Lie Groups

Front Cover
Springer Science & Business Media, Jun 17, 2004 - Mathematics - 451 pages
This book is intended for a one year graduate course on Lie groups and Lie algebras. The author proceeds beyond the representation theory of compact Lie groups (which is the basis of many texts) and provides a carefully chosen range of material to give the student the bigger picture. For compact Lie groups, the Peter-Weyl theorem, conjugacy of maximal tori (two proofs), Weyl character formula and more are covered. The book continues with the study of complex analytic groups, then general noncompact Lie groups, including the Coxeter presentation of the Weyl group, the Iwasawa and Bruhat decompositions, Cartan decomposition, symmetric spaces, Cayley transforms, relative root systems, Satake diagrams, extended Dynkin diagrams and a survey of the ways Lie groups may be embedded in one another. The book culminates in a "topics" section giving depth to the student's understanding of representation theory, taking the Frobenius-Schur duality between the representation theory of the symmetric group and the unitary groups as a unifying theme, with many applications in diverse areas such as random matrix theory, minors of Toeplitz matrices, symmetric algebra decompositions, Gelfand pairs, Hecke algebras, representations of finite general linear groups and the cohomology of Grassmannians and flag varieties. Daniel Bump is Professor of Mathematics at Stanford University. His research is in automorphic forms, representation theory and number theory. He is a co-author of GNU Go, a computer program that plays the game of Go. His previous books include Automorphic Forms and Representations (Cambridge University Press 1997) and Algebraic Geometry (World Scientific 1998).
 

Contents

Haar Measure
7
Schur Orthogonality
10
Compact Operators
21
The PeterWeyl Theorem
25
Lie Group Fundamentals
31
Lie Subgroups of GLnC
33
Vector Fields
40
LeftInvariant Vector Fields
45
Coxeter Groups
193
The Iwasawa Decomposition
201
The Bruhat Decomposition
209
Symmetric Spaces
216
Relative Root Systems
240
Embeddings of Lie Groups
261
Topics
277
Mackey Theory
279

The Exponential Map
50
Tensors and Universal Properties
54
The Universal Enveloping Algebra
58
Extension of Scalars
62
Representations of sl2 C
66
The Universal Cover
73
The Local Frobenius Theorem
83
Tori
90
Geodesies and Maximal Tori
98
Topological Proof of Cartans Theorem
111
The Weyl Integration Formula
116
The Root System
121
Examples of Root Systems
131
Abstract Weyl Groups
140
The Fundamental Group
150
Semisimple Compact Groups
154
HighestWeight Vectors
161
The Weyl Character Formula
166
Spin
179
Complexification
186
Characters of GLn C
288
Duality between Sk and GLn C
293
The JacobiTrudi Identity
301
Schur Polynomials and GLn C
312
Schur Polynomials and Sk
319
Random Matrix Theory
325
Minors of Toeplitz Matrices
335
Branching Formulae and Tableaux
343
The Cauchy Identity
351
Unitary Branching Rules
361
The Involution Model for Sk
365
Some Symmetric Algebras
374
Gelfand Pairs
379
Hecke Algebras
388
The Philosophy of Cusp Forms
401
Cohomology of Grassmannians
432
References
442
Index
450
Copyright

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Page 439 - N. Bourbaki. Elements de Mathematique. Fasc. XXXIV. Groupes et Algebres de Lie. Chapitre IV: Groupes de Coxeter et systemes de Tits. Chapitre V: Groupes engendres par des reflexions.
Page 439 - Chevalley. The Algebraic Theory of Spinors and Clifford Algebras. SpringerVerlag, Berlin, 1997. Collected works. Vol. 2, edited and with a foreword by Pierre Cartier and Catherine Chevalley, with a postface by J.-P. Bourguignon.

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