Symplectic group#Sp(n)

{{Short description|Mathematical group}}{{for| finite groups with all characteristic abelian subgroups cyclic|group of symplectic type}}

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In mathematics, the name symplectic group can refer to two different, but closely related, collections of mathematical groups, denoted {{math|Sp(2n, F)}} and {{math|Sp(n)}} for positive integer n and field F (usually C or R). The latter is called the compact symplectic group and is also denoted by \mathrm{U

Sp}(n). Many authors prefer slightly different notations, usually differing by factors of {{math|2}}. The notation used here is consistent with the size of the most common matrices which represent the groups. In Cartan's classification of the simple Lie algebras, the Lie algebra of the complex group {{math|Sp(2n, C)}} is denoted {{math|Cn}}, and {{math|Sp(n)}} is the compact real form of {{math|Sp(2n, C)}}. Note that when we refer to the (compact) symplectic group it is implied that we are talking about the collection of (compact) symplectic groups, indexed by their dimension {{math|n}}.

The name "symplectic group" was coined by Hermann Weyl as a replacement for the previous confusing names (line) complex group and Abelian linear group, and is the Greek analog of "complex".

The metaplectic group is a double cover of the symplectic group over R; it has analogues over other local fields, finite fields, and adele rings.

{{math|Sp(2''n'', '''F''')}}

The symplectic group is a classical group defined as the set of linear transformations of a {{math|2n}}-dimensional vector space over the field {{math|F}} which preserve a non-degenerate skew-symmetric bilinear form. Such a vector space is called a symplectic vector space, and the symplectic group of an abstract symplectic vector space {{math|V}} is denoted {{math|Sp(V)}}. Upon fixing a basis for {{math|V}}, the symplectic group becomes the group of {{math|2n × 2n}} symplectic matrices, with entries in {{math|F}}, under the operation of matrix multiplication. This group is denoted either {{math|Sp(2n, F)}} or {{math|Sp(n, F)}}. If the bilinear form is represented by the nonsingular skew-symmetric matrix Ω, then

:\operatorname{Sp}(2n, F) = \{M \in M_{2n \times 2n}(F) : M^\mathrm{T} \Omega M = \Omega\},

where MT is the transpose of M. Often Ω is defined to be

:\Omega = \begin{pmatrix} 0 & I_n \\ -I_n & 0 \\ \end{pmatrix},

where In is the identity matrix. In this case, {{math|Sp(2n, F)}} can be expressed as those block matrices (\begin{smallmatrix} A & B \\ C & D \end{smallmatrix}), where A, B, C, D \in M_{n \times n}(F), satisfying the three equations:

:\begin{align}

-C^\mathrm{T}A + A^\mathrm{T}C &= 0, \\

-C^\mathrm{T}B + A^\mathrm{T}D &= I_n, \\

-D^\mathrm{T}B + B^\mathrm{T}D &= 0.

\end{align}

Since all symplectic matrices have determinant {{math|1}}, the symplectic group is a subgroup of the special linear group {{math|SL(2n, F)}}. When {{math|1=n = 1}}, the symplectic condition on a matrix is satisfied if and only if the determinant is one, so that {{math|1=Sp(2, F) = SL(2, F)}}. For {{math|n > 1}}, there are additional conditions, i.e. {{math|Sp(2n, F)}} is then a proper subgroup of {{math|SL(2n, F)}}.

Typically, the field {{math|F}} is the field of real numbers {{math|R}} or complex numbers {{math|C}}. In these cases {{math|Sp(2n, F)}} is a real or complex Lie group of real or complex dimension {{math|n(2n + 1)}}, respectively. These groups are connected but non-compact.

The center of {{math|Sp(2n, F)}} consists of the matrices {{math|I2n}} and {{math|−I2n}} as long as the characteristic of the field is not {{math|2}}.[http://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php/Symplectic_group "Symplectic group"], Encyclopedia of Mathematics Retrieved on 13 December 2014. Since the center of {{math|Sp(2n, F)}} is discrete and its quotient modulo the center is a simple group, {{math|Sp(2n, F)}} is considered a simple Lie group.

The real rank of the corresponding Lie algebra, and hence of the Lie group {{math|Sp(2n, F)}}, is {{math|n}}.

