tensor product of representations

{{Short description|Concept in mathematics}}

In mathematics, the tensor product of representations is a tensor product of vector spaces underlying representations together with the factor-wise group action on the product. This construction, together with the Clebsch–Gordan procedure, can be used to generate additional irreducible representations if one already knows a few.

Definition

=Group representations=

If V_1, V_2 are linear representations of a group G, then their tensor product is the tensor product of vector spaces V_1 \otimes V_2 with the linear action of G uniquely determined by the condition that

:g \cdot (v_1 \otimes v_2) = (g\cdot v_1) \otimes (g\cdot v_2){{sfn|Serre|1977|p=8}}{{sfn|Fulton|Harris|1991|p=4}}

for all v_1\in V_1 and v_2\in V_2. Although not every element of V_1 \otimes V_2 is expressible in the form v_1\otimes v_2, the universal property of the tensor product guarantees that this action is well-defined.

In the language of homomorphisms, if the actions of G on V_1 and V_2 are given by homomorphisms \Pi_1: G\to\operatorname{GL}(V_1) and \Pi_2: G\to\operatorname{GL}(V_2), then the tensor product representation is given by the homomorphism \Pi_1\otimes\Pi_2: G\to\operatorname{GL}(V_1 \otimes V_2) given by

:\Pi_1\otimes\Pi_2(g) = \Pi_1(g)\otimes\Pi_2(g),

where \Pi_1(g)\otimes\Pi_2(g) is the tensor product of linear maps.{{harvnb|Hall|2015}} Section 4.3.2

One can extend the notion of tensor products to any finite number of representations. If V is a linear representation of a group G, then with the above linear action, the tensor algebra T(V) is an algebraic representation of G; i.e., each element of G acts as an algebra automorphism.

=Lie algebra representations=

If (V_1,\pi_1) and (V_2,\pi_2) are representations of a Lie algebra \mathfrak g, then the tensor product of these representations is the map \pi_1\otimes\pi_2:\mathfrak g\to\operatorname{End}(V_1 \otimes V_2) given by{{harvnb|Hall|2015}} Definition 4.19

:\pi_1\otimes\pi_2(X)=\pi_1(X)\otimes I+I\otimes\pi_2(X),

where I is the identity endomorphism. This is called the Kronecker sum, defined in Matrix addition#Kronecker sum and Kronecker product#Properties.

The motivation for the use of the Kronecker sum in this definition comes from the case in which \pi_1 and \pi_2 come from representations \Pi_1 and \Pi_2 of a Lie group G. In that case, a simple computation shows that the Lie algebra representation associated to \Pi_1\otimes\Pi_2 is given by the preceding formula.{{harvnb|Hall|2015}} Proposition 4.18

=Quantum groups=

For quantum groups, the coproduct is no longer co-commutative. As a result, the natural permutation map V \otimes W \rightarrow W \otimes V is no longer an isomorphism of modules. However, the permutation map remains an isomorphism of vector spaces.

Action on linear maps

If (V_1, \Pi_1) and (V_2, \Pi_2) are representations of a group G, let \operatorname{Hom}(V_1,V_2) denote the space of all linear maps from V_1 to V_2. Then \operatorname{Hom}(V_1,V_2) can be given the structure of a representation by defining

:g\cdot A=\Pi_2(g)A\Pi_1(g)^{-1}

for all A\in\operatorname{Hom}(V,W). Now, there is a natural isomorphism

:\operatorname{Hom}(V, W)\cong V^* \otimes W

as vector spaces;{{sfn|Fulton|Harris|1991|p=4}} this vector space isomorphism is in fact an isomorphism of representations.{{harvnb|Hall|2015}} pp. 433–434

The trivial subrepresentation \operatorname{Hom}(V, W)^G consists of G-linear maps; i.e.,

:\operatorname{Hom}_G(V, W) = \operatorname{Hom}(V, W)^G.

Let E = \operatorname{End}(V) denote the endomorphism algebra of V and let A denote the subalgebra of E^{\otimes m} consisting of symmetric tensors. The main theorem of invariant theory states that A is semisimple when the characteristic of the base field is zero.

Clebsch–Gordan theory

=The general problem=

The tensor product of two irreducible representations V_1,V_2 of a group or Lie algebra is usually not irreducible. It is therefore of interest to attempt to decompose V_1\otimes V_2 into irreducible pieces. This decomposition problem is known as the Clebsch–Gordan problem.

=The SU(2) case=

{{further|Clebsch–Gordan coefficients}}

The prototypical example of this problem is the case of the rotation group SO(3)—or its double cover, the special unitary group SU(2). The irreducible representations of SU(2) are described by a parameter \ell, whose possible values are

:\ell=0, 1/2, 1, 3/2, \ldots.

