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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 ...
, the special linear group SL(2, R) or SL2(R) is the group of 2 × 2 real matrices with determinant one: : \mbox(2,\mathbf) = \left\. It is a connected non-compact simple real
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 ...
of dimension 3 with applications in geometry, topology, representation theory, and physics. SL(2, R) acts on the
complex upper half-plane In mathematics, the upper half-plane, \,\mathcal\,, is the set of points in the Cartesian plane with > 0. Complex plane Mathematicians sometimes identify the Cartesian plane with the complex plane, and then the upper half-plane corresponds to t ...
by fractional linear transformations. The group action factors through the quotient PSL(2, R) (the 2 × 2 projective special linear group over R). More specifically, :PSL(2, R) = SL(2, R) / , where ''I'' denotes the 2 × 2
identity matrix In linear algebra, the identity matrix of size n is the n\times n square matrix with ones on the main diagonal and zeros elsewhere. Terminology and notation The identity matrix is often denoted by I_n, or simply by I if the size is immaterial o ...
. It contains the
modular group In mathematics, the modular group is the projective special linear group of matrices with integer coefficients and determinant 1. The matrices and are identified. The modular group acts on the upper-half of the complex plane by fractional l ...
PSL(2, Z). Also closely related is the 2-fold covering group, Mp(2, R), a metaplectic group (thinking of SL(2, R) as a symplectic group). Another related group is SL±(2, R), the group of real 2 × 2 matrices with determinant ±1; this is more commonly used in the context of the
modular group In mathematics, the modular group is the projective special linear group of matrices with integer coefficients and determinant 1. The matrices and are identified. The modular group acts on the upper-half of the complex plane by fractional l ...
, however.


Descriptions

SL(2, R) is the group of all linear transformations of R2 that preserve
oriented In mathematics, orientability is a property of some topological spaces such as real vector spaces, Euclidean spaces, surfaces, and more generally manifolds that allows a consistent definition of "clockwise" and "counterclockwise". A space is ...
area. It is
isomorphic In mathematics, an isomorphism is a structure-preserving mapping between two structures of the same type that can be reversed by an inverse mapping. Two mathematical structures are isomorphic if an isomorphism exists between them. The word is ...
to the symplectic group Sp(2, R) and the special unitary group SU(1, 1). It is also isomorphic to the group of unit-length coquaternions. The group SL±(2, R) preserves unoriented area: it may reverse orientation. The quotient PSL(2, R) has several interesting descriptions: * It is the group of orientation-preserving projective transformations of the real projective line * It is the group of
conformal Conformal may refer to: * Conformal (software), in ASIC Software * Conformal coating in electronics * Conformal cooling channel, in injection or blow moulding * Conformal field theory in physics, such as: ** Boundary conformal field theory ...
automorphism In mathematics, an automorphism is an isomorphism from a mathematical object to itself. It is, in some sense, a symmetry of the object, and a way of mapping the object to itself while preserving all of its structure. The set of all automorphisms ...
s of the unit disc. * It is the group of orientation-preserving isometries of the hyperbolic plane. * It is the restricted Lorentz group of three-dimensional Minkowski space. Equivalently, it is isomorphic to the indefinite orthogonal group SO+(1,2). It follows that SL(2, R) is isomorphic to the spin group Spin(2,1)+. Elements of the modular group PSL(2, Z) have additional interpretations, as do elements of the group SL(2, Z) (as linear transforms of the torus), and these interpretations can also be viewed in light of the general theory of SL(2, R).


Homographies

Elements of PSL(2, R) are homographies on the real projective line : : ,1\mapsto ,\ 1\begina & c \\ b & d \end \ = \ x + b,\ cx + d\ = \, \left frac,\ 1\right. These projective transformations form a subgroup of PSL(2, C), which acts on the Riemann sphere by
Möbius transformation In geometry and complex analysis, a Möbius transformation of the complex plane is a rational function of the form f(z) = \frac of one complex variable ''z''; here the coefficients ''a'', ''b'', ''c'', ''d'' are complex numbers satisfying ''ad'' ...
s. When the real line is considered the boundary of the hyperbolic plane, PSL(2, R) expresses hyperbolic motions.


