Jump to content

Representation theory of SL2(R)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 24.80.225.24 (talk) at 11:24, 12 January 2011 (Minicourse). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In mathematics, the main results concerning irreducible unitary representations of the Lie group SL2(R) are due to Gelfand and Naimark (1946), V. Bargmann (1947), and Harish-Chandra (1952).

Structure of the complexified Lie algebra

We choose a basis H, X, Y for the complexification of the Lie algebra of SL2(R) so that iH generates the Lie algebra of a compact Cartan subgroup K (so in particular unitary representations split as a sum of eigenspaces of H), and {H,X,Y} is an sl2-triple, which means that they satisfy the relations

One way of doing this is as follows:

corresponding to the subgroup K of matrices

The Casimir operator Ω is defined to be

It generates the center of the universal enveloping algebra of the complexified Lie algebra of SL2(R). The Casimir element acts on any irreducible representation as multiplication by some complex scalar μ2. Thus in the case of the Lie algebra sl2, the infinitesimal character of an irreducible representation is specified by one complex number.

The center Z of the group SL2(R) is a cyclic group {I,-I} of order 2, consisting of the identity matrix and its negative. On any irreducible representation, the center either acts trivially, or by the non trivial character of Z, which represents the matrix -I by multiplication by -1 in the representation space. Correspondingly, one speaks of the trivial or nontrivial central character.

The central character and the infinitesimal character of an irreducible representation of any reductive Lie group are important invariants of the representation. In the case of irreducible admissible representations of SL2(R), it turns out that, generically, there is exactly one representation, up to an isomorphism, with the specified central and infinitesimal characters. In the exceptional cases there are two or three representations with the prescribed parameters, all of which have been determined.

Finite dimensional representations

For each nonnegative integer n, the group SL2(R) has an irreducible representation of dimension n+1, which is unique up to an isomorphism. This representation can be constructed in the space of homogeneous polynomials of degree n in two variables. The case n = 0 corresponds to the trivial representation. An irreducible finite dimensional representation of a noncompact simple Lie group of dimension greater than 1 is never unitary. Thus this construction produces only one unitary representation of SL2(R), the trivial representation.

The finite-dimensional representation theory of the noncompact group SL2(R) is equivalent to the representation theory of SU(2), its compact form, essentially because their Lie algebras have the same complexification and they are "algebraically simply connected". (More precisely the group SU(2) is simply connected and SL2(R) is not, but has no non-trivial algebraic central extensions.) However, in the general infinite-dimensional case, there is no close correspondence between representations of a group and the representations of its Lie algebra. In fact, it follows from the Peter-Weyl theorem that all irreducible representations of the compact Lie group SU(2) are finite-dimensional and unitary. The situation with SL2(R) is completely different: it possesses infinite-dimensional irreducible representations, some of which are unitary, and some are not.

Principal series representations

A major technique of constructing representations of a reductive Lie group is the method of parabolic induction. In the case of the group SL2(R), there is up to conjugacy only one proper parabolic subgroup, the Borel subgroup of the upper-triangular matrices of determinant 1. The inducing parameter of an induced principal series representation is a (possibly non-unitrary) character of the multiplicative group of real numbers, which is specified by choosing ε = ± 1 and a complex number μ. The corresponding principal series representation is denoted Iε,μ. It turns out that ε is the central character of the induced representation and the complex number μ may be identified with the infinitesimal character via the Harish-Chandra homomorphism.

The principal series representation Iε,μ (or more precisely its Harish-Chandra module of K-finite elements) admits a basis consisting of elements wj, where the index j runs through the even integers if ε=1 and the odd integers if ε=−1. The action of X, Y, and H is given by the formulas

Admissible representations

Using the fact that it is an eigenvector of the Casimir operator and has an eigenvector for H, it follows easily that any irreducible admissible representation is a subrepresentation of a parabolically induced representation. (This also is true for more general reductive Lie groups and is known as Casselman's subrepresentation theorem.) Thus the irreducible admissible representations of SL2(R) can be found by decomposing the principal series representations Iε,μ into irreducible components and determining the isomorphisms. We summarize the decompositions as follows:

  • Iε,μ is reducible if and only if μ is an integer and ε=−(−1)μ. If Iε,μ is irreducible then it is isomorphic to Iε,−μ.
  • I−1, 0 splits as the direct sum Iε,0 = D+0 + D−0 of two irreducible representations, called limit of discrete series representations. D+0 has a basis wj for j≥1, and D-0 has a basis wj for j≤−1,
  • If Iε,μ is reducible with μ>0 (so ε=−(−1)μ) then it has a unique irreducible quotient which has finite dimension μ, and the kernel is the sum of two discrete series representations D + D−μ. The representation Dμ has a basis wμ+j for j≥1, and D has a basis w−μ−j for j≤−1.
  • If Iε,μ is reducible with μ<0 (so ε=−(−1)μ) then it has a unique irreducible subrepresentation, which has finite dimension μ, and the quotient is the sum of two discrete series representations D + D−μ.