(The dimension of the representation is then 2\ell+1.) Let us take two parameters \ell and m with \ell\geq m. Then the tensor product representation V_\ell\otimes V_m then decomposes as follows:{{harvnb|Hall|2015}} Theorem C.1

:V_\ell\otimes V_m\cong V_{\ell+m}\oplus V_{\ell+m-1}\oplus\cdots\oplus V_{\ell-m+1}\oplus V_{\ell-m}.

Consider, as an example, the tensor product of the four-dimensional representation V_{3/2} and the three-dimensional representation V_1. The tensor product representation V_{3/2}\otimes V_1 has dimension 12 and decomposes as

:V_{3/2}\otimes V_1\cong V_{5/2}\oplus V_{3/2}\oplus V_{1/2},

where the representations on the right-hand side have dimension 6, 4, and 2, respectively. We may summarize this result arithmetically as 4 \times 3 = 6+4+2.

=The SU(3) case=

{{main|Clebsch–Gordan coefficients for SU(3)}}

In the case of the group SU(3), all the irreducible representations can be generated from the standard 3-dimensional representation and its dual, as follows. To generate the representation with label (m_1,m_2), one takes the tensor product of m_1 copies of the standard representation and m_2 copies of the dual of the standard representation, and then takes the invariant subspace generated by the tensor product of the highest weight vectors.{{harvnb|Hall|2015}} Proof of Proposition 6.17

In contrast to the situation for SU(2), in the Clebsch–Gordan decomposition for SU(3), a given irreducible representation W may occur more than once in the decomposition of U\otimes V.

Tensor power

As with vector spaces, one can define the {{var|k}}th tensor power of a representation {{var|V}} to be the vector space V^{\otimes k} with the action given above.

= The symmetric and alternating square =

Over a field of characteristic zero, the symmetric and alternating squares are subrepresentations of the second tensor power. They can be used to define the Frobenius–Schur indicator, which indicates whether a given irreducible character is real, complex, or quaternionic. They are examples of Schur functors.

They are defined as follows.

Let {{var|V}} be a vector space. Define an endomorphism {{var|T}} of V \otimes V as follows:

:\begin{align}

T: V \otimes V &\longrightarrow V \otimes V \\

v \otimes w &\longmapsto w \otimes v.

\end{align}Precisely, we have V \times V \to V \otimes V, (v, w) \mapsto v \otimes w, which is bilinear and thus descends to the linear map V \otimes V \to V \otimes V.

It is an involution (its own inverse), and so is an automorphism of V \otimes V.

Define two subsets of the second tensor power of {{var|V}},

:\begin{align}

\operatorname{Sym}^2(V) &:= \{v \in V \otimes V \mid T(v)=v \} \\

\operatorname{Alt}^2(V) &:= \{v \in V \otimes V \mid T(v)=-v \}

\end{align}

These are the symmetric square of {{var|V}}, V \odot V, and the alternating square of {{var|V}}, V\wedge V , respectively.{{sfn|Serre|1977|p=9}} The symmetric and alternating squares are also known as the symmetric part and antisymmetric part of the tensor product.{{sfn|James|2001|p=196}}

== Properties ==

The second tensor power of a linear representation {{var|V}} of a group {{var|G}} decomposes as the direct sum of the symmetric and alternating squares:

: V^{\otimes 2} = V \otimes V \cong \operatorname{Sym}^2(V) \oplus \operatorname{Alt}^2(V)

as representations. In particular, both are subrepresentations of the second tensor power. In the language of modules over the group ring, the symmetric and alternating squares are \mathbb{C}[G]-submodules of V \otimes V.{{sfn|James|2001|loc=Proposition 19.12}}

If {{var|V}} has a basis \{v_1,v_2,\ldots,v_n\}, then the symmetric square has a basis \{v_i\otimes v_j+v_j\otimes v_i\mid 1\leq i\leq j\leq n\} and the alternating square has a basis \{v_i\otimes v_j-v_j\otimes v_i\mid 1\leq i. Accordingly,

:\begin{align}

\dim\operatorname{Sym}^2(V) &= \frac{\dim V(\dim V + 1)}{2}, \\

\dim\operatorname{Alt}^2(V) &= \frac{\dim V(\dim V - 1)}{2}.

\end{align}{{sfn|James|2001|loc=Proposition 19.13}}{{sfn|Serre|1977|p=9}}

Let \chi:G\to\mathbb{C} be the character of V. Then we can calculate the characters of the symmetric and alternating squares as follows: for all {{var|g}} in {{var|G}},

:\begin{align}

\chi_{\operatorname{Sym}^2(V)}(g) &= \frac{1}{2}(\chi(g)^2+\chi(g^2)), \\

\chi_{\operatorname{Alt}^2(V)}(g) &= \frac{1}{2}(\chi(g)^2-\chi(g^2)).