The Lie algebra of {{math|Sp(2n, F)}} is the set

:\mathfrak{sp}(2n,F) = \{X \in M_{2n \times 2n}(F) : \Omega X + X^\mathrm{T} \Omega = 0\},

equipped with the commutator as its Lie bracket.{{harvnb|Hall|2015}} Prop. 3.25 For the standard skew-symmetric bilinear form \Omega = (\begin{smallmatrix} 0 & I \\ -I & 0 \end{smallmatrix}), this Lie algebra is the set of all block matrices (\begin{smallmatrix} A & B \\ C & D \end{smallmatrix}) subject to the conditions

:\begin{align}

A &= -D^\mathrm{T}, \\

B &= B^\mathrm{T}, \\

C &= C^\mathrm{T}.

\end{align}

={{math|Sp(2''n'', '''C''')}}=

The symplectic group over the field of complex numbers is a non-compact, simply connected, simple Lie group. The definition of this group includes no conjugates (contrary to what one might naively expect) but instead it is exactly the same as the definition bar the field change.{{sfn|Hall|2015|p=10}}

={{math|Sp(2''n'', '''R''')}}=

{{math|Sp(n, C)}} is the complexification of the real group {{math|Sp(2n, R)}}. {{math|Sp(2n, R)}} is a real, non-compact, connected, simple Lie group.[https://math.stackexchange.com/q/1051400 "Is the symplectic group Sp(2n, R) simple?"], Stack Exchange Retrieved on 14 December 2014. It has a fundamental group isomorphic to the group of integers under addition. As the real form of a simple Lie group its Lie algebra is a splittable Lie algebra.

Some further properties of {{math|Sp(2n, R)}}:

  • The exponential map from the Lie algebra {{math|sp(2n, R)}} to the group {{math|Sp(2n, R)}} is not surjective. However, any element of the group can be represented as the product of two exponentials.[https://math.stackexchange.com/q/1051255 "Is the exponential map for Sp(2n, R) surjective?"], Stack Exchange Retrieved on 5 December 2014. In other words,

::\forall S \in \operatorname{Sp}(2n,\mathbf{R})\,\, \exists X,Y \in \mathfrak{sp}(2n,\mathbf{R}) \,\, S = e^Xe^Y.

  • For all {{math|S}} in {{math|Sp(2n, R)}}:

::S = OZO' \quad \text{such that} \quad O, O' \in \operatorname{Sp}(2n,\mathbf{R})\cap\operatorname{SO}(2n) \cong U(n) \quad \text{and} \quad Z = \begin{pmatrix}D & 0 \\ 0 & D^{-1}\end{pmatrix}.

:The matrix {{math|D}} is positive-definite and diagonal. The set of such {{math|Z}}s forms a non-compact subgroup of {{math|Sp(2n, R)}} whereas {{math|U(n)}} forms a compact subgroup. This decomposition is known as 'Euler' or 'Bloch–Messiah' decomposition.[https://www.maths.nottingham.ac.uk/personal/ga/papers/2602.pdf "Standard forms and entanglement engineering of multimode Gaussian states under local operations – Serafini and Adesso"], Retrieved on 30 January 2015. Further symplectic matrix properties can be found on that Wikipedia page.

=Infinitesimal generators=

The members of the symplectic Lie algebra {{math|sp(2n, F)}} are the Hamiltonian matrices.

These are matrices, Q such that

Q = \begin{pmatrix} A & B \\ C & -A^\mathrm{T} \end{pmatrix}
where {{math|B}} and {{math|C}} are symmetric matrices. See classical group for a derivation.

=Example of symplectic matrices=

For {{math|Sp(2, R)}}, the group of {{math|2 × 2}} matrices with determinant {{math|1}}, the three symplectic {{math|(0, 1)}}-matrices are:[http://mathworld.wolfram.com/SymplecticGroup.html Symplectic Group], (source: Wolfram MathWorld), downloaded February 14, 2012

\begin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix},\quad \begin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 1 & 1 \end{pmatrix}\quad \text{and} \quad

\begin{pmatrix} 1 & 1 \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix}.

== Sp(2n, R) ==

It turns out that \operatorname{Sp}(2n,\mathbf{R}) can have a fairly explicit description using generators. If we let \operatorname{Sym}(n) denote the symmetric n\times n matrices, then \operatorname{Sp}(2n,\mathbf{R}) is generated by D(n)\cup N(n) \cup \{\Omega\}, where

\begin{align}

D(n) &= \left\{ \left. \begin{bmatrix} A & 0 \\ 0 & (A^T)^{-1} \end{bmatrix} \,\right| \, A \in \operatorname{GL}(n, \mathbf{R})

\right\} \\[6pt]

N(n) &= \left\{ \left. \begin{bmatrix} I_n & B \\ 0 & I_n \end{bmatrix} \, \right| \, B \in \operatorname{Sym}(n)\right\}

\end{align}

are subgroups of \operatorname{Sp}(2n,\mathbf{R}){{Cite book|last=Gerald B. Folland.|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/945482850|title=Harmonic analysis in phase space|date=2016|publisher=Princeton Univ Press|isbn=978-1-4008-8242-7|location=Princeton|page=173|oclc=945482850}}pg 173{{Cite book|last=Habermann, Katharina, 1966-|url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/262692314|title=Introduction to symplectic Dirac operators|date=2006|publisher=Springer|isbn=978-3-540-33421-7|oclc=262692314}}pg 2.