Möbius transformations

Elements of PSL(2, R) act on the complex plane by Möbius transformations: : z \mapsto \frac\;\;\;\;\mboxa,b,c,d\in\mathbf\mbox. This is precisely the set of Möbius transformations that preserve the upper half-plane. It follows that PSL(2, R) is the group of conformal automorphisms of the upper half-plane. By the Riemann mapping theorem, it is also isomorphic to the group of conformal automorphisms of the unit disc. These Möbius transformations act as the isometries of the upper half-plane model of hyperbolic space, and the corresponding Möbius transformations of the disc are the hyperbolic isometries of the
Poincaré disk model In geometry, the Poincaré disk model, also called the conformal disk model, is a model of 2-dimensional hyperbolic geometry in which all points are inside the unit disk, and straight lines are either circular arcs contained within the disk th ...
. The above formula can be also used to define Möbius transformations of
dual Dual or Duals may refer to: Paired/two things * Dual (mathematics), a notion of paired concepts that mirror one another ** Dual (category theory), a formalization of mathematical duality *** see more cases in :Duality theories * Dual (grammatical ...
and double (aka split-complex) numbers. The corresponding geometries are in non-trivial relations to Lobachevskian geometry.


Adjoint representation

The group SL(2, R) acts on its Lie algebra sl(2, R) by conjugation (remember that the Lie algebra elements are also 2 × 2 matrices), yielding a faithful 3-dimensional linear
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 ...
of PSL(2, R). This can alternatively be described as the action of PSL(2, R) on the space of quadratic forms on R2. The result is the following representation: :\begin a & b \\ c & d \end \mapsto \begin a^2 & 2ab & b^2 \\ ac & ad+bc & bd \\ c^2 & 2cd & d^2 \end. The
Killing form In mathematics, the Killing form, named after Wilhelm Killing, is a symmetric bilinear form that plays a basic role in the theories of Lie groups and Lie algebras. Cartan's criteria (criterion of solvability and criterion of semisimplicity) show ...
on sl(2, R) has signature (2,1), and induces an isomorphism between PSL(2, R) and the Lorentz group SO+(2,1). This action of PSL(2, R) on Minkowski space restricts to the isometric action of PSL(2, R) on the hyperboloid model of the hyperbolic plane.


Classification of elements

The eigenvalues of an element ''A'' ∈ SL(2, R) satisfy the
characteristic polynomial In linear algebra, the characteristic polynomial of a square matrix is a polynomial which is invariant under matrix similarity and has the eigenvalues as roots. It has the determinant and the trace of the matrix among its coefficients. The chara ...
: \lambda^2 \,-\, \mathrm(A)\,\lambda \,+\, 1 \,=\, 0 and therefore : \lambda = \frac. This leads to the following classification of elements, with corresponding action on the Euclidean plane: * If , tr(''A''), < 2, then ''A'' is called elliptic, and is conjugate to a
rotation Rotation, or spin, is the circular movement of an object around a '' central axis''. A two-dimensional rotating object has only one possible central axis and can rotate in either a clockwise or counterclockwise direction. A three-dimensional ...
. * If , tr(''A''), = 2, then ''A'' is called parabolic, and is a shear mapping. * If , tr(''A''), > 2, then ''A'' is called hyperbolic, and is a squeeze mapping. The names correspond to the classification of conic sections by eccentricity: if one defines eccentricity as half the absolute value of the trace (ε = ½ tr; dividing by 2 corrects for the effect of dimension, while absolute value corresponds to ignoring an overall factor of ±1 such as when working in PSL(2, R)), then this yields: \epsilon < 1, elliptic; \epsilon = 1, parabolic; \epsilon > 1, hyperbolic. The identity element 1 and negative identity element −1 (in PSL(2, R) they are the same), have trace ±2, and hence by this classification are parabolic elements, though they are often considered separately. The same classification is used for SL(2, C) and PSL(2, C) (
Möbius transformation In geometry and complex analysis, a Möbius transformation of the complex plane is a rational function of the form f(z) = \frac of one complex variable ''z''; here the coefficients ''a'', ''b'', ''c'', ''d'' are complex numbers satisfying ''ad'' ...
s) and PSL(2, R) (real Möbius transformations), with the addition of "loxodromic" transformations corresponding to complex traces; analogous classifications are used elsewhere. A subgroup that is contained with the elliptic (respectively, parabolic, hyperbolic) elements, plus the identity and negative identity, is called an elliptic subgroup (respectively, parabolic subgroup, hyperbolic subgroup). This is a classification into ''subsets,'' not ''subgroups:'' these sets are not closed under multiplication (the product of two parabolic elements need not be parabolic, and so forth). However, all elements are conjugate into one of 3 standard
one-parameter subgroup In mathematics, a one-parameter group or one-parameter subgroup usually means a continuous group homomorphism :\varphi : \mathbb \rightarrow G from the real line \mathbb (as an additive group) to some other topological group G. If \varphi is ...
s (possibly times ±1), as detailed below. Topologically, as trace is a continuous map, the elliptic elements (excluding ±1) are an open set, as are the hyperbolic elements (excluding ±1), while the parabolic elements (including ±1) are a
closed set In geometry, topology, and related branches of mathematics, a closed set is a set whose complement is an open set. In a topological space, a closed set can be defined as a set which contains all its limit points. In a complete metric space, a cl ...
.


