Reductive Group
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mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, a reductive group is a type of linear algebraic group over a field. One definition is that a connected linear algebraic group ''G'' over a perfect field is reductive if it has a
representation Representation may refer to: Law and politics *Representation (politics), political activities undertaken by elected representatives, as well as other theories ** Representative democracy, type of democracy in which elected officials represent a ...
that has a finite kernel and is a
direct sum The direct sum is an operation between structures in abstract algebra, a branch of mathematics. It is defined differently, but analogously, for different kinds of structures. To see how the direct sum is used in abstract algebra, consider a more ...
of
irreducible representation In mathematics, specifically in the representation theory of groups and algebras, an irreducible representation (\rho, V) or irrep of an algebraic structure A is a nonzero representation that has no proper nontrivial subrepresentation (\rho, _W,W ...
s. Reductive groups include some of the most important groups in mathematics, such as the general linear group ''GL''(''n'') of invertible matrices, the
special orthogonal group In mathematics, the orthogonal group in dimension , denoted , is the group of distance-preserving transformations of a Euclidean space of dimension that preserve a fixed point, where the group operation is given by composing transformations. T ...
''SO''(''n''), and the symplectic group ''Sp''(2''n''). Simple algebraic groups and (more generally) semisimple algebraic groups are reductive. Claude Chevalley showed that the classification of reductive groups is the same over any
algebraically closed field In mathematics, a field is algebraically closed if every non-constant polynomial in (the univariate polynomial ring with coefficients in ) has a root in . Examples As an example, the field of real numbers is not algebraically closed, because ...
. In particular, the simple algebraic groups are classified by Dynkin diagrams, as in the theory of compact Lie groups or complex semisimple Lie algebras. Reductive groups over an arbitrary field are harder to classify, but for many fields such as the real numbers R or a number field, the classification is well understood. The classification of finite simple groups says that most finite simple groups arise as the group ''G''(''k'') of ''k''- rational points of a simple algebraic group ''G'' over a finite field ''k'', or as minor variants of that construction. Reductive groups have a rich representation theory in various contexts. First, one can study the representations of a reductive group ''G'' over a field ''k'' as an algebraic group, which are actions of ''G'' on ''k''-vector spaces. But also, one can study the complex representations of the group ''G''(''k'') when ''k'' is a finite field, or the infinite-dimensional unitary representations of a real reductive group, or the
automorphic representation In harmonic analysis and number theory, an automorphic form is a well-behaved function from a topological group ''G'' to the complex numbers (or complex vector space) which is invariant under the action of a discrete subgroup \Gamma \subset ...
s of an
adelic algebraic group In abstract algebra, an adelic algebraic group is a semitopological group defined by an algebraic group ''G'' over a number field ''K'', and the adele ring ''A'' = ''A''(''K'') of ''K''. It consists of the points of ''G'' having values in ''A'' ...
. The structure theory of reductive groups is used in all these areas.


Definitions

A linear algebraic group over a field ''k'' is defined as a smooth closed subgroup scheme of ''GL''(''n'') over ''k'', for some positive integer ''n''. Equivalently, a linear algebraic group over ''k'' is a smooth affine group scheme over ''k''.


With the unipotent radical

A connected linear algebraic group G over an algebraically closed field is called semisimple if every smooth connected solvable
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 ...
of G is trivial. More generally, a connected linear algebraic group G over an algebraically closed field is called reductive if the largest smooth connected unipotent normal subgroup of G is trivial. This normal subgroup is called the unipotent radical and is denoted R_u(G). (Some authors do not require reductive groups to be connected.) A group G over an arbitrary field ''k'' is called semisimple or reductive if the base change G_ is semisimple or reductive, where \overline k is an algebraic closure of ''k''. (This is equivalent to the definition of reductive groups in the introduction when ''k'' is perfect.) Any torus over ''k'', such as the multiplicative group ''G''''m'', is reductive.


With representation theory

Over fields of characteristic zero another equivalent definition of a reductive group is a connected group G admitting a faithful semisimple representation which remains semisimple over its algebraic closure k^ page 424.


Simple reductive groups

A linear algebraic group ''G'' over a field ''k'' is called simple (or ''k''-simple) if it is semisimple, nontrivial, and every smooth connected normal subgroup of ''G'' over ''k'' is trivial or equal to ''G''. (Some authors call this property "almost simple".) This differs slightly from the terminology for abstract groups, in that a simple algebraic group may have nontrivial center (although the center must be finite). For example, for any integer ''n'' at least 2 and any field ''k'', the group ''SL''(''n'') over ''k'' is simple, and its center is the group scheme μ''n'' of ''n''th roots of unity. A central isogeny of reductive groups is a surjective homomorphism with kernel a finite
central subgroup In mathematics, in the field of group theory, a subgroup of a group is termed central if it lies inside the center of the group. Given a group G, the center of G, denoted as Z(G), is defined as the set of those elements of the group which commute ...
scheme. Every reductive group over a field admits a central isogeny from the product of a torus and some simple groups. For example, over any field ''k'', :GL(n)\cong (G_m\times SL(n))/\mu_n. It is slightly awkward that the definition of a reductive group over a field involves passage to the algebraic closure. For a perfect field ''k'', that can be avoided: a linear algebraic group ''G'' over ''k'' is reductive if and only if every smooth connected unipotent normal ''k''-subgroup of ''G'' is trivial. For an arbitrary field, the latter property defines a
pseudo-reductive group In mathematics, a pseudo-reductive group over a field ''k'' (sometimes called a ''k''-reductive group) is a smooth connected affine algebraic group defined over ''k'' whose ''k''-unipotent radical (i.e., largest smooth connected unipotent normal ''k ...
, which is somewhat more general.


Split-reductive groups

A reductive group ''G'' over a field ''k'' is called split if it contains a split maximal torus ''T'' over ''k'' (that is, a split torus in ''G'' whose base change to \overline k is a maximal torus in G_). It is equivalent to say that ''T'' is a split torus in ''G'' that is maximal among all ''k''-tori in ''G''. These kinds of groups are useful because their classification can be described through combinatorical data called root data.


