Getting representations of the Lie group out of representations of its Lie algebra Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Geometric algebra approach to Lorentz group representationsIsomorphisms of the Lorentz group and algebraIrreducible representations of the Lorentz Lie algebraRepresentation of Lie groups as exponentiations of algebra representations.Reference for rigorous treatment of the representation theory of the Lorentz groupClassification of representations of the lie algebra $mathfraku(2)$.Relation between representations of Lie Group and Lie AlgebraCorrespondence between representations of a Lie group and Lie algebra.Representations of $sl(2,C)$ as a real Lie algebraDifference between infinitesimal parameters of Lie algebra and group generators of Lie group

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Getting representations of the Lie group out of representations of its Lie algebra



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Geometric algebra approach to Lorentz group representationsIsomorphisms of the Lorentz group and algebraIrreducible representations of the Lorentz Lie algebraRepresentation of Lie groups as exponentiations of algebra representations.Reference for rigorous treatment of the representation theory of the Lorentz groupClassification of representations of the lie algebra $mathfraku(2)$.Relation between representations of Lie Group and Lie AlgebraCorrespondence between representations of a Lie group and Lie algebra.Representations of $sl(2,C)$ as a real Lie algebraDifference between infinitesimal parameters of Lie algebra and group generators of Lie group










2












$begingroup$


This is something that is usually done in QFT and that bothers me a lot because it seems to be done without much caution.



In QFT when classifying fields one looks for the irreducible representations of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group $SO_e^+(1,3)$.



But to do so what one does in practice is: look for representations of the Lie algebra $mathfrakso(1,3)$ and then exponentiate.



For instance, in Peskin's QFT book:




It is generally true that one can find matrix representations of a continuous group by finding matrix representations of the generators of the group, then exponentiating these infinitesimal transformations.




The same thing is done in countless other books.



Now I do agree that if we have a representation of $G$ we can get one of $mathfrakg$ differentiating at the identity. Here one is doing the reverse!



In practice what is doing is: find a representation of $mathfrakso(1,3)$ on a vector space $V$, then exponentiate it to get a representation of $SO_e^+(1,3)$. I think one way to write it would be as follows, let $D : mathfrakso(1,3)to operatornameEnd(V)$ be the representation of the algebra, define $mathscrD : SO_e^+(1,3)to GL(V)$



$$mathscrD(exp theta X)=exp theta D(X).$$



Now, this seems to be very subtle.



In general the exponential $exp : mathfrakgto G$ is not surjective. Even if it is, I think it need not be injective.



Also I've heard there is one very important and very subtle connection between $exp(mathfrakg)$ and the universal cover of $G$.



My question here is: how to understand this procedure Physicists do more rigorously? In general this process of "getting representations of $G$ out of representations of $mathfrakg$ by exponentiation" can be done, or it really just gives representations of $exp(mathfrakg)?



Or in the end physicists are allowed to do this just because very luckilly in this case $exp$ is surjective onto $SO_e^+(1,3)$?










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$
















    2












    $begingroup$


    This is something that is usually done in QFT and that bothers me a lot because it seems to be done without much caution.



    In QFT when classifying fields one looks for the irreducible representations of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group $SO_e^+(1,3)$.



    But to do so what one does in practice is: look for representations of the Lie algebra $mathfrakso(1,3)$ and then exponentiate.



    For instance, in Peskin's QFT book:




    It is generally true that one can find matrix representations of a continuous group by finding matrix representations of the generators of the group, then exponentiating these infinitesimal transformations.




    The same thing is done in countless other books.



    Now I do agree that if we have a representation of $G$ we can get one of $mathfrakg$ differentiating at the identity. Here one is doing the reverse!



    In practice what is doing is: find a representation of $mathfrakso(1,3)$ on a vector space $V$, then exponentiate it to get a representation of $SO_e^+(1,3)$. I think one way to write it would be as follows, let $D : mathfrakso(1,3)to operatornameEnd(V)$ be the representation of the algebra, define $mathscrD : SO_e^+(1,3)to GL(V)$



    $$mathscrD(exp theta X)=exp theta D(X).$$



    Now, this seems to be very subtle.



    In general the exponential $exp : mathfrakgto G$ is not surjective. Even if it is, I think it need not be injective.



