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G2 (mathematics)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mathematics, G2 is three simple Lie groups (a complex form, a compact real form and a split real form), their Lie algebras as well as some algebraic groups. They are the smallest of the five exceptional simple Lie groups. G2 has rank 2 and dimension 14. It has two fundamental representations, with dimension 7 and 14.

The compact form of G2 can be described as the automorphism group of the octonion algebra or, equivalently, as the subgroup of SO(7) that preserves any chosen particular vector in its 8-dimensional real spinor representation (a spin representation).

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Transcription

History

The Lie algebra , being the smallest exceptional simple Lie algebra, was the first of these to be discovered in the attempt to classify simple Lie algebras. On May 23, 1887, Wilhelm Killing wrote a letter to Friedrich Engel saying that he had found a 14-dimensional simple Lie algebra, which we now call .[1]

In 1893, Élie Cartan published a note describing an open set in equipped with a 2-dimensional distribution—that is, a smoothly varying field of 2-dimensional subspaces of the tangent space—for which the Lie algebra appears as the infinitesimal symmetries.[2] In the same year, in the same journal, Engel noticed the same thing. Later it was discovered that the 2-dimensional distribution is closely related to a ball rolling on another ball. The space of configurations of the rolling ball is 5-dimensional, with a 2-dimensional distribution that describes motions of the ball where it rolls without slipping or twisting.[3][4]

In 1900, Engel discovered that a generic antisymmetric trilinear form (or 3-form) on a 7-dimensional complex vector space is preserved by a group isomorphic to the complex form of G2.[5]

In 1908 Cartan mentioned that the automorphism group of the octonions is a 14-dimensional simple Lie group.[6] In 1914 he stated that this is the compact real form of G2.[7]

In older books and papers, G2 is sometimes denoted by E2.

Real forms

There are 3 simple real Lie algebras associated with this root system:

  • The underlying real Lie algebra of the complex Lie algebra G2 has dimension 28. It has complex conjugation as an outer automorphism and is simply connected. The maximal compact subgroup of its associated group is the compact form of G2.
  • The Lie algebra of the compact form is 14-dimensional. The associated Lie group has no outer automorphisms, no center, and is simply connected and compact.
  • The Lie algebra of the non-compact (split) form has dimension 14. The associated simple Lie group has fundamental group of order 2 and its outer automorphism group is the trivial group. Its maximal compact subgroup is SU(2) × SU(2)/(−1,−1). It has a non-algebraic double cover that is simply connected.

Algebra

Dynkin diagram and Cartan matrix

The Dynkin diagram for G2 is given by

Dynkin diagram of G 2.

Its Cartan matrix is:

Roots of G2


The 12 vector root system of G2 in 2 dimensions.

The A2 Coxeter plane projection of the 12 vertices of the cuboctahedron contain the same 2D vector arrangement.

Graph of G2 as a subgroup of F4 and E8 projected into the Coxeter plane

A set of simple roots for can be read directly from the Cartan matrix above. These are (2,−3) and (−1, 2), however the integer lattice spanned by those is not the one pictured above (from obvious reason: the hexagonal lattice on the plane cannot be generated by integer vectors). The diagram above is obtained from a different pair roots: and . The remaining (positive) roots are A = α + β, B = 3α + β, α + A = 2α + β, and A + B = 3α + 2β. Although they do span a 2-dimensional space, as drawn, it is much more symmetric to consider them as vectors in a 2-dimensional subspace of a three-dimensional space. In this identification α corresponds to e₁−e₂, β to −e₁ + 2e₂−e₃, A to e₂−e₃ and so on. In euclidean coordinates these vectors look as follows:

(1,−1,0), (−1,1,0)
(1,0,−1), (−1,0,1)
(0,1,−1), (0,−1,1)
(2,−1,−1), (−2,1,1)
(1,−2,1), (−1,2,−1)
(1,1,−2), (−1,−1,2)

The corresponding set of simple roots is:

e₁−e₂ = (1,−1,0), and −e₁+2e₂−e₃ = (−1,2,−1)

Note: α and A together form root system identical to A₂, while the system formed by β and B is isomorphic to A₂.

Weyl/Coxeter group

Its Weyl/Coxeter group is the dihedral group of order 12. It has minimal faithful degree .

Special holonomy

G2 is one of the possible special groups that can appear as the holonomy group of a Riemannian metric. The manifolds of G2 holonomy are also called G2-manifolds.

