Induced representation

Summary

In group theory, the induced representation is a representation of a group, G, which is constructed using a known representation of a subgroup H. Given a representation of H, the induced representation is, in a sense, the "most general" representation of G that extends the given one. Since it is often easier to find representations of the smaller group H than of G, the operation of forming induced representations is an important tool to construct new representations.

Induced representations were initially defined by Frobenius, for linear representations of finite groups. The idea is by no means limited to the case of finite groups, but the theory in that case is particularly well-behaved.

Constructions edit

Algebraic edit

Let G be a finite group and H any subgroup of G. Furthermore let (π, V) be a representation of H. Let n = [G : H] be the index of H in G and let g1, ..., gn be a full set of representatives in G of the left cosets in G/H. The induced representation IndG
H
π
can be thought of as acting on the following space:

 

Here each gi V is an isomorphic copy of the vector space V whose elements are written as gi v with vV. For each g in G and each gi there is an hi in H and j(i) in {1, ..., n} such that g gi = gj(i) hi . (This is just another way of saying that g1, ..., gn is a full set of representatives.) Via the induced representation G acts on W as follows:

 

where   for each i.

Alternatively, one can construct induced representations by extension of scalars: any K-linear representation   of the group H can be viewed as a module V over the group ring K[H]. We can then define

 

This latter formula can also be used to define IndG
H
π
for any group G and subgroup H, without requiring any finiteness.[1]

Examples edit

For any group, the induced representation of the trivial representation of the trivial subgroup is the right regular representation. More generally the induced representation of the trivial representation of any subgroup is the permutation representation on the cosets of that subgroup.

An induced representation of a one dimensional representation is called a monomial representation, because it can be represented as monomial matrices. Some groups have the property that all of their irreducible representations are monomial, the so-called monomial groups.

Properties edit

If H is a subgroup of the group G, then every K-linear representation ρ of G can be viewed as a K-linear representation of H; this is known as the restriction of ρ to H and denoted by Res(ρ). In the case of finite groups and finite-dimensional representations, the Frobenius reciprocity theorem states that, given representations σ of H and ρ of G, the space of H-equivariant linear maps from σ to Res(ρ) has the same dimension over K as that of G-equivariant linear maps from Ind(σ) to ρ.[2]

The universal property of the induced representation, which is also valid for infinite groups, is equivalent to the adjunction asserted in the reciprocity theorem. If   is a representation of H and   is the representation of G induced by  , then there exists a H-equivariant linear map   with the following property: given any representation (ρ,W) of G and H-equivariant linear map  , there is a unique G-equivariant linear map   with  . In other words,   is the unique map making the following diagram commute:[3]

 

The Frobenius formula states that if χ is the character of the representation σ, given by χ(h) = Tr σ(h), then the character ψ of the induced representation is given by

 

where the sum is taken over a system of representatives of the left cosets of H in G and

 

Analytic edit

If G is a locally compact topological group (possibly infinite) and H is a closed subgroup then there is a common analytic construction of the induced representation. Let (π, V) be a continuous unitary representation of H into a Hilbert space V. We can then let:

 

Here φ∈L2(G/H) means: the space G/H carries a suitable invariant measure, and since the norm of φ(g) is constant on each left coset of H, we can integrate the square of these norms over G/H and obtain a finite result. The group G acts on the induced representation space by translation, that is, (g.φ)(x)=φ(g−1x) for g,xG and φ∈IndG
H
π
.

This construction is often modified in various ways to fit the applications needed. A common version is called normalized induction and usually uses the same notation. The definition of the representation space is as follows:

 

Here ΔG, ΔH are the modular functions of G and H respectively. With the addition of the normalizing factors this induction functor takes unitary representations to unitary representations.

One other variation on induction is called compact induction. This is just standard induction restricted to functions with compact support. Formally it is denoted by ind and defined as:

 

Note that if G/H is compact then Ind and ind are the same functor.

Geometric edit

Suppose G is a topological group and H is a closed subgroup of G. Also, suppose π is a representation of H over the vector space V. Then G acts on the product G × V as follows:

 

where g and g are elements of G and x is an element of V.

Define on G × V the equivalence relation

 

Denote the equivalence class of   by  . Note that this equivalence relation is invariant under the action of G; consequently, G acts on (G × V)/~ . The latter is a vector bundle over the quotient space G/H with H as the structure group and V as the fiber. Let W be the space of sections   of this vector bundle. This is the vector space underlying the induced representation IndG
H
π
. The group G acts on a section   given by   as follows:

 

Systems of imprimitivity edit

In the case of unitary representations of locally compact groups, the induction construction can be formulated in terms of systems of imprimitivity.

Lie theory edit

In Lie theory, an extremely important example is parabolic induction: inducing representations of a reductive group from representations of its parabolic subgroups. This leads, via the philosophy of cusp forms, to the Langlands program.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Brown, Cohomology of Groups, III.5
  2. ^ Serre, Jean-Pierre (1926–1977). Linear representations of finite groups. New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0387901906. OCLC 2202385.
  3. ^ Thm. 2.1 from Miller, Alison. "Math 221 : Algebra notes Nov. 20". Archived from the original on 2018-08-01. Retrieved 2018-08-01.

References edit

  • Alperin, J. L.; Rowen B. Bell (1995). Groups and Representations. Springer-Verlag. pp. 164–177. ISBN 0-387-94526-1.
  • Folland, G. B. (1995). A Course in Abstract Harmonic Analysis. CRC Press. pp. 151–200. ISBN 0-8493-8490-7.
  • Kaniuth, E.; Taylor, K. (2013). Induced Representations of Locally Compact Groups. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521762267.
  • Mackey, G. W. (1951), "On induced representations of groups", American Journal of Mathematics, 73 (3): 576–592, doi:10.2307/2372309, JSTOR 2372309
  • Mackey, G. W. (1952), "Induced representations of locally compact groups I", Annals of Mathematics, 55 (1): 101–139, doi:10.2307/1969423, JSTOR 1969423
  • Mackey, G. W. (1953), "Induced representations of locally compact groups II : the Frobenius reciprocity theorem", Annals of Mathematics, 58 (2): 193–220, doi:10.2307/1969786, JSTOR 1969786
  • Sengupta, Ambar N. (2012). "Chapter 8: Induced Representations". Representing Finite Groups, A Semimsimple Introduction. Springer. ISBN 978-1-4614-1232-8. OCLC 875741967.
  • Varadarajan, V. S. (2007). "Chapter VI: Systems of Impritivity". Geometry of Quantum Theory. Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-49385-5.