Cartan's criteria fail in characteristic p>0; for example: • the Lie algebra \mathfrak{sl}_p(k) is simple if
k has characteristic not 2 and has vanishing Killing form, though it does have a nonzero invariant bilinear form given by (a,b) = \operatorname{tr}(ab). • the Lie algebra with basis a_n for n\in \Z/p\Z and bracket [
ai,
aj] = (
i−
j)
ai+
j is simple for p>2 but has no nonzero invariant bilinear form. • If
k has characteristic 2 then the
semidirect product gl2(
k).
k2 is a solvable Lie algebra, but the Killing form is not identically zero on its derived algebra sl2(
k).
k2. If a finite-dimensional Lie algebra is nilpotent, then the Killing form is identically zero (and more generally the Killing form vanishes on any nilpotent ideal). The converse is false: there are non-nilpotent Lie algebras whose Killing form vanishes. An example is given by the semidirect product of an abelian Lie algebra
V with a 1-dimensional Lie algebra acting on
V as an endomorphism
b such that
b is not nilpotent and Tr(
b2)=0. In characteristic 0, every reductive Lie algebra (one that is a sum of abelian and simple Lie algebras) has a non-degenerate invariant symmetric bilinear form. However the converse is false: a Lie algebra with a non-degenerate invariant symmetric bilinear form need not be a sum of simple and abelian Lie algebras. A typical counterexample is
G =
L[
t]/''t'
n'L
[t
] where n
>1, L
is a simple complex Lie algebra with a bilinear form (,), and the bilinear form on G
is given by taking the coefficient of t''
n−1 of the
C[
t]-valued bilinear form on
G induced by the form on
L. The bilinear form is non-degenerate, but the Lie algebra is not a sum of simple and abelian Lie algebras. ==Notes==