Examples


GL''n'' and SL''n''

A fundamental example of a reductive group is the general linear group \text_n of invertible ''n'' × ''n'' matrices over a field ''k'', for a natural number ''n''. In particular, the multiplicative group ''G''''m'' is the group ''GL''(1), and so its group ''G''''m''(''k'') of ''k''-rational points is the group ''k''* of nonzero elements of ''k'' under multiplication. Another reductive group is the special linear group ''SL''(''n'') over a field ''k'', the subgroup of matrices with determinant 1. In fact, ''SL''(''n'') is a simple algebraic group for ''n'' at least 2.


O(''n''), SO(''n''), and Sp(''n'')

An important simple group is the symplectic group ''Sp''(2''n'') over a field ''k'', the subgroup of ''GL''(2''n'') that preserves a nondegenerate alternating
bilinear form In mathematics, a bilinear form is a bilinear map on a vector space (the elements of which are called '' vectors'') over a field ''K'' (the elements of which are called ''scalars''). In other words, a bilinear form is a function that is linear i ...
on the vector space ''k''2''n''. Likewise, the
orthogonal group In mathematics, the orthogonal group in dimension , denoted , is the Group (mathematics), group of isometry, distance-preserving transformations of a Euclidean space of dimension that preserve a fixed point, where the group operation is given by ...
''O''(''q'') is the subgroup of the general linear group that preserves a nondegenerate
quadratic form In mathematics, a quadratic form is a polynomial with terms all of degree two ("form" is another name for a homogeneous polynomial). For example, :4x^2 + 2xy - 3y^2 is a quadratic form in the variables and . The coefficients usually belong to a ...
''q'' on a vector space over a field ''k''. The algebraic group ''O''(''q'') has two connected components, and its identity component ''SO''(''q'') is reductive, in fact simple for ''q'' of dimension ''n'' at least 3. (For ''k'' of characteristic 2 and ''n'' odd, the group scheme ''O''(''q'') is in fact connected but not smooth over ''k''. The simple group ''SO''(''q'') can always be defined as the maximal smooth connected subgroup of ''O''(''q'') over ''k''.) When ''k'' is algebraically closed, any two (nondegenerate) quadratic forms of the same dimension are isomorphic, and so it is reasonable to call this group ''SO''(''n''). For a general field ''k'', different quadratic forms of dimension ''n'' can yield non-isomorphic simple groups ''SO''(''q'') over ''k'', although they all have the same base change to the algebraic closure \overline k.


Tori

The group \mathbb_m and products of it are called the
algebraic tori Algebraic may refer to any subject related to algebra in mathematics and related branches like algebraic number theory and algebraic topology. The word algebra itself has several meanings. Algebraic may also refer to: * Algebraic data type, a d ...
. They are examples of reductive groups since they embed in \text_n through the diagonal, and from this representation, their unipotent radical is trivial. For example, \mathbb_m\times \mathbb _m embeds in \text_2 from the map
(a_1,a_2) \mapsto \begin a_1 & 0 \\ 0 & a_2 \end.


Non-examples

* Any unipotent group is not reductive since its unipotent radical is itself. This includes the additive group \mathbb_a. * The Borel group B_n of \text_n has a non-trivial unipotent radical \mathbb_n of upper-triangular matrices with 1 on the diagonal. This is an example of a non-reductive group which is not unipotent.


Associated reductive group

Note that the normality of the unipotent radical R_u(G) implies that the quotient group G/R_u(G) is reductive. For example,
B_n/(R_u(B_n)) \cong \prod^n_ \mathbb_m.


Other characterizations of reductive groups

Every compact connected Lie group has a complexification, which is a complex reductive algebraic group. In fact, this construction gives a one-to-one correspondence between compact connected Lie groups and complex reductive groups, up to isomorphism. For a compact Lie group ''K'' with complexification ''G'', the inclusion from ''K'' into the complex reductive group ''G''(C) is a homotopy equivalence, with respect to the classical topology on ''G''(C). For example, the inclusion from the unitary group ''U''(''n'') to ''GL''(''n'',C) is a homotopy equivalence. For a reductive group ''G'' over a field of characteristic zero, all finite-dimensional representations of ''G'' (as an algebraic group) are
completely reducible In mathematics, semi-simplicity is a widespread concept in disciplines such as linear algebra, abstract algebra, representation theory, category theory, and algebraic geometry. A semi-simple object is one that can be decomposed into a sum of ''sim ...
, that is, they are direct sums of irreducible representations. That is the source of the name "reductive". Note, however, that complete reducibility fails for reductive groups in positive characteristic (apart from tori). In more detail: an affine group scheme ''G'' of finite type over a field ''k'' is called linearly reductive if its finite-dimensional representations are completely reducible. For ''k'' of characteristic zero, ''G'' is linearly reductive if and only if the identity component ''G''o of ''G'' is reductive. For ''k'' of characteristic ''p''>0, however, Masayoshi Nagata showed that ''G'' is linearly reductive if and only if ''G''o is of multiplicative type and ''G''/''G''o has order prime to ''p''.


