In
group theory, restriction forms 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 ...
of a
subgroup using a known representation of the whole
group. Restriction is a fundamental construction in representation theory of groups. Often the restricted representation is simpler to understand. Rules for decomposing the restriction of an
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 ...
into irreducible representations of the subgroup are called branching rules, and have important applications in
physics. For example, in case of
explicit symmetry breaking, the
symmetry group
In group theory, the symmetry group of a geometric object is the group of all transformations under which the object is invariant, endowed with the group operation of composition. Such a transformation is an invertible mapping of the ambient ...
of the problem is reduced from the whole group to one of its subgroups. In
quantum mechanics, this reduction in symmetry appears as a splitting of
degenerate energy levels into
multiplets, as in the
Stark or
Zeeman effect.
The
induced representation is a related operation that forms a representation of the whole group from a representation of a subgroup. The relation between restriction and induction is described by
Frobenius reciprocity
In mathematics, and in particular representation theory, Frobenius reciprocity is a theorem expressing a duality between the process of restricting and inducting. It can be used to leverage knowledge about representations of a subgroup to find a ...
and the Mackey theorem. Restriction 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 ...
behaves particularly well and is often called
Clifford theory after the theorem of A. H. Clifford. Restriction can be generalized to other
group homomorphisms and to other
rings.
For any group ''G'', its
subgroup ''H'', and a
linear representation ''ρ'' of ''G'', the restriction of ''ρ'' to ''H'', denoted
:
is a representation of ''H'' on the same
vector space by the same operators:
:
Classical branching rules
Classical branching rules describe the restriction of an irreducible complex representation (, ''V'') of a
classical group ''G'' to a classical subgroup ''H'', i.e. the multiplicity with which an irreducible representation (''σ'', ''W'') of ''H'' occurs in . By Frobenius reciprocity for
compact groups, this is equivalent to finding the multiplicity of in the
unitary representation induced from σ. Branching rules for the classical groups were determined by
* between successive
unitary groups;
* between successive
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 ...
s and
unitary symplectic group
In mathematics, the name symplectic group can refer to two different, but closely related, collections of mathematical groups, denoted and for positive integer ''n'' and field F (usually C or R). The latter is called the compact symplectic grou ...
s;
* from the unitary groups to the unitary symplectic groups and special orthogonal groups.
The results are usually expressed graphically using
Young diagrams to encode the signatures used classically to label irreducible representations, familiar from
classical invariant theory.
Hermann Weyl
Hermann Klaus Hugo Weyl, (; 9 November 1885 – 8 December 1955) was a German mathematician, theoretical physicist and philosopher. Although much of his working life was spent in Zürich, Switzerland, and then Princeton, New Jersey, he is assoc ...
and
Richard Brauer discovered a systematic method for determining the branching rule when the groups ''G'' and ''H'' share a common
maximal torus: in this case the
Weyl group of ''H'' is a subgroup of that of ''G'', so that the rule can be deduced from the
Weyl character formula.
A systematic modern interpretation has been given by in the context of his theory of
dual pairs. The special case where σ is the trivial representation of ''H'' was first used extensively by
Hua in his work on the
Szegő kernels of
bounded symmetric domains in
several complex variables
The theory of functions of several complex variables is the branch of mathematics dealing with complex-valued functions. The name of the field dealing with the properties of function of several complex variables is called several complex variable ...
, where the
Shilov boundary In functional analysis, a branch of mathematics, the Shilov boundary is the smallest closed subset of the structure space of a commutative Banach algebra where an analog of the maximum modulus principle holds. It is named after its discoverer, ...
has the form ''G''/''H''. More generally the
Cartan-Helgason theorem gives the decomposition when ''G''/''H'' is a compact symmetric space, in which case all multiplicities are one; a generalization to arbitrary σ has since been obtained by . Similar geometric considerations have also been used by to rederive Littlewood's rules, which involve the celebrated
Littlewood–Richardson rules for tensoring irreducible representations of the unitary groups.
has found generalizations of these rules to arbitrary compact semisimple Lie groups, using his
path model, an approach to representation theory close in spirit to the theory of
crystal bases
A crystal base for a representation of a quantum group on a \Q(v)-vector space
is not a base of that vector space but rather a \Q-base of L/vL where L is a \Q(v)-lattice in that vector spaces. Crystal bases appeared in the work of and also in the ...
of
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 ...
and
Kashiwara. His methods yield branching rules for restrictions to subgroups containing a maximal torus. The study of branching rules is important in classical invariant theory and its modern counterpart,
algebraic combinatorics
Algebraic combinatorics is an area of mathematics that employs methods of abstract algebra, notably group theory and representation theory, in various combinatorial contexts and, conversely, applies combinatorial techniques to problems in algeb ...