    Also I've heard there is one very important and very subtle connection between $exp(mathfrakg)$ and the universal cover of $G$.



    My question here is: how to understand this procedure Physicists do more rigorously? In general this process of "getting representations of $G$ out of representations of $mathfrakg$ by exponentiation" can be done, or it really just gives representations of $exp(mathfrakg)?



    Or in the end physicists are allowed to do this just because very luckilly in this case $exp$ is surjective onto $SO_e^+(1,3)$?










    share|cite|improve this question









    $endgroup$














      2












      2








      2





      $begingroup$


      This is something that is usually done in QFT and that bothers me a lot because it seems to be done without much caution.



      In QFT when classifying fields one looks for the irreducible representations of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group $SO_e^+(1,3)$.



      But to do so what one does in practice is: look for representations of the Lie algebra $mathfrakso(1,3)$ and then exponentiate.



      For instance, in Peskin's QFT book:




      It is generally true that one can find matrix representations of a continuous group by finding matrix representations of the generators of the group, then exponentiating these infinitesimal transformations.




      The same thing is done in countless other books.



      Now I do agree that if we have a representation of $G$ we can get one of $mathfrakg$ differentiating at the identity. Here one is doing the reverse!



      In practice what is doing is: find a representation of $mathfrakso(1,3)$ on a vector space $V$, then exponentiate it to get a representation of $SO_e^+(1,3)$. I think one way to write it would be as follows, let $D : mathfrakso(1,3)to operatornameEnd(V)$ be the representation of the algebra, define $mathscrD : SO_e^+(1,3)to GL(V)$



      $$mathscrD(exp theta X)=exp theta D(X).$$



      Now, this seems to be very subtle.



      In general the exponential $exp : mathfrakgto G$ is not surjective. Even if it is, I think it need not be injective.



      Also I've heard there is one very important and very subtle connection between $exp(mathfrakg)$ and the universal cover of $G$.



      My question here is: how to understand this procedure Physicists do more rigorously? In general this process of "getting representations of $G$ out of representations of $mathfrakg$ by exponentiation" can be done, or it really just gives representations of $exp(mathfrakg)?



      Or in the end physicists are allowed to do this just because very luckilly in this case $exp$ is surjective onto $SO_e^+(1,3)$?










      share|cite|improve this question









      $endgroup$




      This is something that is usually done in QFT and that bothers me a lot because it seems to be done without much caution.



      In QFT when classifying fields one looks for the irreducible representations of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group $SO_e^+(1,3)$.



      But to do so what one does in practice is: look for representations of the Lie algebra $mathfrakso(1,3)$ and then exponentiate.



      For instance, in Peskin's QFT book:




      It is generally true that one can find matrix representations of a continuous group by finding matrix representations of the generators of the group, then exponentiating these infinitesimal transformations.




      The same thing is done in countless other books.



      Now I do agree that if we have a representation of $G$ we can get one of $mathfrakg$ differentiating at the identity. Here one is doing the reverse!



      In practice what is doing is: find a representation of $mathfrakso(1,3)$ on a vector space $V$, then exponentiate it to get a representation of $SO_e^+(1,3)$. I think one way to write it would be as follows, let $D : mathfrakso(1,3)to operatornameEnd(V)$ be the representation of the algebra, define $mathscrD : SO_e^+(1,3)to GL(V)$



      $$mathscrD(exp theta X)=exp theta D(X).$$



      Now, this seems to be very subtle.



      In general the exponential $exp : mathfrakgto G$ is not surjective. Even if it is, I think it need not be injective.



      Also I've heard there is one very important and very subtle connection between $exp(mathfrakg)$ and the universal cover of $G$.



      My question here is: how to understand this procedure Physicists do more rigorously? In general this process of "getting representations of $G$ out of representations of $mathfrakg$ by exponentiation" can be done, or it really just gives representations of $exp(mathfrakg)?



