History
Group representation theory was generalized by Richard Brauer from the 1940s to give modular representation theory, in which the matrix operators act on a vector space over a field of arbitrary characteristic, rather than a vector space over the field of real numbers or over the field of complex numbers. The structure analogous to an irreducible representation in the resulting theory is a simple module.Overview
Let be a representation i.e. a homomorphism of a group where is a vector space over a field . If we pick a basis for , can be thought of as a function (a homomorphism) from a group into a set of invertible matrices and in this context is called a matrix representation. However, it simplifies things greatly if we think of the space without a basis. ANotation and terminology of group representations
Group elements can be represented by matrices, although the term "represented" has a specific and precise meaning in this context. A representation of a group is a mapping from the group elements to the general linear group of matrices. As notation, let denote elements of a group with group product signified without any symbol, so is the group product of and and is also an element of , and let representations be indicated by . The representation of ''a'' is written : By definition of group representations, the representation of a group product is translated into matrix multiplication of the representations: : If is the identity element of the group (so that , etc.), then is anReducible and irreducible representations
A representation is reducible if it contains a nontrivial G-invariant subspace, that is to say, all the matrices can be put in upper triangular block form by the same invertible matrix . In other words, if there is a similarity transformation: : which maps every matrix in the representation into the same pattern upper triangular blocks. Every ordered sequence minor block is a group subrepresentation. That is to say, if the representation is, for example, of dimension 2, then we have: where is a nontrivial subrepresentation. If we are able to find a matrix that makes as well, then is not only reducible but also decomposable. Notice: Even if a representation is reducible, its matrix representation may still not be the upper triangular block form. It will only have this form if we choose a suitable basis, which can be obtained by applying the matrix above to the standard basis.Decomposable and indecomposable representations
A representation is decomposable if all the matrices can be put in block-diagonal form by the same invertible matrix . In other words, if there is a similarity transformation: : which diagonalizes every matrix in the representation into the same pattern of diagonal blocks. Each such block is then a group subrepresentation independent from the others. The representations and are said to be equivalent representations. The (''k''-dimensional, say) representation can be decomposed into a direct sum of matrices: : so is decomposable, and it is customary to label the decomposed matrices by a superscript in brackets, as in for , although some authors just write the numerical label without parentheses. The dimension of is the sum of the dimensions of the blocks: : If this is not possible, i.e. , then the representation is indecomposable. Notice: Even if a representation is decomposable, its matrix representation may not be the diagonal block form. It will only have this form if we choose a suitable basis, which can be obtained by applying the matrix above to the standard basis.Connection between irreducible representation and indecomposable representation
An irreducible representation is by nature an indecomposable one. However, the converse may fail. But under some conditions, we do have an indecomposable representation being an irreducible representation. * When group is finite, and it has a representation over field , then an indecomposable representation is an irreducible representation. * When group is finite, and it has a representation over field , if we have , then an indecomposable representation is an irreducible representation.Examples of irreducible representations
Trivial representation
All groups have a one-dimensional, irreducible trivial representation by mapping all group elements to the identity transformation.One-dimensional representation
Any one-dimensional representation is irreducible since it has no proper nontrivial subspaces.Irreducible complex representations
The irreducible complex representations of a finite group G can be characterized using results from character theory. In particular, all complex representations decompose as a direct sum of irreps, and the number of irreps of is equal to the number of conjugacy classes of . * The irreducible complex representations of are exactly given by the maps , where is an th root of unity. * Let be an -dimensional complex representation of with basis . Then decomposes as a direct sum of the irreps and the orthogonal subspace given by The former irrep is one-dimensional and isomorphic to the trivial representation of . The latter is dimensional and is known as the standard representation of . * Let be a group. The regular representation of is the free complex vector space on the basis with the group action , denoted All irreducible representations of appear in the decomposition of as a direct sum of irreps.Example of an irreducible representation over
*Let be a group and be a finite dimensional irreducible representation of G over . By Orbit-stabilizer theorem, the orbit of every element acted by the group has size being power of . Since the sizes of all these orbits sum up to the size of , and is in a size 1 orbit only containing itself, there must be other orbits of size 1 for the sum to match. That is, there exists some such that for all . This forces every irreducible representation of a group over to be one dimensional.Applications in theoretical physics and chemistry
InLie groups
Lorentz group
The irreps of and , where is the generator of rotations and the generator of boosts, can be used to build to spin representations of the Lorentz group, because they are related to the spin matrices of quantum mechanics. This allows them to derive relativistic wave equations.See also
Associative algebras
* Simple module * Indecomposable module * Representation of an associative algebraLie groups
*References
Books
*Articles
* *Further reading
*External links
* * * * * * * *, see chapter 40 * * * *{{cite web, title=McGraw-Hill dictionary of scientific and technical terms, website= Answers.com , url=http://www.answers.com/topic/irreducible-representation-of-a-group Group theory Representation theory Theoretical physics Theoretical chemistry Symmetry