=Relationship with symplectic geometry=

Symplectic geometry is the study of symplectic manifolds. The tangent space at any point on a symplectic manifold is a symplectic vector space.[https://empg.maths.ed.ac.uk/Activities/BRST/ "Lecture Notes – Lecture 2: Symplectic reduction"], Retrieved on 30 January 2015. As noted earlier, structure preserving transformations of a symplectic vector space form a group and this group is {{math|Sp(2n, F)}}, depending on the dimension of the space and the field over which it is defined.

A symplectic vector space is itself a symplectic manifold. A transformation under an action of the symplectic group is thus, in a sense, a linearised version of a symplectomorphism which is a more general structure preserving transformation on a symplectic manifold.

{{math|Sp(''n'')}}

The compact symplectic group{{harvnb|Hall|2015}} Section 1.2.8 {{math|Sp(n)}} is the intersection of {{math|Sp(2n, C)}} with the 2n\times 2n unitary group:

:\operatorname{Sp}(n):=\operatorname{Sp}(2n;\mathbf C)\cap\operatorname{U}(2n)=\operatorname{Sp}(2n;\mathbf C)\cap\operatorname {SU} (2n).

It is sometimes written as {{math|USp(2n)}}. Alternatively, {{math|Sp(n)}} can be described as the subgroup of {{math|GL(n, H)}} (invertible quaternionic matrices) that preserves the standard hermitian form on {{math|Hn}}:

:\langle x, y\rangle = \bar x_1 y_1 + \cdots + \bar x_n y_n.

That is, {{math|Sp(n)}} is just the quaternionic unitary group, {{math|U(n, H)}}.{{harvnb|Hall|2015}} p. 14 Indeed, it is sometimes called the hyperunitary group. Also Sp(1) is the group of quaternions of norm {{math|1}}, equivalent to {{math|SU(2)}} and topologically a 3-sphere {{math|S3}}.

Note that {{math|Sp(n)}} is not a symplectic group in the sense of the previous section—it does not preserve a non-degenerate skew-symmetric {{math|H}}-bilinear form on {{math|Hn}}: there is no such form except the zero form. Rather, it is isomorphic to a subgroup of {{math|Sp(2n, C)}}, and so does preserve a complex symplectic form in a vector space of twice the dimension. As explained below, the Lie algebra of {{math|Sp(n)}} is the compact real form of the complex symplectic Lie algebra {{math|sp(2n, C)}}.

{{math|Sp(n)}} is a real Lie group with (real) dimension {{math|n(2n + 1)}}. It is compact and simply connected.{{harvnb|Hall|2015}} Prop. 13.12

The Lie algebra of {{math|Sp(n)}} is given by the quaternionic skew-Hermitian matrices, the set of {{math|n-by-n}} quaternionic matrices that satisfy

:A+A^{\dagger} = 0

where {{math|A}} is the conjugate transpose of {{math|A}} (here one takes the quaternionic conjugate). The Lie bracket is given by the commutator.

=Important subgroups=

Some main subgroups are:

: \operatorname{Sp}(n) \supset \operatorname{Sp}(n-1)

: \operatorname{Sp}(n) \supset \operatorname{U}(n)

: \operatorname{Sp}(2) \supset \operatorname{O}(4)

Conversely it is itself a subgroup of some other groups:

: \operatorname{SU}(2n) \supset \operatorname{Sp}(n)

: \operatorname{F}_4 \supset \operatorname{Sp}(4)

: \operatorname{G}_2 \supset \operatorname{Sp}(1)

There are also the isomorphisms of the Lie algebras {{math|1=sp(2) = so(5)}} and {{math|1=sp(1) = so(3) = su(2)}}.

Relationship between the symplectic groups

Every complex, semisimple Lie algebra has a split real form and a compact real form; the former is called a complexification of the latter two.

The Lie algebra of {{math|Sp(2n, C)}} is semisimple and is denoted {{math|sp(2n, C)}}. Its split real form is {{math|sp(2n, R)}} and its compact real form is {{math|sp(n)}}. These correspond to the Lie groups {{math|Sp(2n, R)}} and {{math|Sp(n)}} respectively.