Roots

The classification of reductive algebraic groups is in terms of the associated root system, as in the theories of complex semisimple Lie algebras or compact Lie groups. Here is the way roots appear for reductive groups. Let ''G'' be a split reductive group over a field ''k'', and let ''T'' be a split maximal torus in ''G''; so ''T'' is isomorphic to (''G''''m'')''n'' for some ''n'', with ''n'' called the rank of ''G''. Every representation of ''T'' (as an algebraic group) is a direct sum of 1-dimensional representations. A weight for ''G'' means an isomorphism class of 1-dimensional representations of ''T'', or equivalently a homomorphism ''T'' → ''G''''m''. The weights form a group ''X''(''T'') under tensor product of representations, with ''X''(''T'') isomorphic to the product of ''n'' copies of the integers, Z''n''. The adjoint representation is the action of ''G'' by conjugation on its
Lie algebra In mathematics, a Lie algebra (pronounced ) is a vector space \mathfrak g together with an Binary operation, operation called the Lie bracket, an Alternating multilinear map, alternating bilinear map \mathfrak g \times \mathfrak g \rightarrow ...
\mathfrak g. A root of ''G'' means a nonzero weight that occurs in the action of ''T'' ⊂ ''G'' on \mathfrak g. The subspace of \mathfrak g corresponding to each root is 1-dimensional, and the subspace of \mathfrak g fixed by ''T'' is exactly the Lie algebra \mathfrak t of ''T''.Milne (2017), Theorem 21.11. Therefore, the Lie algebra of ''G'' decomposes into \mathfrak t together with 1-dimensional subspaces indexed by the set Φ of roots: : = \oplus \bigoplus_ _. For example, when ''G'' is the group ''GL''(''n''), its Lie algebra (n) is the vector space of all ''n'' × ''n'' matrices over ''k''. Let ''T'' be the subgroup of diagonal matrices in ''G''. Then the root-space decomposition expresses (n) as the direct sum of the diagonal matrices and the 1-dimensional subspaces indexed by the off-diagonal positions (''i'', ''j''). Writing ''L''1,...,''L''''n'' for the standard basis for the weight lattice ''X''(''T'') ≅ Z''n'', the roots are the elements ''L''''i'' − ''L''''j'' for all ''i'' ≠ ''j'' from 1 to ''n''. The roots of a semisimple group form a root system; this is a combinatorial structure which can be completely classified. More generally, the roots of a reductive group form a root datum, a slight variation. The Weyl group of a reductive group ''G'' means the
quotient group A quotient group or factor group is a mathematical group obtained by aggregating similar elements of a larger group using an equivalence relation that preserves some of the group structure (the rest of the structure is "factored" out). For examp ...
of the normalizer of a maximal torus by the torus, ''W'' = ''N''''G''(''T'')/''T''. The Weyl group is in fact a finite group generated by reflections. For example, for the group ''GL''(''n'') (or ''SL''(''n'')), the Weyl group is the symmetric group ''S''''n''. There are finitely many Borel subgroups containing a given maximal torus, and they are permuted
simply transitively In mathematics, a group action on a space is a group homomorphism of a given group into the group of transformations of the space. Similarly, a group action on a mathematical structure is a group homomorphism of a group into the automorphism g ...
by the Weyl group (acting by
conjugation Conjugation or conjugate may refer to: Linguistics *Grammatical conjugation, the modification of a verb from its basic form * Emotive conjugation or Russell's conjugation, the use of loaded language Mathematics *Complex conjugation, the change ...
). A choice of Borel subgroup determines a set of positive roots Φ+ ⊂ Φ, with the property that Φ is the disjoint union of Φ+ and −Φ+. Explicitly, the Lie algebra of ''B'' is the direct sum of the Lie algebra of ''T'' and the positive root spaces: :=\oplus \bigoplus_ _. For example, if ''B'' is the Borel subgroup of upper-triangular matrices in ''GL''(''n''), then this is the obvious decomposition of the subspace \mathfrak b of upper-triangular matrices in (n). The positive roots are ''L''''i'' − ''L''''j'' for 1 ≤ ''i'' < ''j'' ≤ ''n''. A simple root means a positive root that is not a sum of two other positive roots. Write Δ for the set of simple roots. The number ''r'' of simple roots is equal to the rank of the commutator subgroup of ''G'', called the semisimple rank of ''G'' (which is simply the rank of ''G'' if ''G'' is semisimple). For example, the simple roots for ''GL''(''n'') (or ''SL''(''n'')) are ''L''''i'' − ''L''''i''+1 for 1 ≤ ''i'' ≤ ''n'' − 1. Root systems are classified by the corresponding Dynkin diagram, which is a finite graph (with some edges directed or multiple). The set of vertices of the Dynkin diagram is the set of simple roots. In short, the Dynkin diagram describes the angles between the simple roots and their relative lengths, with respect to a Weyl group-invariant inner product on the weight lattice. The connected Dynkin diagrams (corresponding to simple groups) are pictured below. For a split reductive group ''G'' over a field ''k'', an important point is that a root α determines not just a 1-dimensional subspace of the Lie algebra of ''G'', but also a copy of the additive group ''G''a in ''G'' with the given Lie algebra, called a root subgroup ''U''α. The root subgroup is the unique copy of the additive group in ''G'' which is normalized by ''T'' and which has the given Lie algebra. The whole group ''G'' is generated (as an algebraic group) by ''T'' and the root subgroups, while the Borel subgroup ''B'' is generated by ''T'' and the positive root subgroups. In fact, a split semisimple group ''G'' is generated by the root subgroups alone.


Parabolic subgroups

For a split reductive group ''G'' over a field ''k'', the smooth connected subgroups of ''G'' that contain a given Borel subgroup ''B'' of ''G'' are in one-to-one correspondence with the subsets of the set Δ of simple roots (or equivalently, the subsets of the set of vertices of the Dynkin diagram). Let ''r'' be the order of Δ, the semisimple rank of ''G''. Every parabolic subgroup of ''G'' is conjugate to a subgroup containing ''B'' by some element of ''G''(''k''). As a result, there are exactly 2''r'' conjugacy classes of parabolic subgroups in ''G'' over ''k''. Explicitly, the parabolic subgroup corresponding to a given subset ''S'' of Δ is the group generated by ''B'' together with the root subgroups ''U''−α for α in ''S''. For example, the parabolic subgroups of ''GL''(''n'') that contain the Borel subgroup ''B'' above are the groups of invertible matrices with zero entries below a given set of squares along the diagonal, such as: :\left \ By definition, a parabolic subgroup ''P'' of a reductive group ''G'' over a field ''k'' is a smooth ''k''-subgroup such that the quotient variety ''G''/''P'' is proper over ''k'', or equivalently projective over ''k''. Thus the classification of parabolic subgroups amounts to a classification of the
projective homogeneous varieties In mathematics, a generalized flag variety (or simply flag variety) is a homogeneous space whose points are flags in a finite-dimensional vector space ''V'' over a field F. When F is the real or complex numbers, a generalized flag variety is a smo ...
for ''G'' (with smooth stabilizer group; that is no restriction for ''k'' of characteristic zero). For ''GL''(''n''), these are the flag varieties, parametrizing sequences of linear subspaces of given dimensions ''a''1,...,''a''''i'' contained in a fixed vector space ''V'' of dimension ''n'': :0\subset S_\subset \cdots \subset S_\subset V. For the orthogonal group or the symplectic group, the projective homogeneous varieties have a similar description as varieties of
isotropic Isotropy is uniformity in all orientations; it is derived . Precise definitions depend on the subject area. Exceptions, or inequalities, are frequently indicated by the prefix ' or ', hence ''anisotropy''. ''Anisotropy'' is also used to describe ...
flags with respect to a given quadratic form or symplectic form. For any reductive group ''G'' with a Borel subgroup ''B'', ''G''/''B'' is called the flag variety or flag manifold of ''G''.


