. Fac. Sci. Univ. Tokyo, Sect. 1, 11: 155–171, Zbl 0136.28802
  • Kane, Richard (2001), Reflection Groups and Invariant Theory, CMS Books in Mathematics, Springer, ISBN 978-0-387-98979-2, Zbl 0986.20038
  • Vinberg, E. B. (1984), "Absence of crystallographic groups of reflections in Lobachevski spaces of large dimension", Trudy Moskov. Mat. Obshch., 47
  • Yokonuma, Takeo (1965), "On the second cohomology groups (Schur-multipliers) of infinite discrete reflection groups", J. Fac. Sci. Univ. Tokyo, Sect. 1, 11: 173–186, hdl:2261/6049, Zbl 0136.28803

External links

weyl, group, mathematics, particular, theory, algebras, named, after, hermann, weyl, root, system, subgroup, isometry, group, that, root, system, specifically, subgroup, which, generated, reflections, through, hyperplanes, orthogonal, roots, such, finite, refl. In mathematics in particular the theory of Lie algebras the Weyl group named after Hermann Weyl of a root system F is a subgroup of the isometry group of that root system Specifically it is the subgroup which is generated by reflections through the hyperplanes orthogonal to the roots and as such is a finite reflection group In fact it turns out that most finite reflection groups are Weyl groups 1 Abstractly Weyl groups are finite Coxeter groups and are important examples of these The Weyl group of a semisimple Lie group a semisimple Lie algebra a semisimple linear algebraic group etc is the Weyl group of the root system of that group or algebra Contents 1 Definition and examples 2 Weyl chambers 3 Coxeter group structure 3 1 Generating set 3 2 Relations 3 3 As a Coxeter group 4 Weyl groups in algebraic group theoretic and geometric settings 4 1 The Weyl group of a connected compact Lie group 4 2 In other settings 5 Bruhat decomposition 6 Analogy with algebraic groups 7 Cohomology 8 See also 9 Footnotes 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksDefinition and examples Edit The Weyl group of the A 2 displaystyle A 2 root system is the symmetry group of an equilateral triangle Let F displaystyle Phi be a root system in a Euclidean space V displaystyle V For each root a F displaystyle alpha in Phi let s a displaystyle s alpha denote the reflection about the hyperplane perpendicular to a displaystyle alpha which is given explicitly as s a v v 2 v a a a a displaystyle s alpha v v 2 frac v alpha alpha alpha alpha where displaystyle cdot cdot is the inner product on V displaystyle V The Weyl group W displaystyle W of F displaystyle Phi is the subgroup of the orthogonal group O V displaystyle O V generated by all the s a displaystyle s alpha s By the definition of a root system each s a displaystyle s alpha preserves F displaystyle Phi from which it follows that W displaystyle W is a finite group In the case of the A 2 displaystyle A 2 root system for example the hyperplanes perpendicular to the roots are just lines and the Weyl group is the symmetry group of an equilateral triangle as indicated in the figure As a group W displaystyle W is isomorphic to the permutation group on three elements which we may think of as the vertices of the triangle Note that in this case W displaystyle W is not the full symmetry group of the root system a 60 degree rotation preserves F displaystyle Phi but is not an element of W displaystyle W We may consider also the A n displaystyle A n root system In this case V displaystyle V is the space of all vectors in R n 1 displaystyle mathbb R n 1 whose entries sum to zero The roots consist of the vectors of the form e i e j i j displaystyle e i e j i neq j where e i displaystyle e i is the i displaystyle i th standard basis element for R n 1 displaystyle mathbb R n 1 The reflection associated to such a root is the transformation of V displaystyle V obtained by interchanging the i displaystyle i th and j displaystyle j th entries of each vector The Weyl group for A n displaystyle A n is then the permutation group on n 1 displaystyle n 1 elements Weyl chambers EditSee also Coxeter group Affine Coxeter groups The shaded region is the fundamental Weyl chamber for the base a 1 a 2 displaystyle alpha 1 alpha 2 If F V displaystyle Phi subset V is a root system we may consider the hyperplane perpendicular to each root a displaystyle alpha Recall that s a displaystyle s alpha denotes the reflection about the hyperplane and that the Weyl group is the group of transformations of V displaystyle V generated by all the s a displaystyle s alpha 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 V displaystyle v in V such that a v gt 0 displaystyle alpha v gt 0 for all a D displaystyle alpha in Delta Since the reflections s a a F displaystyle s alpha alpha in Phi preserve F displaystyle Phi 