The algebras, {{math|sp(p, np)}}, which are the Lie algebras of {{math|Sp(p, np)}}, are the indefinite signature equivalent to the compact form.

Physical significance

=Classical mechanics=

The non-compact symplectic group {{math|Sp(2n, R)}} comes up in classical physics as the symmetries of canonical coordinates preserving the Poisson bracket.

Consider a system of {{math|n}} particles, evolving under Hamilton's equations whose position in phase space at a given time is denoted by the vector of canonical coordinates,

:\mathbf{z} = (q^1, \ldots , q^n, p_1, \ldots , p_n)^\mathrm{T}.

The elements of the group {{math|Sp(2n, R)}} are, in a certain sense, canonical transformations on this vector, i.e. they preserve the form of Hamilton's equations.{{harvnb|Arnold|1989}} gives an extensive mathematical overview of classical mechanics. See chapter 8 for symplectic manifolds. If

:\mathbf{Z} = \mathbf Z(\mathbf z, t) = (Q^1, \ldots , Q^n, P_1, \ldots , P_n)^\mathrm{T}

are new canonical coordinates, then, with a dot denoting time derivative,

:\dot {\mathbf Z} = M({\mathbf z}, t) \dot {\mathbf z},

where

:M(\mathbf z, t) \in \operatorname{Sp}(2n, \mathbf R)

for all {{mvar|t}} and all {{math|z}} in phase space.{{harvnb|Goldstein|1980|loc=Section 9.3}}

For the special case of a Riemannian manifold, Hamilton's equations describe the geodesics on that manifold. The coordinates q^i live on the underlying manifold, and the momenta p_i live in the cotangent bundle. This is the reason why these are conventionally written with upper and lower indexes; it is to distinguish their locations. The corresponding Hamiltonian consists purely of the kinetic energy: it is H=\tfrac{1}{2}g^{ij}(q)p_ip_j where g^{ij} is the inverse of the metric tensor g_{ij} on the Riemannian manifold.Jurgen Jost, (1992) Riemannian Geometry and Geometric Analysis, Springer.Ralph Abraham and Jerrold E. Marsden, Foundations of Mechanics, (1978) Benjamin-Cummings, London {{isbn|0-8053-0102-X}} In fact, the cotangent bundle of any smooth manifold can be a given a symplectic structure in a canonical way, with the symplectic form defined as the exterior derivative of the tautological one-form.{{Cite book|last=da Silva|first=Ana Cannas|url=http://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-3-540-45330-7|title=Lectures on Symplectic Geometry|date=2008|publisher=Springer Berlin Heidelberg|isbn=978-3-540-42195-5|series=Lecture Notes in Mathematics|volume=1764|location=Berlin, Heidelberg|pages=9|doi=10.1007/978-3-540-45330-7}}

=Quantum mechanics=

{{More citations needed section|date=October 2019}}

Consider a system of {{math|n}} particles whose quantum state encodes its position and momentum. These coordinates are continuous variables and hence the Hilbert space, in which the state lives, is infinite-dimensional. This often makes the analysis of this situation tricky. An alternative approach is to consider the evolution of the position and momentum operators under the Heisenberg equation in phase space.

Construct a vector of canonical coordinates,

:\mathbf{\hat{z}} = (\hat{q}^1, \ldots , \hat{q}^n, \hat{p}_1, \ldots , \hat{p}_n)^\mathrm{T}.

The canonical commutation relation can be expressed simply as

: [\mathbf{\hat{z}},\mathbf{\hat{z}}^\mathrm{T}] = i\hbar\Omega

where

: \Omega = \begin{pmatrix} \mathbf{0} & I_n \\ -I_n & \mathbf{0}\end{pmatrix}

and {{math|In}} is the {{math|n × n}} identity matrix.

Many physical situations only require quadratic Hamiltonians, i.e. Hamiltonians of the form

:\hat{H} = \frac{1}{2}\mathbf{\hat{z}}^\mathrm{T} K\mathbf{\hat{z}}

where {{math|K}} is a {{math|2n × 2n}} real, symmetric matrix. This turns out to be a useful restriction and allows us to rewrite the Heisenberg equation as

:\frac{d\mathbf{\hat{z}}}{dt} = \Omega K \mathbf{\hat{z}}

The solution to this equation must preserve the canonical commutation relation. It can be shown that the time evolution of this system is equivalent to an action of Symplectic group#Sp.282n.2C R.29, on the phase space.

See also

Notes

{{reflist}}

References

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