Classification of split reductive groups

Chevalley showed in 1958 that the reductive groups over any algebraically closed field are classified up to isomorphism by root data. In particular, the semisimple groups over an algebraically closed field are classified up to central isogenies by their Dynkin diagram, and the simple groups correspond to the connected diagrams. Thus there are simple groups of types A''n'', B''n'', C''n'', D''n'', E6, E7, E8, F4, G2. This result is essentially identical to the classifications of compact Lie groups or complex semisimple Lie algebras, by Wilhelm Killing and Élie Cartan in the 1880s and 1890s. In particular, the dimensions, centers, and other properties of the simple algebraic groups can be read from the list of simple Lie groups. It is remarkable that the classification of reductive groups is independent of the characteristic. For comparison, there are many more simple Lie algebras in positive characteristic than in characteristic zero. The exceptional groups ''G'' of type G2 and E6 had been constructed earlier, at least in the form of the abstract group ''G''(''k''), by
L. E. Dickson Leonard Eugene Dickson (January 22, 1874 – January 17, 1954) was an American mathematician. He was one of the first American researchers in abstract algebra, in particular the theory of finite fields and classical groups, and is also remem ...
. For example, the group ''G''2 is the automorphism group of an octonion algebra over ''k''. By contrast, the Chevalley groups of type F4, E7, E8 over a field of positive characteristic were completely new. More generally, the classification of ''split'' reductive groups is the same over any field. A semisimple group ''G'' over a field ''k'' is called simply connected if every central isogeny from a semisimple group to ''G'' is an isomorphism. (For ''G'' semisimple over the complex numbers, being simply connected in this sense is equivalent to ''G''(C) being
simply connected In topology, a topological space is called simply connected (or 1-connected, or 1-simply connected) if it is path-connected and every path between two points can be continuously transformed (intuitively for embedded spaces, staying within the spac ...
in the classical topology.) Chevalley's classification gives that, over any field ''k'', there is a unique simply connected split semisimple group ''G'' with a given Dynkin diagram, with simple groups corresponding to the connected diagrams. At the other extreme, a semisimple group is of adjoint type if its center is trivial. The split semisimple groups over ''k'' with given Dynkin diagram are exactly the groups ''G''/''A'', where ''G'' is the simply connected group and ''A'' is a ''k''-subgroup scheme of the center of ''G''. For example, the simply connected split simple groups over a field ''k'' corresponding to the "classical" Dynkin diagrams are as follows: *A''n'': ''SL''(''n''+1) over ''k''; *B''n'': the spin group Spin(2''n''+1) associated to a quadratic form of dimension 2''n''+1 over ''k'' with
Witt index :''"Witt's theorem" or "the Witt theorem" may also refer to the Bourbaki–Witt fixed point theorem of order theory.'' In mathematics, Witt's theorem, named after Ernst Witt, is a basic result in the algebraic theory of quadratic forms: any isom ...
''n'', for example the form ::q(x_1,\ldots,x_)=x_1x_2+x_3x_4+\cdots+x_x_+x_^2; *C''n'': the symplectic group ''Sp''(2''n'') over ''k''; *D''n'': the spin group Spin(2''n'') associated to a quadratic form of dimension 2''n'' over ''k'' with Witt index ''n'', which can be written as: ::q(x_1,\ldots,x_)=x_1x_2+x_3x_4+\cdots+x_x_. The outer automorphism group of a split reductive group ''G'' over a field ''k'' is isomorphic to the automorphism group of the root datum of ''G''. Moreover, the automorphism group of ''G'' splits as a
semidirect product In mathematics, specifically in group theory, the concept of a semidirect product is a generalization of a direct product. There are two closely related concepts of semidirect product: * an ''inner'' semidirect product is a particular way in w ...
: :\operatorname(G)\cong \operatorname(G)\ltimes (G/Z)(k), where ''Z'' is the center of ''G''. For a split semisimple simply connected group ''G'' over a field, the outer automorphism group of ''G'' has a simpler description: it is the automorphism group of the Dynkin diagram of ''G''.


Reductive group schemes

A group scheme ''G'' over a scheme ''S'' is called reductive if the morphism ''G'' → ''S'' is smooth and affine, and every geometric fiber G_ is reductive. (For a point ''p'' in ''S'', the corresponding geometric fiber means the base change of ''G'' to an algebraic closure \overline k of the residue field of ''p''.) Extending Chevalley's work, Michel Demazure and Grothendieck showed that split reductive group schemes over any nonempty scheme ''S'' are classified by root data. This statement includes the existence of Chevalley groups as group schemes over Z, and it says that every split reductive group over a scheme ''S'' is isomorphic to the base change of a Chevalley group from Z to ''S''.