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 A2 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 2 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 A related result is this one 3 Theorem Fix a Weyl chamber C displaystyle C Then for all v V displaystyle v in V the Weyl orbit of v displaystyle v contains exactly one point in the closure C displaystyle bar C of C displaystyle C Coxeter group structure EditGenerating set Edit A key result about the Weyl group is this 4 Theorem If D displaystyle Delta is base for F displaystyle Phi then the Weyl group is generated by the reflections s a displaystyle s alpha with a displaystyle alpha in D displaystyle Delta That is to say the group generated by the reflections s a a D displaystyle s alpha alpha in Delta is the same as the group generated by the reflections s a a F displaystyle s alpha alpha in Phi Relations Edit Meanwhile if a displaystyle alpha and b displaystyle beta are in D displaystyle Delta then the Dynkin diagram for F displaystyle Phi relative to the base D displaystyle Delta tells us something about how the pair s a s b displaystyle s alpha s beta behaves Specifically suppose v displaystyle v and v displaystyle v are the corresponding vertices in the Dynkin diagram Then we have the following results If there is no bond between v displaystyle v and v displaystyle v then s a displaystyle s alpha and s b displaystyle s beta commute Since s a displaystyle s alpha and s b displaystyle s beta each have order two this is equivalent to saying that s a s b 2 1 displaystyle s alpha s beta 2 1 If there is one bond between v displaystyle v and v displaystyle v then s a s b 3 1 displaystyle s alpha s beta 3 1 If there are two bonds between v displaystyle v and v displaystyle v then s a s b 4 1 displaystyle s alpha s beta 4 1 If there are three bonds between v displaystyle v and v displaystyle v then s a s b 6 1 displaystyle s alpha s beta 6 1 The preceding claim is not hard to verify if we simply remember what the Dynkin diagram tells us about the angle between each pair of roots If for example there is no bond between the two vertices then a displaystyle alpha and b displaystyle beta are orthogonal from which it follows easily that the corresponding reflections commute More generally the number of bonds determines the angle 8 displaystyle theta between the roots The product of the two reflections is then a rotation by angle 2 8 displaystyle 2 theta in the plane spanned by a displaystyle alpha and b displaystyle beta as the reader may verify from which the above claim follows easily As a Coxeter group Edit Weyl groups are examples of finite reflection groups as they are generated by reflections the abstract groups not considered as subgroups of a linear group are accordingly finite Coxeter groups which allows them to be classified by their Coxeter Dynkin diagram Being a Coxeter group means that a Weyl group has a special kind of presentation in which each generator xi is of order two and the relations other than xi2 1 are of the form xixj mij 1 The generators are the reflections given by simple roots and mij is 2 3 4 or 6 depending on whether roots i and j make an angle of 90 120 135 or 150 degrees i e whether in the Dynkin diagram they are unconnected connected by a simple edge connected by a double edge or connected by a triple edge We have already noted these relations in the bullet points above but to say that W displaystyle W is a Coxeter group we are saying that those are the only relations in W displaystyle W Weyl groups have a Bruhat order and length function in terms of this presentation the length of a Weyl group element is the length of the shortest word representing that element in terms of these standard generators There is a unique longest element of a Coxeter group which is opposite to the identity in the Bruhat order Weyl groups in algebraic group theoretic and geometric settings EditAbove the Weyl group was defined as a subgroup of the isometry group of a root system There are also various definitions of Weyl groups specific to various group theoretic and geometric contexts Lie algebra Lie group symmetric space etc For each of these ways of defining Weyl groups it is a usually nontrivial theorem that it is a Weyl group in the sense of the definition at the top of this article namely the Weyl group of some root system associated with the object A concrete realization of such a Weyl group usually depends on a choice e g of Cartan subalgebra for a Lie algebra of maximal torus for a Lie group 5 The Weyl group of a connected compact Lie group Edit Let K displaystyle K be a connected compact Lie group and let T displaystyle T be a maximal torus in K displaystyle K We