This gives the following list of irreducible admissible representations:

  • A finite dimensional representation of dimension μ for each positive integer μ, with central character −(−1)μ.
  • Two limit of discrete series representations D+0, D−0, with μ=0 and non-trivial central character.
  • Discrete series representations Dμ for μ a non-zero integer, with central character −(−1)μ
  • Two families of irreducible principal series representations Iε,μ for ε≠−(−1)μ (where Iε,μ is isomorphic to Iε,−μ).

Relation with the Langlands classification

According to the Langlands classification, the irreducible admissible representations are parametrized by certain tempered representations of Levi subgroups M of parabolic subgroups P=MAN. This works as follows:

  • The discrete series, limit of discrete series, and unitary principle series representations Iε,μ with μ imaginary are already tempered, so in these cases the parabolic subgroup P is SL2 itself.
  • The finite dimensional representations and the representations Iε,μ for ℜμ>0, μ not an integer or ε≠−(−1)μ are the irreducible quotients of the principal series representations Iε,μ for ℜμ>0, which are induced from tempered representations of the parabolic subgroup P=MAN of upper triangular matrices, with A the positive diagonal matrices and M the center of order 2. For μ a positive integer and ε=−(−1)μ the principal series representation has a finite dimensional representation as its irreducible quotient, and otherwise it is already irreducible.

Unitary representations

The irreducible unitary representations can be found by checking which of the irreducible admissible representations admit an invariant positively-definite Hermitian form. This results in the following list of unitary representations of SL2(R):

  • The trivial representation (the only finite-dimensional representation in this list).
  • The two limit of discrete series representations D+0, D0.
  • The discrete series representations Dk, indexed by non-zero integers k. They are all distinct.
  • The two families of irreducible principal series representation, consisting of the spherical principal series I+,iμ indexed by the real numbers μ, and the non-spherical unitary principal series I-,iμ indexed by the non-zero real numbers μ. The representation with parameter μ is isomorphic to the one with parameter −μ, and there are no further isomorphisms between them.
  • The complementary series representations I+,μ for 0<|μ|<1. The representation with parameter μ is isomorphic to the one with parameter −μ, and there are no further isomorphisms between them.

Of these, the two limit of discrete series representations, the discrete series representations, and the two families of principal series representations are tempered, while the trivial and complementary series representations are not tempered.

References

  • V. Bargmann, Irreducible Unitary Representations of the Lorentz Group, The Annals of Mathematics, 2nd Ser., Vol. 48, No. 3 (Jul., 1947), pp. 568–640
  • Gelfand, I.; Neumark, M. Unitary representations of the Lorentz group. Acad. Sci. USSR. J. Phys. 10, (1946), pp. 93–94
  • Harish-Chandra, Plancherel formula for the 2×2 real unimodular group. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 38 (1952), pp. 337–342
  • Roger Howe, Eng-Chye Tan, Nonabelian harmonic analysis. Applications of SL(2,R). Universitext. Springer-Verlag, New York, 1992. ISBN 0-387-97768-6
  • Knapp, Anthony W. Representation theory of semisimple groups. An overview based on examples. Reprint of the 1986 original. Princeton Landmarks in Mathematics. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 2001. xx+773 pp. ISBN 0-691-09089-0
  • Kunze, R. A.; Stein, E. M. Uniformly bounded representations and harmonic analysis of the 2×2 real unimodular group. Amer. J. Math. 82 (1960), pp. 1–62
  • D. Vogan, Representations of real reductive Lie groups, ISBN 3-7643-3037-6
  • N. R. Wallach, Real reductive groups I. ISBN 0-12-732960-9

Minicourse

The videos of the SL(2,R) Summer School in Utah in June 2006 provides a great introduction on master level: Homepage of Utah Summer School 2006.