Real reductive groups

In the context of
Lie group In mathematics, a Lie group (pronounced ) is a group that is also a differentiable manifold. A manifold is a space that locally resembles Euclidean space, whereas groups define the abstract concept of a binary operation along with the additio ...
s rather than algebraic groups, a real reductive group is a Lie group ''G'' such that there is a linear algebraic group ''L'' over R whose identity component (in the Zariski topology) is reductive, and a homomorphism ''G'' → ''L''(R) whose kernel is finite and whose image is open in ''L''(R) (in the classical topology). It is also standard to assume that the image of the adjoint representation Ad(''G'') is contained in Int(''g''C) = Ad(''L''0(C)) (which is automatic for ''G'' connected). In particular, every connected semisimple Lie group (meaning that its Lie algebra is semisimple) is reductive. Also, the Lie group R is reductive in this sense, since it can be viewed as the identity component of ''GL''(1,R) ≅ R*. The problem of classifying the real reductive groups largely reduces to classifying the simple Lie groups. These are classified by their Satake diagram; or one can just refer to the list of simple Lie groups (up to finite coverings). Useful theories of admissible representations and unitary representations have been developed for real reductive groups in this generality. The main differences between this definition and the definition of a reductive algebraic group have to do with the fact that an algebraic group ''G'' over R may be connected as an algebraic group while the Lie group ''G''(R) is not connected, and likewise for simply connected groups. For example, the projective linear group ''PGL''(2) is connected as an algebraic group over any field, but its group of real points ''PGL''(2,R) has two connected components. The identity component of ''PGL''(2,R) (sometimes called ''PSL''(2,R)) is a real reductive group that cannot be viewed as an algebraic group. Similarly, ''SL''(2) is simply connected as an algebraic group over any field, but the Lie group ''SL''(2,R) has
fundamental group In the mathematical field of algebraic topology, the fundamental group of a topological space is the group of the equivalence classes under homotopy of the loops contained in the space. It records information about the basic shape, or holes, of ...
isomorphic to the integers Z, and so ''SL''(2,R) has nontrivial covering spaces. By definition, all finite coverings of ''SL''(2,R) (such as the metaplectic group) are real reductive groups. On the other hand, the universal cover of ''SL''(2,R) is not a real reductive group, even though its Lie algebra is reductive, that is, the product of a semisimple Lie algebra and an abelian Lie algebra. For a connected real reductive group ''G'', the quotient manifold ''G''/''K'' of ''G'' by a maximal compact subgroup ''K'' is a symmetric space of non-compact type. In fact, every symmetric space of non-compact type arises this way. These are central examples in Riemannian geometry of manifolds with nonpositive sectional curvature. For example, ''SL''(2,R)/''SO''(2) is the hyperbolic plane, and ''SL''(2,C)/''SU''(2) is hyperbolic 3-space. For a reductive group ''G'' over a field ''k'' that is complete with respect to a discrete valuation (such as the p-adic numbers Q''p''), the affine building ''X'' of ''G'' plays the role of the symmetric space. Namely, ''X'' is a
simplicial complex In mathematics, a simplicial complex is a set composed of points, line segments, triangles, and their ''n''-dimensional counterparts (see illustration). Simplicial complexes should not be confused with the more abstract notion of a simplicial set ...
with an action of ''G''(''k''), and ''G''(''k'') preserves a
CAT(0) In mathematics, a \mathbf(k) space, where k is a real number, is a specific type of metric space. Intuitively, triangles in a \operatorname(k) space are "slimmer" than corresponding "model triangles" in a standard space of constant curvature k. In ...
metric on ''X'', the analog of a metric with nonpositive curvature. The dimension of the affine building is the ''k''-rank of ''G''. For example, the building of ''SL''(2,Q''p'') is a tree.


Representations of reductive groups

For a split reductive group ''G'' over a field ''k'', the irreducible representations of ''G'' (as an algebraic group) are parametrized by the
dominant weight In the mathematical field of representation theory, a weight of an algebra ''A'' over a field F is an algebra homomorphism from ''A'' to F, or equivalently, a one-dimensional representation of ''A'' over F. It is the algebra analogue of a multiplica ...
s, which are defined as the intersection of the weight lattice ''X''(''T'') ≅ Z''n'' with a convex cone (a Weyl chamber) in R''n''. In particular, this parametrization is independent of the characteristic of ''k''. In more detail, fix a split maximal torus and a Borel subgroup, ''T'' ⊂ ''B'' ⊂ ''G''. Then ''B'' is the semidirect product of ''T'' with a smooth connected unipotent subgroup ''U''. Define a highest weight vector in a representation ''V'' of ''G'' over ''k'' to be a nonzero vector ''v'' such that ''B'' maps the line spanned by ''v'' into itself. Then ''B'' acts on that line through its quotient group ''T'', by some element λ of the weight lattice ''X''(''T''). Chevalley showed that every irreducible representation of ''G'' has a unique highest weight vector up to scalars; the corresponding "highest weight" λ is dominant; and every dominant weight λ is the highest weight of a unique irreducible representation ''L''(λ) of ''G'', up to isomorphism. There remains the problem of describing the irreducible representation with given highest weight. For ''k'' of characteristic zero, there are essentially complete answers. For a dominant weight λ, define the Schur module ∇(λ) as the ''k''-vector space of sections of the ''G''-equivariant
line bundle In mathematics, a line bundle expresses the concept of a line that varies from point to point of a space. For example, a curve in the plane having a tangent line at each point determines a varying line: the ''tangent bundle'' is a way of organisin ...
on the flag manifold ''G''/''B'' associated to λ; this is a representation of ''G''. For ''k'' of characteristic zero, the Borel–Weil theorem says that the irreducible representation ''L''(λ) is isomorphic to the Schur module ∇(λ). Furthermore, the Weyl character formula gives the
character Character or Characters may refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media Literature * ''Character'' (novel), a 1936 Dutch novel by Ferdinand Bordewijk * ''Characters'' (Theophrastus), a classical Greek set of character sketches attributed to The ...
(and in particular the dimension) of this representation. For a split reductive group ''G'' over a field ''k'' of positive characteristic, the situation is far more subtle, because representations of ''G'' are typically not direct sums of irreducibles. For a dominant weight λ, the irreducible representation ''L''(λ) is the unique simple submodule (the socle) of the Schur module ∇(λ), but it need not be equal to the Schur module. The dimension and character of the Schur module are given by the Weyl character formula (as in characteristic zero), by
George Kempf George Rushing Kempf (Globe, Arizona, August 12, 1944 – Lawrence, Kansas, July 16, 2002) was a mathematician who worked on algebraic geometry, who proved the Riemann–Kempf singularity theorem, the Kempf–Ness theorem, the Kempf vanishing the ...
. The dimensions and characters of the irreducible representations ''L''(λ) are in general unknown, although a large body of theory has been developed to analyze these representations. One important result is that the dimension and character of ''L''(λ) are known when the characteristic ''p'' of ''k'' is much bigger than the Coxeter number of ''G'', by
Henning Andersen Henning Andersen (16 July 1917 – 29 June 1944) was a member of the Danish resistance executed by the Nazi Germany, German occupying power. Biography In addition to being a member of the Hvidsten group, Andersen was also a miller. The group ...
, Jens Jantzen, and Wolfgang Soergel (proving
Lusztig Lusztig is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: *George Lusztig George Lusztig (born ''Gheorghe Lusztig''; May 20, 1946) is an American-Romanian mathematician and Abdun Nur Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology ...
's conjecture in that case). Their character formula for ''p'' large is based on the Kazhdan–Lusztig polynomials, which are combinatorially complex. For any prime ''p'', Simon Riche and Geordie Williamson conjectured the irreducible characters of a reductive group in terms of the ''p''-Kazhdan-Lusztig polynomials, which are even more complex, but at least are computable.