then introduce the normalizer of T displaystyle T in K displaystyle K denoted N T displaystyle N T and defined as N T x K x t x 1 T for all t T displaystyle N T x in K xtx 1 in T text for all t in T We also define the centralizer of T displaystyle T in K displaystyle K denoted Z T displaystyle Z T and defined as Z T x K x t x 1 t for all t T displaystyle Z T x in K xtx 1 t text for all t in T The Weyl group W displaystyle W of K displaystyle K relative to the given maximal torus T displaystyle T is then defined initially as W N T T displaystyle W N T T Eventually one proves that Z T T displaystyle Z T T 6 at which point one has an alternative description of the Weyl group as W N T Z T displaystyle W N T Z T Now one can define a root system F displaystyle Phi associated to the pair K T displaystyle K T the roots are the nonzero weights of the adjoint action of T displaystyle T on the Lie algebra of K displaystyle K For each a F displaystyle alpha in Phi one can construct an element x a displaystyle x alpha of N T displaystyle N T whose action on T displaystyle T has the form of reflection 7 With a bit more effort one can show that these reflections generate all of N T Z T displaystyle N T Z T 6 Thus in the end the Weyl group as defined as N T T displaystyle N T T or N T Z T displaystyle N T Z T is isomorphic to the Weyl group of the root system F displaystyle Phi In other settings Edit For a complex semisimple Lie algebra the Weyl group is simply defined as the reflection group generated by reflections in the roots the specific realization of the root system depending on a choice of Cartan subalgebra For a Lie group G satisfying certain conditions note 1 given a torus T lt G which need not be maximal the Weyl group with respect to that torus is defined as the quotient of the normalizer of the torus N N T NG T by the centralizer of the torus Z Z T ZG T W T G N T Z T displaystyle W T G N T Z T The group W is finite Z is of finite index in N If T T0 is a maximal torus so it equals its own centralizer Z T 0 T 0 displaystyle Z T 0 T 0 then the resulting quotient N Z N T is called the Weyl group of G and denoted W G Note that the specific quotient set depends on a choice of maximal torus but the resulting groups are all isomorphic by an inner automorphism of G since maximal tori are conjugate If G is compact and connected and T is a maximal torus then the Weyl group of G is isomorphic to the Weyl group of its Lie algebra as discussed above For example for the general linear group GL a maximal torus is the subgroup D of invertible diagonal matrices whose normalizer is the generalized permutation matrices matrices in the form of permutation matrices but with any non zero numbers in place of the 1 s and whose Weyl group is the symmetric group In this case the quotient map N N T splits via the permutation matrices so the normalizer N is a semidirect product of the torus and the Weyl group and the Weyl group can be expressed as a subgroup of G In general this is not always the case the quotient does not always split the normalizer N is not always the semidirect product of W and Z and the Weyl group cannot always be realized as a subgroup of G 5 Bruhat decomposition EditFurther information Bruhat decomposition If B is a Borel subgroup of G i e a maximal connected solvable subgroup and a maximal torus T T0 is chosen to lie in B then we obtain the Bruhat decomposition G w W B w B displaystyle G bigcup w in W BwB which gives rise to the decomposition of the flag variety G B into Schubert cells see Grassmannian The structure of the Hasse diagram of the group is related geometrically to the cohomology of the manifold rather of the real and complex forms of the group which is constrained by Poincare duality Thus algebraic properties of the Weyl group correspond to general topological properties of manifolds For instance Poincare duality gives a pairing between cells in dimension k and in dimension n k where n is the dimension of a manifold the bottom 0 dimensional cell corresponds to the identity element of the Weyl group and the dual top dimensional cell corresponds to the longest element of a Coxeter group Analogy with algebraic groups EditMain article q analog See also Field with one element There are a number of analogies between algebraic groups and Weyl groups for instance the number of elements of the symmetric group is n and the number of elements of the general linear group over a finite field is related to the q factorial n q displaystyle n q thus the symmetric group behaves as though it were a linear group over the field with one element This is formalized by the field with one element which considers Weyl groups to be simple algebraic