\end{align}{{sfn|James|2001|loc=Proposition 19.14}}

= The symmetric and exterior powers =

As in multilinear algebra, over a field of characteristic zero, one can more generally define the {{var|k}}th symmetric power \operatorname{Sym}^k(V) and {{var|k}}th exterior power \Lambda^k(V), which are subspaces of the {{var|k}}th tensor power (see those pages for more detail on this construction). They are also subrepresentations, but higher tensor powers no longer decompose as their direct sum.

The Schur–Weyl duality computes the irreducible representations occurring in tensor powers of representations of the general linear group G = \operatorname{GL}(V). Precisely, as an S_n \times G-module

:V^{\otimes n} \simeq \bigoplus_\lambda M_{\lambda} \otimes S^{\lambda}(V)

where

  • M_{\lambda} is an irreducible representation of the symmetric group \mathrm{S}_n corresponding to a partition \lambda of n (in decreasing order),
  • S^{\lambda}(V) is the image of the Young symmetrizer c_{\lambda}: V^{\otimes n} \to V^{\otimes n}.

The mapping V \mapsto S^{\lambda}(V) is a functor called the Schur functor. It generalizes the constructions of symmetric and exterior powers:

:S^{(n)}(V) = \operatorname{Sym}^n V, \,\, S^{(1, 1, \dots, 1)}(V) = \wedge^n V.

In particular, as a G-module, the above simplifies to

:V^{\otimes n} \simeq \bigoplus_{\lambda} S^{\lambda}(V)^{\oplus m_{\lambda}}

where m_\lambda = \dim M_\lambda. Moreover, the multiplicity m_{\lambda} may be computed by the Frobenius formula (or the hook length formula). For example, take n = 3. Then there are exactly three partitions: 3 = 3 = 2 + 1 = 1 + 1 + 1 and, as it turns out, m_{(3)} = m_{(1, 1, 1)} = 1, \, m_{(2, 1)} = 2. Hence,

:V^{\otimes 3} \simeq \operatorname{Sym}^3 V \bigoplus \wedge^3 V \bigoplus S^{(2, 1)}(V)^{\oplus 2}.

Tensor products involving Schur functors

Let S^{\lambda} denote the Schur functor defined according to a partition \lambda. Then there is the following decomposition:{{harvnb|Fulton|Harris|1991|loc=§ 6.1. just after Corollary 6.6.}}

:S^{\lambda} V \otimes S^{\mu} V \simeq \bigoplus_{\nu} (S^{\nu} V)^{\oplus N_{\lambda \mu \nu}}

where the multiplicities N_{\lambda \mu \nu} are given by the Littlewood–Richardson rule.

Given finite-dimensional vector spaces V, W, the Schur functors Sλ give the decomposition

:\operatorname{Sym}(W^* \otimes V) \simeq \bigoplus_{\lambda} S^{\lambda}(W^*) \otimes S^{\lambda}(V)

The left-hand side can be identified with the ring of polynomial functions on Hom(V, W ), k[Hom(V, W )] = k[V * ⊗ W ], and so the above also gives the decomposition of k[Hom(V, W )].

Tensor products representations as representations of product groups

Let G, H be two groups and let (\pi,V) and (\rho,W) be representations of G and H, respectively. Then we can let the direct product group G \times H act on the tensor product space V \otimes W by the formula

:(g, h) \cdot (v \otimes w) = \pi(g) v \otimes \rho(h) w.

Even if G=H, we can still perform this construction, so that the tensor product of two representations of G could, alternatively, be viewed as a representation of G \times G rather than a representation of G. It is therefore important to clarify whether the tensor product of two representations of G is being viewed as a representation of G or as a representation of G \times G.

In contrast to the Clebsch–Gordan problem discussed above, the tensor product of two irreducible representations of G is irreducible when viewed as a representation of the product group G \times G.

See also

Notes

{{reflist}}

References

{{sfn whitelist|CITEREFFultonHarris1991}}

  • {{Fulton-Harris}}
  • {{citation|first=Brian C.|last=Hall|title=Lie Groups, Lie Algebras, and Representations: An Elementary Introduction|edition= 2nd|series=Graduate Texts in Mathematics|volume=222 |publisher=Springer|year=2015|isbn=978-3319134666}}.
  • {{Cite book|title=Representations and characters of groups|last=James|first=Gordon Douglas|date=2001|publisher=Cambridge University Press|others=Liebeck, Martin W.|isbn=978-0521003926|edition=2nd|location=Cambridge, UK|oclc=52220683}}
  • Claudio Procesi (2007) Lie Groups: an approach through invariants and representation, Springer, {{isbn|9780387260402}} .
  • {{cite book|first=Jean-Pierre|last=Serre|title=Linear Representations of Finite Groups|url=https://archive.org/details/linearrepresenta1977serr|url-access=registration|publisher=Springer-Verlag|year=1977|isbn=978-0-387-90190-9|oclc=2202385}}

Category:Representation theory of finite groups