Elliptic elements

The
eigenvalues In linear algebra, an eigenvector () or characteristic vector of a linear transformation is a nonzero vector that changes at most by a scalar factor when that linear transformation is applied to it. The corresponding eigenvalue, often denoted b ...
for an elliptic element are both complex, and are conjugate values on the unit circle. Such an element is conjugate to a
rotation Rotation, or spin, is the circular movement of an object around a '' central axis''. A two-dimensional rotating object has only one possible central axis and can rotate in either a clockwise or counterclockwise direction. A three-dimensional ...
of the Euclidean plane – they can be interpreted as rotations in a possibly non-orthogonal basis – and the corresponding element of PSL(2, R) acts as (conjugate to) a
rotation Rotation, or spin, is the circular movement of an object around a '' central axis''. A two-dimensional rotating object has only one possible central axis and can rotate in either a clockwise or counterclockwise direction. A three-dimensional ...
of the hyperbolic plane and of Minkowski space. Elliptic elements of the
modular group In mathematics, the modular group is the projective special linear group of matrices with integer coefficients and determinant 1. The matrices and are identified. The modular group acts on the upper-half of the complex plane by fractional l ...
must have eigenvalues , where ''ω'' is a primitive 3rd, 4th, or 6th root of unity. These are all the elements of the modular group with finite
order Order, ORDER or Orders may refer to: * Categorization, the process in which ideas and objects are recognized, differentiated, and understood * Heterarchy, a system of organization wherein the elements have the potential to be ranked a number of d ...
, and they act on the torus as periodic diffeomorphisms. Elements of trace 0 may be called "circular elements" (by analogy with eccentricity) but this is rarely done; they correspond to elements with eigenvalues ±''i'', and are conjugate to rotation by 90°, and square to -''I'': they are the non-identity involutions in PSL(2). Elliptic elements are conjugate into the subgroup of rotations of the Euclidean plane, 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(2); the angle of rotation is arccos of half of the trace, with the sign of the rotation determined by orientation. (A rotation and its inverse are conjugate in GL(2) but not SL(2).)


Parabolic elements

A parabolic element has only a single eigenvalue, which is either 1 or -1. Such an element acts as a shear mapping on the Euclidean plane, and the corresponding element of PSL(2, R) acts as a limit rotation of the hyperbolic plane and as a null rotation of Minkowski space. Parabolic elements of the
modular group In mathematics, the modular group is the projective special linear group of matrices with integer coefficients and determinant 1. The matrices and are identified. The modular group acts on the upper-half of the complex plane by fractional l ...
act as Dehn twists of the torus. Parabolic elements are conjugate into the 2 component group of standard shears × ±''I'': \left(\begin1 & \lambda \\ & 1\end\right) \times \. In fact, they are all conjugate (in SL(2)) to one of the four matrices \left(\begin1 & \pm 1 \\ & 1\end\right), \left(\begin-1 & \pm 1 \\ & -1\end\right) (in GL(2) or SL±(2), the ± can be omitted, but in SL(2) it cannot).


