Jump to content

Harish-Chandra module

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

In mathematics, specifically in the representation theory of Lie groups, a Harish-Chandra module, named after the Indian mathematician and physicist Harish-Chandra, is a representation of a real Lie group, associated to a general representation, with regularity and finiteness conditions. When the associated representation is a -module, then its Harish-Chandra module is a representation with desirable factorization properties.

Definition

Let G be a Lie group and K a compact subgroup of G. If is a representation of G, then the Harish-Chandra module of is the subspace X of V consisting of the K-finite smooth vectors in V. This means that X includes exactly those vectors v such that the map via

is smooth, and the subspace

is finite-dimensional.

Notes

In 1973, Lepowsky showed that any irreducible -module X is isomorphic to the Harish-Chandra module of an irreducible representation of G on a Hilbert space. Such representations are admissible, meaning that they decompose in a manner analogous to the prime factorization of integers. (Of course, the decomposition may have infinitely many distinct factors!) Further, a result of Harish-Chandra indicates that if G is a reductive Lie group with maximal compact subgroup K, and X is an irreducible -module with a positive definite Hermitian form satisfying

and

for all and , then X is the Harish-Chandra module of a unique irreducible unitary representation of G.

References

  • Vogan, Jr., David A. (1987), Unitary Representations of Reductive Lie Groups, Annals of Mathematics Studies, vol. 118, Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-08482-4

See also