Non-split reductive groups

As discussed above, the classification of split reductive groups is the same over any field. By contrast, the classification of arbitrary reductive groups can be hard, depending on the base field. Some examples among the classical groups are: *Every nondegenerate quadratic form ''q'' over a field ''k'' determines a reductive group G = ''SO''(''q''). Here ''G'' is simple if ''q'' has dimension ''n'' at least 3, since G_ is isomorphic to ''SO''(''n'') over an algebraic closure \overline k. The ''k''-rank of ''G'' is equal to the Witt index of ''q'' (the maximum dimension of an isotropic subspace over ''k'').Borel (1991), section 23.4. So the simple group ''G'' is split over ''k'' if and only if ''q'' has the maximum possible Witt index, \lfloor n/2\rfloor. *Every
central simple algebra In ring theory and related areas of mathematics a central simple algebra (CSA) over a field ''K'' is a finite-dimensional associative ''K''-algebra ''A'' which is simple, and for which the center is exactly ''K''. (Note that ''not'' every simple a ...
''A'' over ''k'' determines a reductive group ''G'' = ''SL''(1,''A''), the kernel of the reduced norm on the
group of units In algebra, a unit of a ring is an invertible element for the multiplication of the ring. That is, an element of a ring is a unit if there exists in such that vu = uv = 1, where is the multiplicative identity; the element is unique for this ...
''A''* (as an algebraic group over ''k''). The degree of ''A'' means the square root of the dimension of ''A'' as a ''k''-vector space. Here ''G'' is simple if ''A'' has degree ''n'' at least 2, since G_ is isomorphic to ''SL''(''n'') over \overline k. If ''A'' has index ''r'' (meaning that ''A'' is isomorphic to the matrix algebra ''M''''n''/''r''(''D'') for a division algebra ''D'' of degree ''r'' over ''k''), then the ''k''-rank of ''G'' is (''n''/''r'') − 1. So the simple group ''G'' is split over ''k'' if and only if ''A'' is a matrix algebra over ''k''. As a result, the problem of classifying reductive groups over ''k'' essentially includes the problem of classifying all quadratic forms over ''k'' or all central simple algebras over ''k''. These problems are easy for ''k'' algebraically closed, and they are understood for some other fields such as number fields, but for arbitrary fields there are many open questions. A reductive group over a field ''k'' is called isotropic if it has ''k''-rank greater than 0 (that is, if it contains a nontrivial split torus), and otherwise anisotropic. For a semisimple group ''G'' over a field ''k'', the following conditions are equivalent: *''G'' is isotropic (that is, ''G'' contains a copy of the multiplicative group ''G''''m'' over ''k''); *''G'' contains a parabolic subgroup over ''k'' not equal to ''G''; *''G'' contains a copy of the additive group ''G''''a'' over ''k''. For ''k'' perfect, it is also equivalent to say that ''G''(''k'') contains a unipotent element other than 1. For a connected linear algebraic group ''G'' over a local field ''k'' of characteristic zero (such as the real numbers), the group ''G''(''k'') is compact in the classical topology (based on the topology of ''k'') if and only if ''G'' is reductive and anisotropic. Example: the orthogonal group ''SO''(''p'',''q'') over R has real rank min(''p'',''q''), and so it is anisotropic if and only if ''p'' or ''q'' is zero. A reductive group ''G'' over a field ''k'' is called quasi-split if it contains a Borel subgroup over ''k''. A split reductive group is quasi-split. If ''G'' is quasi-split over ''k'', then any two Borel subgroups of ''G'' are conjugate by some element of ''G''(''k''). Example: the orthogonal group ''SO''(''p'',''q'') over R is split if and only if , ''p''−''q'', ≤ 1, and it is quasi-split if and only if , ''p''−''q'', ≤ 2.


Structure of semisimple groups as abstract groups

For a simply connected split semisimple group ''G'' over a field ''k'', Robert Steinberg gave an explicit presentation of the abstract group ''G''(''k''). It is generated by copies of the additive group of ''k'' indexed by the roots of ''G'' (the root subgroups), with relations determined by the Dynkin diagram of ''G''. For a simply connected split semisimple group ''G'' over a perfect field ''k'', Steinberg also determined the automorphism group of the abstract group ''G''(''k''). Every automorphism is the product of an inner automorphism, a diagonal automorphism (meaning conjugation by a suitable \overline k-point of a maximal torus), a graph automorphism (corresponding to an automorphism of the Dynkin diagram), and a field automorphism (coming from an automorphism of the field ''k''). For a ''k''-simple algebraic group ''G'', Tits's simplicity theorem says that the abstract group ''G''(''k'') is close to being simple, under mild assumptions. Namely, suppose that ''G'' is isotropic over ''k'', and suppose that the field ''k'' has at least 4 elements. Let ''G''(''k'')+ be the subgroup of the abstract group ''G''(''k'') generated by ''k''-points of copies of the additive group ''G''''a'' over ''k'' contained in ''G''. (By the assumption that ''G'' is isotropic over ''k'', the group ''G''(''k'')+ is nontrivial, and even Zariski dense in ''G'' if ''k'' is infinite.) Then the quotient group of ''G''(''k'')+ by its center is simple (as an abstract group). The proof uses Jacques Tits's machinery of BN-pairs. The exceptions for fields of order 2 or 3 are well understood. For ''k'' = F2, Tits's simplicity theorem remains valid except when ''G'' is split of type ''A''1, ''B''2, or ''G''2, or non-split (that is, unitary) of type ''A''2. For ''k'' = F3, the theorem holds except for ''G'' of type ''A''1. For a ''k''-simple group ''G'', in order to understand the whole group ''G''(''k''), one can consider the Whitehead group ''W''(''k'',''G'')=''G''(''k'')/''G''(''k'')+. For ''G'' simply connected and quasi-split, the Whitehead group is trivial, and so the whole group ''G''(''k'') is simple modulo its center. More generally, the Kneser–Tits problem asks for which isotropic ''k''-simple groups the Whitehead group is trivial. In all known examples, ''W''(''k'',''G'') is abelian. For an anisotropic ''k''-simple group ''G'', the abstract group ''G''(''k'') can be far from simple. For example, let ''D'' be a division algebra with center a ''p''-adic field ''k''. Suppose that the dimension of ''D'' over ''k'' is finite and greater than 1. Then ''G'' = ''SL''(1,''D'') is an anisotropic ''k''-simple group. As mentioned above, ''G''(''k'') is compact in the classical topology. Since it is also totally disconnected, ''G''(''k'') is a
profinite group In mathematics, a profinite group is a topological group that is in a certain sense assembled from a system of finite groups. The idea of using a profinite group is to provide a "uniform", or "synoptic", view of an entire system of finite groups. ...
(but not finite). As a result, ''G''(''k'') contains infinitely many normal subgroups of finite
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 ...
.


