|  Group Representations | 
In General > s.a. group.
  * Idea: A representation is
    the most common way of specifying a group, in which one defines how it acts
    on some vector space.
  $ Def: A representation of a
    group G is a homomorphism h: G → GL(V),
    for some vector space V.
  * History: The theory originated
    with a series of papers by Frobenius in 1896–1900, then Schur, Burnside,
    Brauer, and others (finite groups), then generalised to compact groups by Cartan
    and Weyl in the 1920s: Also motivated by the development of quantum physics.
  * Quote: "Group
    representations can be thought of as an abstraction of the Fourier methods
    of solving pdes" (meaning?).
  @ General references: in Frobenius 68;
    in Schur 73;
    Curtis 99 [history].
  @ Texts: Kirillov 76;
    Barut & Rączka 77;
    Naimark & Stern 82;
    Chen 86;
    Huang 99;
    James & Liebeck 01 [III].
Specific Concepts and Results > s.a. Character;
  Fusion Rules [representation ring]; Schur's Lemma.
  * Intertwiner: Given N
    irreducible representations {πj}
    of G, an intertwiner is a multilinear map I:
    ⊗j=1k
    πj →
    ⊗j=k+1N
    πj,
    for some k, such that \(\pi^~_{k+1}(g)^c{}_p\) ... \(\pi^~_N(g)^d{}_q\)
    I p...qm...n
    \(\pi_1(g^{-1})\)ma
    ...
    \(\pi_k(g^{-1})\)nb
    = I c...da...b
    for all g ∈ G, i.e., invariant tensor; The intertwiners for SU(2)
    are given by Clebsch-Gordan theory.
  @ Invariants: Jarvis & Sumner ANZIAM(14)-a1205 [character methods, and case studies].
Regular Representation
  * Idea: Define the space
    C(G) of complex-valued functions on G; The left
    (right) regular representation of G acts on C(G) by
    f \(\mapsto\) g(f), with (g(f))(g'):=
    f(g−1g')
    (respectively, f(g'g)).
  * Use: Very important
    mathematically, because it contains all irreducible representations (n
    copies of each n-dimensional one), and physically because it seems
    that gauge fields transform like this.
  > Online resources:
    see Wikipedia page.
Types of Groups and Representations > s.a. Adjoint
  Representation; Special Functions.
  * Conjugate representations:
    For example, for SU(2), 2 and 2* are
    isomorphic, while for SU(3), 3 and 3* are not.
  * Cyclic: A representation
    of a group G on a vector space V is cyclic if ∃
    v0 ∈ V such that
    for all v ∈ V, ∃ g ∈ G such that
    v = g \(\circ\) v0.
  * Ladder: Multiplicity-free
    with respect to the maximal compact subgroup.
  * Schwinger: The
    multiplicity-free direct sum of all unitary irreducible representations of the group.
  * Projective: A map h:
    G → GL(V) such that h(g1)
    h(g2)
    = ω(g1,
    g2) h(g1
    g2), where ω is a phase
    factor, |ω(g1,
    g2)| = 1; a.k.a. representation up to a phase.
  * On function spaces:
    From a representation of G on a vector space V, we get
    a representation on functions F: V → \(\mathbb C\) by
    (gF)(x):= F(g−1x).
  @ Unitary representations: Mackey 76, 78.
  @ Projective representations: Adler mp/04-in [and Yang-Mills theory].
  @ Other representations: Chaturvedi et al RVMP(06)qp/05 [Schwinger representation, finite or compact simple Lie groups].
  @ Corepresentations: Kociński & Wierzbicki a0905 [continuous groups].
  @ Types of groups: Knapp 86 [semisimple];
    Manz & Wolf 93 [solvable];
    Klink  & Ton-That JMP(96) [compact, tensor product].
  > Types of groups: see finite
    groups; lie groups; group theory [categorical groups].
And Physics
  @ Intros for physicists: Banino 77;
    Jones 98 [IIb];
    Chen et al 02;
    Vvedensky & Evans 09.
  @ And quantum mechanics: Mackey 68;
    Bargmann in(70) [on Hilbert spaces of functions].
  > Related topics: see Character;
    diffeomorphisms; group theory; knot theory.
  > Specific areas: see canonical quantum
    gravity; σ-models;
    supersymmetry in field theory.
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  send feedback and suggestions to bombelli at olemiss.edu – modified 22 jan 2016