groups over the field with one element Cohomology EditFor a non abelian connected compact Lie group G the first group cohomology of the Weyl group W with coefficients in the maximal torus T used to define it note 2 is related to the outer automorphism group of the normalizer N N G T displaystyle N N G T as 8 Out N H 1 W T Out G displaystyle operatorname Out N cong H 1 W T rtimes operatorname Out G The outer automorphisms of the group Out G are essentially the diagram automorphisms of the Dynkin diagram while the group cohomology is computed in Hammerli Matthey amp Suter 2004 and is a finite elementary abelian 2 group Z 2 k displaystyle mathbf Z 2 k for simple Lie groups it has order 1 2 or 4 The 0th and 2nd group cohomology are also closely related to the normalizer 8 See also EditAffine Weyl group Semisimple Lie algebra Cartan subalgebras and root systems Maximal torus Root system of a semi simple Lie algebra Hasse diagramFootnotes EditNotes Edit Different conditions are sufficient most simply if G is connected and either compact or an affine algebraic group The definition is simpler for a semisimple or more generally reductive Lie group over an algebraically closed field but a relative Weyl group can be defined for a split Lie group W acts on T that is how it is defined and the group H 1 W T displaystyle H 1 W T means with respect to this action Citations Edit Humphreys 1992 p 6 Hall 2015 Propositions 8 23 and 8 27 Hall 2015 Proposition 8 29 Hall 2015 Propositions 8 24 a b Popov amp Fedenko 2001harvnb error no target CITEREFPopovFedenko2001 help a b Hall 2015 Theorem 11 36 Hall 2015 Propositions 11 35 a b Hammerli Matthey amp Suter 2004References EditHall Brian C 2015 Lie Groups Lie Algebras and Representations An Elementary Introduction Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 222 2nd ed Springer ISBN 978 3 319 13466 6 Knapp Anthony W 2002 Lie Groups Beyond an Introduction Progress in Mathematics vol 140 2nd ed Birkhaeuser ISBN 978 0 8176 4259 4 Popov V L Fedenko A S 2001 1994 Weyl group Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press Hammerli J F Matthey M Suter U 2004 Automorphisms of Normalizers of Maximal Tori and First Cohomology of Weyl Groups PDF Journal of Lie Theory Heldermann Verlag 14 583 617 Zbl 1092 22004Further reading EditBourbaki Nicolas 2002 Lie Groups and Lie Algebras Chapters 4 6 Elements of Mathematics Springer ISBN 978 3 540 42650 9 Zbl 0983 17001 Bjorner Anders Brenti Francesco 2005 Combinatorics of Coxeter Groups Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 231 Springer ISBN 978 3 540 27596 1 Zbl 1110 05001 Coxeter H S M 1934 Discrete groups generated by reflections Ann of Math 35 3 588 621 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 128 471 doi 10 2307 1968753 JSTOR 1968753 Coxeter H S M 1935 The complete enumeration of finite groups of the form r i 2 r i r j k i j 1 displaystyle r i 2 r i r j k ij 1 J London Math Soc 1 10 1 21 25 doi 10 1112 jlms s1 10 37 21 Davis Michael W 2007 The Geometry and Topology of Coxeter Groups PDF ISBN 978 0 691 13138 2 Zbl 1142 20020 Grove Larry C Benson Clark T 1985 Finite Reflection Groups Graduate texts in mathematics vol 99 Springer ISBN 978 0 387 96082 1 Hiller Howard 1982 Geometry of Coxeter groups Research Notes in Mathematics vol 54 Pitman ISBN 978 0 273 08517 1 Zbl 0483 57002 Howlett Robert B 1988 On the Schur Multipliers of Coxeter Groups J London Math Soc 2 38 2 263 276 doi 10 1112 jlms s2 38 2 263 Zbl 0627 20019 Humphreys James E 1992 1990 Reflection Groups and Coxeter Groups Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics vol 29 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 43613 7 Zbl 0725 20028 Ihara S Yokonuma Takeo 1965 On the second cohomology groups Schur multipliers of finite reflection groups PDF J Fac Sci Univ Tokyo Sect 1 11 155 171 Zbl 0136 28802 Kane Richard 2001 Reflection Groups and Invariant Theory CMS Books in Mathematics Springer ISBN 978 0 387 98979 2 Zbl 0986 20038 Vinberg E B 1984 Absence of crystallographic groups of reflections in Lobachevski spaces of large dimension Trudy Moskov Mat Obshch 47 Yokonuma Takeo 1965 On the second cohomology groups Schur multipliers of infinite discrete reflection groups J Fac Sci Univ Tokyo Sect 1 11 173 186 hdl 2261 6049 Zbl 0136 28803External links Edit Coxeter group Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Weisstein Eric W Coxeter group MathWorld Jenn software for visualizing the Cayley graphs of finite Coxeter groups on up to four generators Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Weyl group amp oldid 1027344393 Weyl chambers, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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