Cartan decomposition
The Cartan decomposition is a decomposition of a semisimple Lie group or Lie algebra, which plays an important role in their structure theory and representation theory. It generalizes the polar decomposition or singular value decomposition of matrices. Its history can be traced to the 1880s work of Élie Cartan and Wilhelm Killing.
Cartan involutions on Lie algebras
Let be a real semisimple Lie algebra and let
be its Killing form. An involution on
is a Lie algebra automorphism
of
whose square is equal to the identity. Such an involution is called a Cartan involution on
if
is a positive definite bilinear form.
Two involutions and
are considered equivalent if they differ only by an inner automorphism.
Any real semisimple Lie algebra has a Cartan involution, and any two Cartan involutions are equivalent.
Examples
- A Cartan involution on
is defined by
, where
denotes the transpose matrix of
.
- The identity map on
is an involution, of course. It is the unique Cartan involution of
if and only if the Killing form of
is negative definite. Equivalently,
is the Lie algebra of a compact semisimple Lie group.
- Let
be the complexification of a real semisimple Lie algebra
, then complex conjugation on
is an involution on
. This is the Cartan involution on
if and only if
is the Lie algebra of a compact Lie group.
- The following maps are involutions of the Lie algebra
of the special unitary group SU(n):
- the identity involution
, which is the unique Cartan involution in this case;
-
which on
is also the complex conjugation;
- if
is odd,
. These are all equivalent, but not equivalent to the identity involution (because the matrix
does not belong to
.)
- if
is even, we also have
- the identity involution
Cartan pairs
Let be an involution on a Lie algebra
. Since
, the linear map
has the two eigenvalues
. Let
and
be the corresponding eigenspaces, then
. Since
is a Lie algebra automorphism, eigenvalues are multiplicative. It follows that
-
,
, and
.
Thus is a Lie subalgebra, while any subalgebra of
is commutative.
Conversely, a decomposition with these extra properties determines an involution
on
that is
on
and
on
.
Such a pair is also called a Cartan pair of
,
and
is called a symmetric pair. This notion of "Cartan pair" is not to be confused with a distinct notion involving the relative Lie algebra cohomology
.
The decomposition associated to a Cartan involution is called a Cartan decomposition of
. The special feature of a Cartan decomposition is that the Killing form is negative definite on
and positive definite on
. Furthermore,
and
are orthogonal complements of each other with respect to the Killing form on
.
Cartan decomposition on the Lie group level
Let be a semisimple Lie group and
its Lie algebra. Let
be a Cartan involution on
and let
be the resulting Cartan pair. Let
be the analytic subgroup of
with Lie algebra
. Then:
- There is a Lie group automorphism
with differential
that satisfies
.
- The subgroup of elements fixed by
is
; in particular,
is a closed subgroup.
- The mapping
given by
is a diffeomorphism.
- The subgroup
contains the center
of
, and
is compact modulo center, that is,
is compact.
- The subgroup
is the maximal subgroup of
that contains the center and is compact modulo center.
The automorphism is also called global Cartan involution, and the diffeomorphism
is called global Cartan decomposition.
For the general linear group, we get as the Cartan involution.
A refinement of the Cartan decomposition for symmetric spaces of compact or noncompact type states that the maximal Abelian subalgebras in
are unique up to conjugation by K. Moreover,
In the compact and noncompact case this Lie algebraic result implies the decomposition
where A = exp . Geometrically the image of the subgroup A in G / K is a totally geodesic submanifold.
Relation to polar decomposition
Consider with the Cartan involution
. Then
is the real Lie algebra of skew-symmetric matrices, so that
, while
is the subspace of symmetric matrices. Thus the exponential map is a diffeomorphism from
onto the space of positive definite matrices. Up to this exponential map, the global Cartan decomposition is the polar decomposition of a matrix. Notice that the polar decomposition of an invertible matrix is unique.
See also
References
- Helgason, Sigurdur (1978), Differential geometry, Lie groups, and symmetric spaces, Academic Press, ISBN 0-8218-2848-7
- A. W. Knapp, Lie groups beyond an introduction, ISBN 0-8176-4259-5, Birkhäuser.