Lattices and arithmetic groups

Let ''G'' be a linear algebraic group over the rational numbers Q. Then ''G'' can be extended to an affine group scheme ''G'' over Z, and this determines an abstract group ''G''(Z). An arithmetic group means any subgroup of ''G''(Q) that is
commensurable Two concepts or things are commensurable if they are measurable or comparable by a common standard. Commensurability most commonly refers to commensurability (mathematics). It may also refer to: * Commensurability (astronomy), whether two orbit ...
with ''G''(Z). (Arithmeticity of a subgroup of ''G''(Q) is independent of the choice of Z-structure.) For example, ''SL''(''n'',Z) is an arithmetic subgroup of ''SL''(''n'',Q). For a Lie group ''G'', a lattice in ''G'' means a discrete subgroup Γ of ''G'' such that the manifold ''G''/Γ has finite volume (with respect to a ''G''-invariant measure). For example, a discrete subgroup Γ is a lattice if ''G''/Γ is compact. The Margulis arithmeticity theorem says, in particular: for a simple Lie group ''G'' of real rank at least 2, every lattice in ''G'' is an arithmetic group.


The Galois action on the Dynkin diagram

In seeking to classify reductive groups which need not be split, one step is the Tits index, which reduces the problem to the case of anisotropic groups. This reduction generalizes several fundamental theorems in algebra. For example, Witt's decomposition theorem says that a nondegenerate quadratic form over a field is determined up to isomorphism by its Witt index together with its anisotropic kernel. Likewise, the Artin–Wedderburn theorem reduces the classification of central simple algebras over a field to the case of division algebras. Generalizing these results, Tits showed that a reductive group over a field ''k'' is determined up to isomorphism by its Tits index together with its anisotropic kernel, an associated anisotropic semisimple ''k''-group. For a reductive group ''G'' over a field ''k'', the absolute Galois group Gal(''k''''s''/''k'') acts (continuously) on the "absolute" Dynkin diagram of ''G'', that is, the Dynkin diagram of ''G'' over a separable closure ''k''s (which is also the Dynkin diagram of ''G'' over an algebraic closure ). The Tits index of ''G'' consists of the root datum of ''G''''k''''s'', the Galois action on its Dynkin diagram, and a Galois-invariant subset of the vertices of the Dynkin diagram. Traditionally, the Tits index is drawn by circling the Galois orbits in the given subset. There is a full classification of quasi-split groups in these terms. Namely, for each action of the absolute Galois group of a field ''k'' on a Dynkin diagram, there is a unique simply connected semisimple quasi-split group ''H'' over ''k'' with the given action. (For a quasi-split group, every Galois orbit in the Dynkin diagram is circled.) Moreover, any other simply connected semisimple group ''G'' over ''k'' with the given action is an
inner form In mathematics, an inner form of an algebraic group G over a field K is another algebraic group H such that there exists an isomorphism \phi between G and H defined over \overline K (this means that H is a ''K-form'' of G) and in addition, for ever ...
of the quasi-split group ''H'', meaning that ''G'' is the group associated to an element of the Galois cohomology set ''H''1(''k'',''H''/''Z''), where ''Z'' is the center of ''H''. In other words, ''G'' is the twist of ''H'' associated to some ''H''/''Z''-torsor over ''k'', as discussed in the next section. Example: Let ''q'' be a nondegenerate quadratic form of even dimension 2''n'' over a field ''k'' of characteristic not 2, with ''n'' ≥ 5. (These restrictions can be avoided.) Let ''G'' be the simple group ''SO''(''q'') over ''k''. The absolute Dynkin diagram of ''G'' is of type D''n'', and so its automorphism group is of order 2, switching the two "legs" of the D''n'' diagram. The action of the absolute Galois group of ''k'' on the Dynkin diagram is trivial if and only if the signed
discriminant In mathematics, the discriminant of a polynomial is a quantity that depends on the coefficients and allows deducing some properties of the roots without computing them. More precisely, it is a polynomial function of the coefficients of the origi ...
''d'' of ''q'' in ''k''*/(''k''*)2 is trivial. If ''d'' is nontrivial, then it is encoded in the Galois action on the Dynkin diagram: the index-2 subgroup of the Galois group that acts as the identity is \operatorname(k_s/k(\sqrt))\subset \operatorname(k_s/k). The group ''G'' is split if and only if ''q'' has Witt index ''n'', the maximum possible, and ''G'' is quasi-split if and only if ''q'' has Witt index at least ''n'' − 1.