.
Example. The unitary group ''U''(''N'') has irreducible representations labelled by signatures
:
where the ''f''
''i'' are integers. In fact if a unitary matrix ''U'' has eigenvalues ''z''
''i'', then the character of the corresponding irreducible representation
f is given by
:
The branching rule from ''U''(''N'') to ''U''(''N'' – 1) states that
:
Example. The unitary symplectic group or
quaternionic unitary group
In mathematics, the name symplectic group can refer to two different, but closely related, collections of mathematical groups, denoted and for positive integer ''n'' and field F (usually C or R). The latter is called the compact symplectic grou ...
, denoted Sp(''N'') or ''U''(''N'', H), is the group of all transformations of
H
''N'' which commute with right multiplication by the
quaternions H and preserve the H-valued hermitian inner product
:
on H
''N'', where ''q''* denotes the quaternion conjugate to ''q''. Realizing quaternions as 2 x 2 complex matrices, the group Sp(''N'') is just the group of
block matrices (''q''
''ij'') in SU(2''N'') with
:
where ''α''
''ij'' and ''β''
''ij'' are
complex numbers.
Each matrix ''U'' in Sp(''N'') is conjugate to a block diagonal matrix with entries
:
where , ''z''
''i'', = 1. Thus the eigenvalues of ''U'' are (''z''
''i''±1). The irreducible representations of Sp(''N'') are labelled by signatures
:
where the ''f''
''i'' are integers. The character of the corresponding irreducible representation ''σ''
f is given by
:
The branching rule from Sp(''N'') to Sp(''N'' – 1) states that
:
Here ''f''
''N'' + 1 = 0 and the
multiplicity ''m''(f, g) is given by
:
where
:
is the non-increasing rearrangement of the 2''N'' non-negative integers (''f''
i), (''g''
''j'') and 0.
Example. The branching from U(2''N'') to Sp(''N'') relies on two identities of
Littlewood Littlewood is a surname, and may refer to:
* Alison Littlewood, British author
* Angela Littlewood (born 1949), English shot putter
* Barclay Littlewood (born 1978), British entrepreneur
* Chic Littlewood (1930–2015), New Zealand actor
* Clayto ...
:
:
where Π
f,0 is the irreducible representation of ''U''(2''N'') with signature ''f''
1 ≥ ··· ≥ ''f''
''N'' ≥ 0 ≥ ··· ≥ 0.
:
where ''f''
''i'' ≥ 0.
The branching rule from U(2''N'') to Sp(''N'') is given by
:
where all the signature are non-negative and the coefficient ''M'' (g, h; k) is the multiplicity of the irreducible representation
k of ''U''(''N'') in the tensor product
g h. It is given combinatorially by the Littlewood–Richardson rule, the number of lattice permutations of the
skew diagram k/h of weight g.
There is an extension of Littelwood's branching rule to arbitrary signatures due to . The Littlewood–Richardson coefficients ''M'' (g, h; f) are extended to allow the signature f to have 2''N'' parts but restricting g to have even column-lengths (''g''
2''i'' – 1 = ''g''
2''i''). In this case the formula reads
:
where ''M''
''N'' (g, h; f) counts the number of lattice permutations of f/h of weight g are counted for which 2''j'' + 1 appears no lower than row ''N'' + ''j'' of f for 1 ≤ ''j'' ≤ , ''g'', /2.
Example. The special orthogonal group SO(''N'') has irreducible ordinary and
spin representations labelled by signatures
*
for ''N'' = 2''n'';
*
for ''N'' = 2''n''+1.