      Or in the end physicists are allowed to do this just because very luckilly in this case $exp$ is surjective onto $SO_e^+(1,3)$?







      representation-theory lie-groups lie-algebras mathematical-physics quantum-field-theory






      share|cite|improve this question













      share|cite|improve this question











      share|cite|improve this question




      share|cite|improve this question










      asked 2 hours ago









      user1620696user1620696

      11.8k742119




      11.8k742119




















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          4












          $begingroup$

          The exponential map doesn't need to be surjective. If $G$ is connected the exponential map is surjective onto a neighborhood of the identity, and since a neighborhood of the identity of a connected topological group generates it, once you know what a representation does to a neighborhood of the identity, that determines what it does everywhere.



          However, in general $G$ needs to be simply connected. That is, exponential in general provides an equivalence between representations of a finite-dimensional Lie algebra $mathfrakg$ and representations of the unique simply connected Lie group $G$ with Lie algebra $mathfrakg$. The proper orthochronous Lorentz group is not simply connected; its universal cover is $SL_2(mathbbC)$. This means that not all representations of $mathfrakso(1, 3)$ exponentiate to representations of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group; some exponentiate to projective representations. As far as I know this is mostly fine for quantum, and so physicists don't seem to worry much about the distinction in practice.






          share|cite|improve this answer









          $endgroup$












          • $begingroup$
            There's certainly also the issue of not-finite-dimensional representations... Wallach's and Casselman's "globalization" functors show two opposite extremes of adjoints to the functor that takes $G$ repns $V$ to $mathfrak g,K$ modules of smooth vectors $V^infty$.
            $endgroup$
            – paul garrett
            45 mins ago











          Your Answer








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          active

          oldest

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          4












          $begingroup$

          The exponential map doesn't need to be surjective. If $G$ is connected the exponential map is surjective onto a neighborhood of the identity, and since a neighborhood of the identity of a connected topological group generates it, once you know what a representation does to a neighborhood of the identity, that determines what it does everywhere.



          However, in general $G$ needs to be simply connected. That is, exponential in general provides an equivalence between representations of a finite-dimensional Lie algebra $mathfrakg$ and representations of the unique simply connected Lie group $G$ with Lie algebra $mathfrakg$. The proper orthochronous Lorentz group is not simply connected; its universal cover is $SL_2(mathbbC)$. This means that not all representations of $mathfrakso(1, 3)$ exponentiate to representations of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group; some exponentiate to projective representations. As far as I know this is mostly fine for quantum, and so physicists don't seem to worry much about the distinction in practice.






          share|cite|improve this answer









          $endgroup$












          • $begingroup$
            There's certainly also the issue of not-finite-dimensional representations... Wallach's and Casselman's "globalization" functors show two opposite extremes of adjoints to the functor that takes $G$ repns $V$ to $mathfrak g,K$ modules of smooth vectors $V^infty$.
            $endgroup$
            – paul garrett
            45 mins ago















          4












          $begingroup$

          The exponential map doesn't need to be surjective. If $G$ is connected the exponential map is surjective onto a neighborhood of the identity, and since a neighborhood of the identity of a connected topological group generates it, once you know what a representation does to a neighborhood of the identity, that determines what it does everywhere.



          However, in general $G$ needs to be simply connected. That is, exponential in general provides an equivalence between representations of a finite-dimensional Lie algebra $mathfrakg$ and representations of the unique simply connected Lie group $G$ with Lie algebra $mathfrakg$. The proper orthochronous Lorentz group is not simply connected; its universal cover is $SL_2(mathbbC)$. This means that not all representations of $mathfrakso(1, 3)$ exponentiate to representations of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group; some exponentiate to projective representations. As far as I know this is mostly fine for quantum, and so physicists don't seem to worry much about the distinction in practice.






          share|cite|improve this answer









          $endgroup$












          • $begingroup$
            There's certainly also the issue of not-finite-dimensional representations... Wallach's and Casselman's "globalization" functors show two opposite extremes of adjoints to the functor that takes $G$ repns $V$ to $mathfrak g,K$ modules of smooth vectors $V^infty$.
            $endgroup$
            – paul garrett
            45 mins ago













          4












          4








          4





          $begingroup$

          The exponential map doesn't need to be surjective. If $G$ is connected the exponential map is surjective onto a neighborhood of the identity, and since a neighborhood of the identity of a connected topological group generates it, once you know what a representation does to a neighborhood of the identity, that determines what it does everywhere.