Torsors and the Hasse principle

A torsor for an affine group scheme ''G'' over a field ''k'' means an affine scheme ''X'' over ''k'' with an action of ''G'' such that X_ is isomorphic to G_ with the action of G_ on itself by left translation. A torsor can also be viewed as a principal G-bundle over ''k'' with respect to the fppf topology on ''k'', or the
étale topology In algebraic geometry, the étale topology is a Grothendieck topology on the category of schemes which has properties similar to the Euclidean topology, but unlike the Euclidean topology, it is also defined in positive characteristic. The étale t ...
if ''G'' is smooth over ''k''. The pointed set of isomorphism classes of ''G''-torsors over ''k'' is called ''H''1(''k'',''G''), in the language of Galois cohomology. Torsors arise whenever one seeks to classify forms of a given algebraic object ''Y'' over a field ''k'', meaning objects ''X'' over ''k'' which become isomorphic to ''Y'' over the algebraic closure of ''k''. Namely, such forms (up to isomorphism) are in one-to-one correspondence with the set ''H''1(''k'',Aut(''Y'')). For example, (nondegenerate) quadratic forms of dimension ''n'' over ''k'' are classified by ''H''1(''k'',''O''(''n'')), and central simple algebras of degree ''n'' over ''k'' are classified by ''H''1(''k'',''PGL''(''n'')). Also, ''k''-forms of a given algebraic group ''G'' (sometimes called "twists" of ''G'') are classified by ''H''1(''k'',Aut(''G'')). These problems motivate the systematic study of ''G''-torsors, especially for reductive groups ''G''. When possible, one hopes to classify ''G''-torsors using cohomological invariants, which are invariants taking values in Galois cohomology with ''abelian'' coefficient groups ''M'', ''H''''a''(''k'',''M''). In this direction, Steinberg proved Serre's "Conjecture I": for a connected linear algebraic group ''G'' over a perfect field of cohomological dimension at most 1, ''H''1(''k'',''G'') = 1. (The case of a finite field was known earlier, as Lang's theorem.) It follows, for example, that every reductive group over a finite field is quasi-split. Serre's Conjecture II predicts that for a simply connected semisimple group ''G'' over a field of cohomological dimension at most 2, ''H''1(''k'',''G'') = 1. The conjecture is known for a totally imaginary number field (which has cohomological dimension 2). More generally, for any number field ''k'', Martin Kneser, Günter Harder and Vladimir Chernousov (1989) proved the
Hasse principle In mathematics, Helmut Hasse's local–global principle, also known as the Hasse principle, is the idea that one can find an integer solution to an equation by using the Chinese remainder theorem to piece together solutions modulo powers of each di ...
: for a simply connected semisimple group ''G'' over ''k'', the map :H^1(k,G)\to \prod_ H^1(k_v,G) is bijective. Here ''v'' runs over all places of ''k'', and ''k''''v'' is the corresponding local field (possibly R or C). Moreover, the pointed set ''H''1(''k''''v'',''G'') is trivial for every nonarchimidean local field ''k''''v'', and so only the real places of ''k'' matter. The analogous result for a
global field In mathematics, a global field is one of two type of fields (the other one is local field) which are characterized using valuations. There are two kinds of global fields: *Algebraic number field: A finite extension of \mathbb *Global function fi ...
''k'' of positive characteristic was proved earlier by Harder (1975): for every simply connected semisimple group ''G'' over ''k'', ''H''1(''k'',''G'') is trivial (since ''k'' has no real places). In the slightly different case of an adjoint group ''G'' over a number field ''k'', the Hasse principle holds in a weaker form: the natural map :H^1(k,G)\to \prod_ H^1(k_v,G) is injective.Platonov & Rapinchuk (1994), Theorem 6.4. For ''G'' = ''PGL''(''n''), this amounts to the
Albert–Brauer–Hasse–Noether theorem In algebraic number theory, the Albert–Brauer–Hasse–Noether theorem states that a central simple algebra over an algebraic number field ''K'' which splits over every completion ''K'v'' is a matrix algebra over ''K''. The theorem is an e ...
, saying that a central simple algebra over a number field is determined by its local invariants. Building on the Hasse principle, the classification of semisimple groups over number fields is well understood. For example, there are exactly three Q-forms of the exceptional group E8, corresponding to the three real forms of E8.


See also

*The groups of Lie type are the finite simple groups constructed from simple algebraic groups over finite fields. * Generalized flag variety, Bruhat decomposition, Schubert variety, Schubert calculus * Schur algebra, Deligne–Lusztig theory *
Real form (Lie theory) In mathematics, the notion of a real form relates objects defined over the field of real and complex numbers. A real Lie algebra ''g''0 is called a real form of a complex Lie algebra ''g'' if ''g'' is the complexification of ''g''0: : \math ...
* Weil's conjecture on Tamagawa numbers * Langlands classification, Langlands dual group, Langlands program,
geometric Langlands program In mathematics, the geometric Langlands correspondence is a reformulation of the Langlands correspondence obtained by replacing the number fields appearing in the original number theoretic version by function fields and applying techniques from al ...
* Special group,
essential dimension In mathematics, essential dimension is an invariant (mathematics), invariant defined for certain algebraic structures such as algebraic groups and quadratic forms. It was introduced by Joe P. Buhler, J. Buhler and Zinovy Reichstein, Z. Reichstein an ...
* Geometric invariant theory,
Luna's slice theorem In mathematics, Luna's slice theorem, introduced by , describes the local behavior of an action of a reductive algebraic group on an affine variety. It is an analogue in algebraic geometry of the theorem that a compact Lie group acting on a smooth ...
,
Haboush's theorem In mathematics Haboush's theorem, often still referred to as the Mumford conjecture, states that for any semisimple algebraic group ''G'' over a field ''K'', and for any linear representation ρ of ''G'' on a ''K''- vector space ''V'', given ''v' ...
* Radical of an algebraic group


Notes


References

* * * * * * Revised and annotated edition of the 1970 original. * * Revised and annotated edition of the 1970 original. * * * * * * * * * * *


External links

*{{Citation , author1-last=Demazure , author1-first=M. , author1-link=Michel Demazure , author2-last=Grothendieck , author2-first=A. , author2-link=Alexander Grothendieck , editor1-last=Gille , editor1-first=P. , editor2-last=Polo , editor2-first=P. , title = Schémas en groupes (SGA 3), II: Groupes de type multiplicatif, et structure des schémas en groupes généraux , url=https://webusers.imj-prg.fr/~patrick.polo/SGA3/ Revised and annotated edition of the 1970 original. Linear algebraic groups Lie groups