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Index of a Lie algebra

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In algebra, let g be a Lie algebra over a field K. Let further be a one-form on g. The stabilizer gξ of ξ is the Lie subalgebra of elements of g that annihilate ξ in the coadjoint representation. The index of the Lie algebra is

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Transcription

Examples

Reductive Lie algebras

If g is reductive then the index of g is also the rank of g, because the adjoint and coadjoint representation are isomorphic and rk g is the minimal dimension of a stabilizer of an element in g. This is actually the dimension of the stabilizer of any regular element in g.

Frobenius Lie algebra

If ind g = 0, then g is called Frobenius Lie algebra. This is equivalent to the fact that the Kirillov form is non-singular for some ξ in g*. Another equivalent condition when g is the Lie algebra of an algebraic group G, is that g is Frobenius if and only if G has an open orbit in g* under the coadjoint representation.

Lie algebra of an algebraic group

If g is the Lie algebra of an algebraic group G, then the index of g is the transcendence degree of the field of rational functions on g* that are invariant under the (co)adjoint action of G.[1]

References

  1. ^ Panyushev, Dmitri I. (2003). "The index of a Lie algebra, the centralizer of a nilpotent element, and the normalizer of the centralizer". Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. 134 (1): 41–59. doi:10.1017/S0305004102006230. S2CID 13138268.

This article incorporates material from index of a Lie algebra on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

This page was last edited on 11 August 2023, at 05:52
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