          However, in general $G$ needs to be simply connected. That is, exponential in general provides an equivalence between representations of a finite-dimensional Lie algebra $mathfrakg$ and representations of the unique simply connected Lie group $G$ with Lie algebra $mathfrakg$. The proper orthochronous Lorentz group is not simply connected; its universal cover is $SL_2(mathbbC)$. This means that not all representations of $mathfrakso(1, 3)$ exponentiate to representations of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group; some exponentiate to projective representations. As far as I know this is mostly fine for quantum, and so physicists don't seem to worry much about the distinction in practice.






          share|cite|improve this answer









          $endgroup$



          The exponential map doesn't need to be surjective. If $G$ is connected the exponential map is surjective onto a neighborhood of the identity, and since a neighborhood of the identity of a connected topological group generates it, once you know what a representation does to a neighborhood of the identity, that determines what it does everywhere.



          However, in general $G$ needs to be simply connected. That is, exponential in general provides an equivalence between representations of a finite-dimensional Lie algebra $mathfrakg$ and representations of the unique simply connected Lie group $G$ with Lie algebra $mathfrakg$. The proper orthochronous Lorentz group is not simply connected; its universal cover is $SL_2(mathbbC)$. This means that not all representations of $mathfrakso(1, 3)$ exponentiate to representations of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group; some exponentiate to projective representations. As far as I know this is mostly fine for quantum, and so physicists don't seem to worry much about the distinction in practice.







          share|cite|improve this answer












          share|cite|improve this answer



          share|cite|improve this answer










          answered 1 hour ago









          Qiaochu YuanQiaochu Yuan

          282k32599946




          282k32599946











          • $begingroup$
            There's certainly also the issue of not-finite-dimensional representations... Wallach's and Casselman's "globalization" functors show two opposite extremes of adjoints to the functor that takes $G$ repns $V$ to $mathfrak g,K$ modules of smooth vectors $V^infty$.
            $endgroup$
            – paul garrett
            45 mins ago
















          • $begingroup$
            There's certainly also the issue of not-finite-dimensional representations... Wallach's and Casselman's "globalization" functors show two opposite extremes of adjoints to the functor that takes $G$ repns $V$ to $mathfrak g,K$ modules of smooth vectors $V^infty$.
            $endgroup$
            – paul garrett
            45 mins ago















          $begingroup$
          There's certainly also the issue of not-finite-dimensional representations... Wallach's and Casselman's "globalization" functors show two opposite extremes of adjoints to the functor that takes $G$ repns $V$ to $mathfrak g,K$ modules of smooth vectors $V^infty$.
          $endgroup$
          – paul garrett
          45 mins ago




          $begingroup$
          There's certainly also the issue of not-finite-dimensional representations... Wallach's and Casselman's "globalization" functors show two opposite extremes of adjoints to the functor that takes $G$ repns $V$ to $mathfrak g,K$ modules of smooth vectors $V^infty$.
          $endgroup$
          – paul garrett
          45 mins ago

















