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In mathematics, Clifford theory, introduced by , describes the relation between representations of a group and those of a normal subgroup.


Alfred H. Clifford

Alfred H. Clifford Alfred Hoblitzelle Clifford (July 11, 1908 – December 27, 1992) was an American mathematician born in St. Louis, Missouri who is known for Clifford theory and for his work on semigroups. He did his undergraduate studies at Yale and his PhD at ...
proved the following result on the restriction of finite-dimensional irreducible representations from a group ''G'' to a
normal subgroup In abstract algebra, a normal subgroup (also known as an invariant subgroup or self-conjugate subgroup) is a subgroup that is invariant under conjugation by members of the group of which it is a part. In other words, a subgroup N of the group G i ...
''N'' of finite
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Clifford's theorem

Theorem. Let π: ''G'' → GL(''n'',''K'') be an irreducible representation with ''K'' a
field Field may refer to: Expanses of open ground * Field (agriculture), an area of land used for agricultural purposes * Airfield, an aerodrome that lacks the infrastructure of an airport * Battlefield * Lawn, an area of mowed grass * Meadow, a grass ...
. Then the restriction of π to ''N'' breaks up into a direct sum of irreducible representations of ''N'' of equal dimensions. These irreducible representations of ''N'' lie in one orbit for the action of ''G'' by conjugation on the equivalence classes of irreducible representations of ''N''. In particular the number of pairwise nonisomorphic summands is no greater than the index of ''N'' in ''G''. Clifford's theorem yields information about the restriction of a complex irreducible character of a finite group ''G'' to a normal subgroup ''N.'' If μ is a complex character of ''N'', then for a fixed element ''g'' of ''G'', another character, μ(g), of ''N'' may be constructed by setting :\mu^(n) = \mu(gng^) for all ''n'' in ''N''. The character μ(g) is irreducible if and only if μ is. Clifford's theorem states that if χ is a complex irreducible character of ''G,'' and μ is an irreducible character of ''N'' with :\langle \chi_N,\mu \rangle \neq 0, then :\chi_N = e\left(\sum_^ \mu^\right), where ''e'' and ''t'' are positive integers, and each ''gi'' is an element of ''G.'' The integers ''e'' and ''t'' both divide the
index Index (or its plural form indices) may refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media Fictional entities * Index (''A Certain Magical Index''), a character in the light novel series ''A Certain Magical Index'' * The Index, an item on a Halo megastru ...
'G'':''N'' The integer ''t'' is the index of a subgroup of ''G'', containing ''N'', known as the inertial subgroup of μ. This is : \ and is often denoted by :I_G(\mu). The elements ''gi'' may be taken to be representatives of all the right cosets of the subgroup ''IG''(μ) in ''G''. In fact, the integer ''e'' divides the index : _G(\mu):N though the proof of this fact requires some use of Schur's theory of
projective representation In the field of representation theory in mathematics, a projective representation of a group ''G'' on a vector space ''V'' over a field ''F'' is a group homomorphism from ''G'' to the projective linear group \mathrm(V) = \mathrm(V) / F^*, where G ...
s.


Proof of Clifford's theorem

The proof of Clifford's theorem is best explained in terms of modules (and the module-theoretic version works for irreducible modular representations). Let ''F'' be a field, ''V'' be an irreducible ''F'' 'G''module, ''VN'' be its restriction to ''N'' and ''U'' be an irreducible ''F'' submodule of ''VN''. For each ''g'' in ''G'', ''U''.''g'' is an irreducible ''F'' 'N''submodule of ''VN'', and \sum_ U.g is an ''F'' 'G''submodule of ''V'', so must be all of ''V'' by irreducibility. Now ''VN'' is expressed as a sum of irreducible submodules, and this expression may be refined to a direct sum. The proof of the character-theoretic statement of the theorem may now be completed in the case ''F'' = C. Let χ be the character of ''G'' afforded by ''V'' and μ be the character of ''N'' afforded by ''U''. For each ''g'' in ''G'', the C 'N''submodule ''U''.''g'' affords the character μ(g) and \langle \chi_N,\mu^\rangle = \langle \chi_N^,\mu^\rangle = \langle \chi_N,\mu \rangle . The respective equalities follow because χ is a class-function of ''G'' and ''N'' is a normal subgroup. The integer ''e'' appearing in the statement of the theorem is this common multiplicity.


Corollary of Clifford's theorem

A corollary of Clifford's theorem, which is often exploited, is that the irreducible character χ appearing in the theorem is induced from an irreducible character of the inertial subgroup ''IG''(μ). If, for example, the irreducible character χ is primitive (that is, χ is not induced from any proper subgroup of ''G''), then ''G'' = ''IG''(μ) and χN = ''e''μ. A case where this property of primitive characters is used particularly frequently is when ''N'' is Abelian and χ is faithful (that is, its kernel contains just the identity element). In that case, μ is linear, ''N'' is represented by scalar matrices in any representation affording character χ and ''N'' is thus contained in the center of ''G''. For example, if ''G'' is the symmetric group ''S''4, then ''G'' has a faithful complex irreducible character χ of degree ''3.'' There is an Abelian normal subgroup ''N'' of order ''4'' (a Klein ''4''-subgroup) which is not contained in the center of ''G''. Hence χ is induced from a character of a proper subgroup of ''G'' containing ''N.'' The only possibility is that χ is induced from a linear character of a Sylow ''2''-subgroup of ''G''.


Further developments

Clifford's theorem has led to a branch of representation theory in its own right, now known as Clifford theory. This is particularly relevant to the representation theory of finite solvable groups, where normal subgroups usually abound. For more general finite groups, Clifford theory often allows representation-theoretic questions to be reduced to questions about groups that are close (in a sense which can be made precise) to being simple. found a more precise version of this result for the restriction of irreducible
unitary representation In mathematics, a unitary representation of a group ''G'' is a linear representation π of ''G'' on a complex Hilbert space ''V'' such that π(''g'') is a unitary operator for every ''g'' ∈ ''G''. The general theory is well-developed in case ''G ...
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locally compact group In mathematics, a locally compact group is a topological group ''G'' for which the underlying topology is locally compact and Hausdorff. Locally compact groups are important because many examples of groups that arise throughout mathematics are loc ...
s to closed normal subgroups in what has become known as the "Mackey machine" or "Mackey normal subgroup analysis".


References

* *{{citation , first=George W. , last=Mackey , authorlink=George Mackey , title=The theory of unitary group representations , series=Chicago Lectures in Mathematics , year=1976 , isbn=0-226-50051-9 , ref={{harvid, George Mackey, 1976 Representation theory