The ''f''
''i'' are taken in Z for ordinary representations and in ½ + Z for spin representations. In fact if an orthogonal matrix ''U'' has eigenvalues ''z''
''i''±1 for 1 ≤ ''i'' ≤ ''n'', then the character of the corresponding irreducible representation
f is given by
:
for ''N'' = 2''n'' and by
:
for ''N'' = 2''n''+1.
The branching rules from SO(''N'') to SO(''N'' – 1) state that
:
for ''N'' = 2''n'' + 1 and
:
for ''N'' = 2''n'', where the differences ''f''
''i'' − ''g''
''i'' must be integers.
Gelfand–Tsetlin basis
Since the branching rules from
to
or
to
have multiplicity one, the irreducible summands corresponding to smaller and smaller ''N'' will eventually terminate in one-dimensional subspaces. In this way
Gelfand and Tsetlin were able to obtain a basis of any irreducible representation of
or
labelled by a chain of interleaved signatures, called a Gelfand–Tsetlin pattern.
Explicit formulas for the action of the Lie algebra on the Gelfand–Tsetlin basis are given in . Specifically, for
, the Gelfand-Testlin basis of the irreducible representation of
with dimension
is given by the complex
spherical harmonics .
For the remaining classical group
, the branching is no longer multiplicity free, so that if ''V'' and ''W'' are irreducible representation of
and
the space of intertwiners
can have dimension greater than one. It turns out that the
Yangian , a
Hopf algebra Hopf is a German surname. Notable people with the surname include:
*Eberhard Hopf (1902–1983), Austrian mathematician
*Hans Hopf (1916–1993), German tenor
*Heinz Hopf (1894–1971), German mathematician
*Heinz Hopf (actor) (1934–2001), Swedis ...
introduced by
Ludwig Faddeev and
collaborators, acts irreducibly on this multiplicity space, a fact which enabled to extend the construction of Gelfand–Tsetlin bases to
.
Clifford's theorem
In 1937
Alfred H. Clifford proved the following result on the restriction of finite-dimensional irreducible representations from a group ''G'' to a normal subgroup ''N'' 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 ...
:
Theorem. Let : ''G''
GL(''n'',''K'') be an irreducible representation with ''K'' a
field. Then
the restriction of 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 distinct summands is no greater than the index of ''N'' in ''G''.
Twenty years later
George Mackey found a more precise version of this result for the restriction of irreducible
unitary representations of
locally compact groups to closed normal subgroups in what has become known as the "Mackey machine" or "Mackey normal subgroup analysis".
Abstract algebraic setting
From the point of view of
category theory
Category theory is a general theory of mathematical structures and their relations that was introduced by Samuel Eilenberg and Saunders Mac Lane in the middle of the 20th century in their foundational work on algebraic topology. Nowadays, cate ...
, restriction is an instance of a
forgetful functor. This functor is
exact
Exact may refer to:
* Exaction, a concept in real property law
* ''Ex'Act'', 2016 studio album by Exo
* Schooner Exact, the ship which carried the founders of Seattle
Companies
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* Exact Change, an Ameri ...
, and its
left adjoint functor is called ''induction''. The relation between restriction and induction in various contexts is called the Frobenius reciprocity. Taken together, the operations of induction and restriction form a powerful set of tools for analyzing representations. This is especially true whenever the representations have the property of
complete reducibility, for example, in
representation theory of finite groups over a
field of
characteristic zero.
Generalizations
This rather evident construction may be extended in numerous and significant ways. For instance we may take any group homomorphism φ from ''H'' to ''G'', instead of the
inclusion map, and define the restricted representation of ''H'' by the composition
:
We may also apply the idea to other categories in
abstract algebra:
associative algebra
In mathematics, an associative algebra ''A'' is an algebraic structure with compatible operations of addition, multiplication (assumed to be associative), and a scalar multiplication by elements in some field ''K''. The addition and multiplic ...
s, rings,
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 ...
s,
Lie superalgebras, Hopf algebras to name some. Representations or
modules ''restrict'' to subobjects, or via homomorphisms.
Notes
References
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available online*
*
* {{citation, last=Želobenko, first= D. P., title=Compact Lie groups and their representations, series=Translations of Mathematical Monographs, volume=40, publisher=American Mathematical Society, year= 1973
Representation theory
Algebraic combinatorics