Lie group action

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In differential geometry, a Lie group action is a group action adapted to the smooth setting: G is a Lie group, M is a smooth manifold, and the action map is differentiable.

Definition and first properties[]

Let be a (left) group action of a Lie group G on a smooth manifold M; it is called a Lie group action (or smooth action) if the map is differentiable. Equivalently, a Lie group action of G on M consists of a Lie group homomorphism . A smooth manifold endowed with a Lie group action is also called a G-manifold.

The fact that the action map is smooth has a couple of immediate consequences:

  • the stabilizers of the group action are closed, thus are Lie subgroups of G
  • the orbits of the group action are immersed submanifolds.

Forgetting the smooth structure, a Lie group action is a particular case of a continuous group action.

Examples[]

For every Lie group G, the following are Lie group actions:

  • the trivial action of G on any manifold
  • the action of G on itself by left multiplication, right multiplication or conjugation
  • the action of any Lie subgroup on G by left multiplication, right multiplication or conjugation
  • the adjoint action of G on its Lie algebra .

Other examples of Lie group actions include:

  • the action of on M given by the flow of any complete vector field
  • the actions of the general linear group and of its Lie subgroups on by matrix multiplication
  • more generally, any Lie group representation on a vector space
  • any Hamiltonian group action on a symplectic manifold
  • the transitive action underlying any homogeneous space
  • more generally, the group action underlying any principal bundle

Infinitesimal Lie algebra action[]

Following the spirit of the Lie group-Lie algebra correspondence, Lie group actions can also be studied from the infinitesimal point of view. Indeed, any Lie group action induces an infinitesimal Lie algebra action on M, i.e. a Lie algebra homomorphism . Intuitively, this is obtained by differentiating at the identity the Lie group homomorphism , and interpreting the set of vector fields as the Lie algebra of the (infinite-dimensional) Lie group .


More precisely, fixing any , the orbit map is differentiable and one can compute its differential at the identity . If , then its image under is a tangent vector at x, and varying x one obtains a vector field on M. The minus of this vector field, denoted by , is also called the fundamental vector field associated with X (the minus sign ensures that is a Lie algebra homomorphism).

Conversely, by Lie–Palais theorem, any abstract infinitesimal action of a (finite-dimensional) Lie algebra on a compact manifold can be integrated to a Lie group action.[1]


Moreover, an infinitesimal Lie algebra action is injective if and only if the corresponding global Lie group action is free. This follows from the fact that the kernel of is the Lie algebra of the stabilizer . On the other hand, in general not surjective. For instance, let be a principal G-bundle: the image of the infinitesimal action is actually equal to the vertical subbundle .

Proper actions[]

An important (and common) class of Lie group actions is that of proper ones. Indeed, such a topological condition implies that

  • the stabilizers are compact
  • the orbits are embedded submanifolds
  • the orbit space is Hausdorff

In general, if a Lie group G is compact, any smooth G-action is automatically proper. An example of proper action by a not necessarily compact Lie group is given by the action a Lie subgroup on G.

Structure of the orbit space[]

Given a Lie group action of G on M, the orbit space does not admit in general a manifold structure. However, if the action is free and proper, then has a unique smooth structure such that the projection is a submersion (in fact, is a principal G-bundle).[2]

The fact that is Hausdorff depends only on the properness of the action (as discussed above); the rest of the claim requires freeness and is a consequence of the slice theorem. If the "free action" condition (i.e. "having zero stabilizers") is relaxed to "having finite stabilizers", becomes instead an orbifold (or quotient stack).


An application of this principle is the Borel construction from algebraic topology. Assuming that G is compact, let denote the universal bundle, which we can assume to be a manifold since G is compact, and let G act on diagonally. The action is free since it is so on the first factor and is proper since G is compact; thus, one can form the quotient manifold and define the equivariant cohomology of M as

,

where the right-hand side denotes the de Rham cohomology of the manifold .

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Palais, Richard S. (1957). "A global formulation of the Lie theory of transformation groups". Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society (22): 0. doi:10.1090/memo/0022. ISSN 0065-9266.
  2. ^ Lee, John M. (2012). Introduction to smooth manifolds (2nd ed.). New York: Springer. ISBN 978-1-4419-9982-5. OCLC 808682771.
  • Michele Audin, Torus actions on symplectic manifolds, Birkhauser, 2004
  • John Lee, Introduction to smooth manifolds, chapter 9, ISBN 978-1-4419-9981-8
  • Frank Warner, Foundations of differentiable manifolds and Lie groups, chapter 3, ISBN 978-0-387-90894-6
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