Polynomial invariant

G2 is the automorphism group of the following two polynomials in 7 non-commutative variables.

(± permutations)

which comes from the octonion algebra. The variables must be non-commutative otherwise the second polynomial would be identically zero.

Generators

Adding a representation of the 14 generators with coefficients A, ..., N gives the matrix:

It is exactly the Lie algebra of the group

There are 480 different representations of corresponding to the 480 representations of octonions. The calibrated form, has 30 different forms and each has 16 different signed variations. Each of the signed variations generate signed differences of and each is an automorphism of all 16 corresponding octonions. Hence there are really only 30 different representations of . These can all be constructed with Clifford algebra[8] using an invertible form for octonions. For other signed variations of , this form has remainders that classify 6 other non-associative algebras that show partial symmetry. An analogous calibration in leads to sedenions and at least 11 other related algebras.

Representations

Embeddings of the maximal subgroups of G2 up to dimension 77 with associated projection matrix.

The characters of finite-dimensional representations of the real and complex Lie algebras and Lie groups are all given by the Weyl character formula. The dimensions of the smallest irreducible representations are (sequence A104599 in the OEIS):

1, 7, 14, 27, 64, 77 (twice), 182, 189, 273, 286, 378, 448, 714, 729, 748, 896, 924, 1254, 1547, 1728, 1729, 2079 (twice), 2261, 2926, 3003, 3289, 3542, 4096, 4914, 4928 (twice), 5005, 5103, 6630, 7293, 7371, 7722, 8372, 9177, 9660, 10206, 10556, 11571, 11648, 12096, 13090....

The 14-dimensional representation is the adjoint representation, and the 7-dimensional one is action of G2 on the imaginary octonions.

There are two non-isomorphic irreducible representations of dimensions 77, 2079, 4928, 30107, etc. The fundamental representations are those with dimensions 14 and 7 (corresponding to the two nodes in the Dynkin diagram in the order such that the triple arrow points from the first to the second).

Vogan (1994) described the (infinite-dimensional) unitary irreducible representations of the split real form of G2.

The embeddings of the maximal subgroups of G2 up to dimension 77 are shown to the right.

Finite groups

The group G2(q) is the points of the algebraic group G2 over the finite field Fq. These finite groups were first introduced by Leonard Eugene Dickson in Dickson (1901) for odd q and Dickson (1905) for even q. The order of G2(q) is q6(q6 − 1)(q2 − 1). When q ≠ 2, the group is simple, and when q = 2, it has a simple subgroup of index 2 isomorphic to 2A2(32), and is the automorphism group of a maximal order of the octonions. The Janko group J1 was first constructed as a subgroup of G2(11). Ree (1960) introduced twisted Ree groups 2G2(q) of order q3(q3 + 1)(q − 1) for q = 32n+1, an odd power of 3.

See also

References

  1. ^ Agricola, Ilka (2008). "Old and new on the exceptional group G2" (PDF). Notices of the American Mathematical Society. 55 (8): 922–929. MR 2441524.
  2. ^ Élie Cartan (1893). "Sur la structure des groupes simples finis et continus". C. R. Acad. Sci. 116: 784–786.
  3. ^ Gil Bor and Richard Montgomery (2009). "G2 and the "rolling distribution"". L'Enseignement Mathématique. 55: 157–196. arXiv:math/0612469. doi:10.4171/lem/55-1-8. S2CID 119679882.
  4. ^ John Baez and John Huerta (2014). "G2 and the rolling ball". Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 366 (10): 5257–5293. arXiv:1205.2447. doi:10.1090/s0002-9947-2014-05977-1.
  5. ^ Friedrich Engel (1900). "Ein neues, dem linearen Komplexe analoges Gebilde". Leipz. Ber. 52: 63–76, 220–239.
  6. ^ Élie Cartan (1908). "Nombres complexes". Encyclopedie des Sciences Mathematiques. Paris: Gauthier-Villars. pp. 329–468.
  7. ^ Élie Cartan (1914), "Les groupes reels simples finis et continus", Ann. Sci. École Norm. Sup., 31: 255–262
  8. ^ Wilmot, G.P. (2023), Construction of G2 using Clifford Algebra
See section 4.1: G2; an online HTML version of which is available at http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/octonions/node14.html.
This page was last edited on 9 April 2024, at 22:30
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