Loop algebra

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In mathematics, loop algebras are certain types of Lie algebras, of particular interest in theoretical physics.

Definition[]

If is a Lie algebra, the tensor product of with C(S1), the algebra of (complex) smooth functions over the circle manifold S1 (equivalently, smooth complex-valued periodic functions of a given period),

,

is an infinite-dimensional Lie algebra with the Lie bracket given by

.

Here g1 and g2 are elements of and f1 and f2 are elements of C(S1).

This isn't precisely what would correspond to the direct product of infinitely many copies of , one for each point in S1, because of the smoothness restriction. Instead, it can be thought of in terms of smooth map from S1 to ; a smooth parametrized loop in , in other words. This is why it is called the loop algebra.

Loop group[]

Similarly, a set of all smooth maps from S1 to a Lie group G forms an infinite-dimensional Lie group (Lie group in the sense we can define functional derivatives over it) called the loop group. The Lie algebra of a loop group is the corresponding loop algebra.

Fourier transform[]

We can take the Fourier transform on this loop algebra by defining

as

where

0 ≤ σ <2π

is a coordinatization of S1.

Applications[]

If g is a semisimple Lie algebra, then a nontrivial central extension of its loop algebra gives rise to an affine Lie algebra.

References[]

  • Fuchs, Jurgen (1992), Affine Lie Algebras and Quantum Groups, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-48412-X
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