Hyperbolic elements

The
eigenvalues In linear algebra, an eigenvector () or characteristic vector of a linear transformation is a nonzero vector that changes at most by a scalar factor when that linear transformation is applied to it. The corresponding eigenvalue, often denoted b ...
for a hyperbolic element are both real, and are reciprocals. Such an element acts as a squeeze mapping of the Euclidean plane, and the corresponding element of PSL(2, R) acts as a translation of the hyperbolic plane and as a Lorentz boost on Minkowski space. Hyperbolic elements of the
modular group In mathematics, the modular group is the projective special linear group of matrices with integer coefficients and determinant 1. The matrices and are identified. The modular group acts on the upper-half of the complex plane by fractional l ...
act as
Anosov diffeomorphism In mathematics, more particularly in the fields of dynamical systems and geometric topology, an Anosov map on a manifold ''M'' is a certain type of mapping, from ''M'' to itself, with rather clearly marked local directions of "expansion" and "cont ...
s of the torus. Hyperbolic elements are conjugate into the 2 component group of standard squeezes × ±''I'': \left(\begin\lambda \\ & \lambda^\end\right) \times \; the hyperbolic angle of the hyperbolic rotation is given by
arcosh In mathematics, the inverse hyperbolic functions are the inverse functions of the hyperbolic functions. For a given value of a hyperbolic function, the corresponding inverse hyperbolic function provides the corresponding hyperbolic angle. T ...
of half of the trace, but the sign can be positive or negative: in contrast to the elliptic case, a squeeze and its inverse are conjugate in SL₂ (by a rotation in the axes; for standard axes, a rotation by 90°).


Conjugacy classes

By Jordan normal form, matrices are classified up to conjugacy (in GL(''n'', C)) by eigenvalues and nilpotence (concretely, nilpotence means where 1s occur in the Jordan blocks). Thus elements of SL(2) are classified up to conjugacy in GL(2) (or indeed SL±(2)) by trace (since determinant is fixed, and trace and determinant determine eigenvalues), except if the eigenvalues are equal, so ±I and the parabolic elements of trace +2 and trace -2 are not conjugate (the former have no off-diagonal entries in Jordan form, while the latter do). Up to conjugacy in SL(2) (instead of GL(2)), there is an additional datum, corresponding to orientation: a clockwise and counterclockwise (elliptical) rotation are not conjugate, nor are a positive and negative shear, as detailed above; thus for absolute value of trace less than 2, there are two conjugacy classes for each trace (clockwise and counterclockwise rotations), for absolute value of the trace equal to 2 there are three conjugacy classes for each trace (positive shear, identity, negative shear), and for absolute value of the trace greater than 2 there is one conjugacy class for a given trace.


Topology and universal cover

As a topological space, PSL(2, R) can be described as the
unit tangent bundle In Riemannian geometry, the unit tangent bundle of a Riemannian manifold (''M'', ''g''), denoted by T1''M'', UT(''M'') or simply UT''M'', is the unit sphere bundle for the tangent bundle T(''M''). It is a fiber bundle over ''M'' whose fiber at ea ...
of the hyperbolic plane. It is a circle bundle, and has a natural contact structure induced by the symplectic structure on the hyperbolic plane. SL(2, R) is a 2-fold cover of PSL(2, R), and can be thought of as the bundle of spinors on the hyperbolic plane. The fundamental group of SL(2, R) is the infinite cyclic group Z. The
universal covering group In mathematics, a covering group of a topological group ''H'' is a covering space ''G'' of ''H'' such that ''G'' is a topological group and the covering map is a continuous group homomorphism. The map ''p'' is called the covering homomorphism. A ...
, denoted \overline, is an example of a finite-dimensional Lie group that is not a matrix group. That is, \overline admits no faithful, finite-dimensional
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 ...
. As a topological space, \overline is a line bundle over the hyperbolic plane. When imbued with a left-invariant metric, the
3-manifold In mathematics, a 3-manifold is a space that locally looks like Euclidean 3-dimensional space. A 3-manifold can be thought of as a possible shape of the universe. Just as a sphere looks like a plane to a small enough observer, all 3-manifolds lo ...
\overline becomes one of the eight Thurston geometries. For example, \overline is the universal cover of the unit tangent bundle to any
hyperbolic surface In mathematics, hyperbolic geometry (also called Lobachevskian geometry or Bolyai–Lobachevskian geometry) is a non-Euclidean geometry. The parallel postulate of Euclidean geometry is replaced with: :For any given line ''R'' and point ''P ...
. Any manifold modeled on \overline is orientable, and is a circle bundle over some 2-dimensional hyperbolic orbifold (a Seifert fiber space). Under this covering, the preimage of the modular group PSL(2, Z) is the braid group on 3 generators, ''B''3, which is the universal central extension of the modular group. These are lattices inside the relevant algebraic groups, and this corresponds algebraically to the universal covering group in topology. The 2-fold covering group can be identified as Mp(2, R), a metaplectic group, thinking of SL(2, R) as the symplectic group Sp(2, R). The aforementioned groups together form a sequence: :\overline \to \cdots \to \mathrm(2,\mathbf) \to \mathrm(2,\mathbf) \to \mathrm(2,\mathbf). However, there are other covering groups of PSL(2, R) corresponding to all ''n'', as ''n'' Z < Z ≅ π1 (PSL(2, R)), which form a lattice of covering groups by divisibility; these cover SL(2, R) if and only if ''n'' is even.