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There's a third YouTube co-founder"سایت یوتیوب برای چندمین بار در ایران فیلتر شدنسخهٔ اصلیسالار کمانگر جوان آمریکایی ایرانی الاصل مدیر سایت یوتیوب شدنسخهٔ اصلیVideo websites pop up, invite postingsthe originalthe originalYouTube: Overnight success has sparked a backlashthe original"Me at the zoo"YouTube serves up 100 million videos a day onlinethe originalcomScore Releases May 2010 U.S. Online Video Rankingsthe originalYouTube hits 4 billion daily video viewsthe originalYouTube users uploading two days of video every minutethe originalEric Schmidt, Princeton Colloquium on Public & Int'l Affairsthe original«Streaming Dreams»نسخهٔ اصلیAlexa Traffic Rank for YouTube (three month average)the originalHelp! 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YouTube on Your TV»نسخهٔ اصلی«Experience YouTube XL on the Big Screen»نسخهٔ اصلی«Xbox Live Getting Live TV, YouTube & Bing Voice Search»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube content locations»نسخهٔ اصلی«April fools: YouTube turns the world up-side-down»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube goes back to 1911 for April Fools' Day»نسخهٔ اصلی«Simon Cowell's bromance, the self-driving Nascar and Hungry Hippos for iPad... the best April Fools' gags»نسخهٔ اصلی"YouTube Announces It Will Shut Down""YouTube Adds Darude 'Sandstorm' Button To Its Videos For April Fools' Day"«Censorship fears rise as Iran blocks access to top websites»نسخهٔ اصلی«China 'blocks YouTube video site'»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube shut down in Morocco»نسخهٔ اصلی«Thailand blocks access to YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«Ban on YouTube lifted after deal»نسخهٔ اصلی«Google's Gatekeepers»نسخهٔ اصلی«Turkey goes into battle with Google»نسخهٔ اصلی«Turkey lifts two-year ban on YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلیسانسور در ترکیه به یوتیوب رسیدلغو فیلترینگ یوتیوب در ترکیه«Pakistan blocks YouTube website»نسخهٔ اصلی«Pakistan lifts the ban on YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«Pakistan blocks access to YouTube in internet crackdown»نسخهٔ اصلی«Watchdog urges Libya to stop blocking websites»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«Due to abuses of religion, customs Emirates, YouTube is blocked in the UAE»نسخهٔ اصلی«Google Conquered The Web - An Ultimate Winner»نسخهٔ اصلی«100 million videos are viewed daily on YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«Harry and Charlie Davies-Carr: Web gets taste for biting baby»نسخهٔ اصلی«Meet YouTube's 224 million girl, Natalie Tran»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube to Double Down on Its 'Channel' Experiment»نسخهٔ اصلی«13 Some Media Companies Choose to Profit From Pirated YouTube Clips»نسخهٔ اصلی«Irate HK man unlikely Web hero»نسخهٔ اصلی«Web Guitar Wizard Revealed at Last»نسخهٔ اصلی«Charlie bit my finger – again!»نسخهٔ اصلی«Lowered Expectations: Web Redefines 'Quality'»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube's 50 Greatest Viral Videos»نسخهٔ اصلیYouTube Community Guidelinesthe original«Why did my YouTube account get closed down?»نسخهٔ اصلی«Why do I have a sanction on my account?»نسخهٔ اصلی«Is YouTube's three-strike rule fair to users?»نسخهٔ اصلی«Viacom will sue YouTube for $1bn»نسخهٔ اصلی«Mediaset Files EUR500 Million Suit Vs Google's YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«Premier League to take action against YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube law fight 'threatens net'»نسخهٔ اصلی«Google must divulge YouTube log»نسخهٔ اصلی«Google Told to Turn Over User Data of YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«US judge tosses out Viacom copyright suit against YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلی«Google and Viacom: YouTube copyright lawsuit back on»نسخهٔ اصلی«Woman can sue over YouTube clip de-posting»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube loses court battle over music clips»نسخهٔ اصلیYouTube to Test Software To Ease Licensing Fightsthe original«Press Statistics»نسخهٔ اصلی«Testing YouTube's Audio Content ID System»نسخهٔ اصلی«Content ID disputes»نسخهٔ اصلیYouTube Community Guidelinesthe originalYouTube criticized in Germany over anti-Semitic Nazi videosthe originalFury as YouTube carries sick Hillsboro video insultthe originalYouTube attacked by MPs over sex and violence footagethe originalAl-Awlaki's YouTube Videos Targeted by Rep. Weinerthe originalYouTube Withdraws Cleric's Videosthe originalYouTube is letting users decide on terrorism-related videosthe original«Time's Person of the Year: You»نسخهٔ اصلی«Our top 10 funniest YouTube comments – what are yours?»نسخهٔ اصلی«YouTube's worst comments blocked by filter»نسخهٔ اصلی«Site Info YouTube»نسخهٔ اصلیوبگاه YouTubeوبگاه موبایل YouTubeوووووو

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          Rest API with Magento using PHP with example. Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?How to update product using magento client library for PHP?Oauth Error while extending Magento Rest APINot showing my custom api in wsdl(url) and web service list?Using Magento API(REST) via IXMLHTTPRequest COM ObjectHow to login in Magento website using REST APIREST api call for Guest userMagento API calling using HTML and javascriptUse API rest media management by storeView code (admin)Magento REST API Example ErrorsHow to log all rest api calls in magento2?How to update product using magento client library for PHP?