In mathematics, admissible representations are a well-behaved class of
representations used in the
representation theory of
reductive 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 and
locally compact In topology and related branches of mathematics, a topological space is called locally compact if, roughly speaking, each small portion of the space looks like a small portion of a compact space. More precisely, it is a topological space in which ev ...
totally disconnected group In mathematics, a totally disconnected group is a topological group that is totally disconnected. Such topological groups are necessarily Hausdorff.
Interest centres on locally compact totally disconnected groups (variously referred to as groups ...
s. They were introduced by
Harish-Chandra.
Real or complex reductive Lie groups
Let ''G'' be a connected reductive (real or complex) Lie group. Let ''K'' be a maximal compact subgroup. A continuous representation (π, ''V'') of ''G'' on a complex
Hilbert space
In mathematics, Hilbert spaces (named after David Hilbert) allow generalizing the methods of linear algebra and calculus from (finite-dimensional) Euclidean vector spaces to spaces that may be infinite-dimensional. Hilbert spaces arise natural ...
''V''
[I.e. a homomorphism (where GL(''V'') is the group of bounded linear operators on ''V'' whose inverse is also bounded and linear) such that the associated map is continuous.] is called admissible if π restricted to ''K'' is
unitary and each
irreducible unitary representation of ''K'' occurs in it with finite multiplicity. The prototypical example is that of an irreducible unitary representation of ''G''.
An admissible representation π induces a
-module which is easier to deal with as it is an algebraic object. Two admissible representations are said to be infinitesimally equivalent if their associated
-modules are isomorphic. Though for general admissible representations, this notion is different than the usual equivalence, it is an important result that the two notions of equivalence agree for unitary (admissible) representations. Additionally, there is a notion of unitarity of
-modules. This reduces the study of the equivalence classes of irreducible unitary representations of ''G'' to the study of infinitesimal equivalence classes of admissible representations and the determination of which of these classes are infinitesimally unitary. The problem of parameterizing the infinitesimal equivalence classes of admissible representations was fully solved by
Robert Langlands and is called the
Langlands classification.
Totally disconnected groups
Let ''G'' be a
locally compact totally disconnected group (such as a reductive algebraic group over a nonarchimedean
local field or over the finite
adeles of 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 ...
). A representation (π, ''V'') of ''G'' on a complex vector space ''V'' is called smooth if the subgroup of ''G'' fixing any vector of ''V'' is
open. If, in addition, the space of vectors fixed by any
compact open subgroup is finite dimensional then π is called admissible. Admissible representations of ''p''-adic groups admit more algebraic description through the action of the
Hecke algebra of locally constant functions on ''G''.
Deep studies of admissible representations of ''p''-adic reductive groups were undertaken by
Casselman and by
Bernstein and
Zelevinsky
Andrei Vladlenovich Zelevinsky (; 30 January 1953 – 10 April 2013) was a Russian-American mathematician who made important contributions to algebra, combinatorics, and representation theory, among other areas.
Biography
Zelevinsky graduated i ...
in the 1970s. Progress was made more recently by
Howe, Moy,
Gopal Prasad and Bushnell and Kutzko, who developed a ''theory of types'' and classified the admissible dual (i.e. the set of equivalence classes of irreducible admissible representations) in many cases.
Notes
References
*
*
*Chapter VIII of {{cite book, last = Knapp, first = Anthony W., title = Representation Theory of Semisimple Groups: An Overview Based on Examples, publisher = Princeton University Press, year = 2001, isbn = 0-691-09089-0, url = https://books.google.com/books?id=QCcW1h835pwC
Representation theory