Algebraic structure

The center of SL(2, R) is the two-element group , and the quotient PSL(2, R) is simple. Discrete subgroups of PSL(2, R) are called Fuchsian groups. These are the hyperbolic analogue of the Euclidean wallpaper groups and Frieze groups. The most famous of these is the
modular group In mathematics, the modular group is the projective special linear group of matrices with integer coefficients and determinant 1. The matrices and are identified. The modular group acts on the upper-half of the complex plane by fractional l ...
PSL(2, Z), which acts on a tessellation of the hyperbolic plane by ideal triangles. The
circle group In mathematics, the circle group, denoted by \mathbb T or \mathbb S^1, is the multiplicative group of all complex numbers with absolute value 1, that is, the unit circle in the complex plane or simply the unit complex numbers. \mathbb T = \ ...
SO(2) In mathematics, the circle group, denoted by \mathbb T or \mathbb S^1, is the multiplicative group of all complex numbers with absolute value 1, that is, the unit circle in the complex plane or simply the unit complex numbers. \mathbb T = \. ...
is a maximal compact subgroup of SL(2, R), and the circle SO(2) /  is a maximal compact subgroup of PSL(2, R). The Schur multiplier of the discrete group PSL(2, R) is much larger than Z, and the universal central extension is much larger than the universal covering group. However these large central extensions do not take the topology into account and are somewhat pathological.


Representation theory

SL(2, R) is a real, non-compact simple Lie group, and is the split-real form of the complex Lie group SL(2, C). The
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 ...
of SL(2, R), denoted sl(2, R), is the algebra of all real, traceless 2 × 2 matrices. It is the Bianchi algebra of type VIII. The finite-dimensional representation theory of SL(2, R) is equivalent to the representation theory of SU(2), which is the compact real form of SL(2, C). In particular, SL(2, R) has no nontrivial finite-dimensional unitary representations. This is a feature of every connected simple non-compact Lie group. For outline of proof, see non-unitarity of representations. The infinite-dimensional representation theory of SL(2, R) is quite interesting. The group has several families of unitary representations, which were worked out in detail by
Gelfand ''Gelfand'' is a surname meaning "elephant" in the Yiddish language and may refer to: * People: ** Alan Gelfand, the inventor of the ollie, a skateboarding move ** Alan E. Gelfand, a statistician ** Boris Gelfand, a chess grandmaster ** Israel Gel ...
and Naimark (1946), V. Bargmann (1947), and Harish-Chandra (1952).


See also

* Linear group * Special linear group * Projective linear group *
Modular group In mathematics, the modular group is the projective special linear group of matrices with integer coefficients and determinant 1. The matrices and are identified. The modular group acts on the upper-half of the complex plane by fractional l ...
* SL(2, C) (Möbius transformations) * Projective transformation * Fuchsian group *
Table of Lie groups This article gives a table of some common Lie groups and their associated Lie algebras. The following are noted: the topological properties of the group (dimension; connectedness; compactness; the nature of the fundamental group; and whether ...
* Anosov flow


References

* * * * * {{cite book, first=William, last=Thurston, title=Three-dimensional geometry and topology. Vol. 1, mr=1435975 , others=Edited by Silvio Levy , series=Princeton Mathematical Series , volume=35 , publisher=Princeton University Press , location=Princeton, NJ , year=1997 , isbn=0-691-08304-5 Group theory Lie groups Projective geometry Hyperbolic geometry