An Let
E be the subspace of
Rn+1 for which the coordinates sum to 0, and let Φ be the set of vectors in
E of length and which are
integer vectors, i.e. have integer coordinates in
Rn+1. Such a vector must have all but two coordinates equal to 0, one coordinate equal to 1, and one equal to −1, so there are
n2 +
n roots in all. One choice of simple roots expressed in the
standard basis is for . The
reflection σi through the
hyperplane perpendicular to
αi is the same as
permutation of the adjacent
ith and (
i + 1)th
coordinates. Such
transpositions generate the full
permutation group. For adjacent simple roots,
σi(
αi+1) =
αi+1 +
αi =
σi+1(
αi) =
αi +
αi+1, that is, reflection is equivalent to adding a multiple of 1; but reflection of a simple root perpendicular to a nonadjacent simple root leaves it unchanged, differing by a multiple of 0. The
An root lattice – that is, the lattice generated by the
An roots – is most easily described as the set of integer vectors in
Rn+1 whose components sum to zero. The
A2 root lattice is the
vertex arrangement of the
triangular tiling. The
A3 root lattice is known to crystallographers as the
face-centered cubic (or
cubic close packed) lattice. It is the vertex arrangement of the
tetrahedral-octahedral honeycomb. The
A3 root system (as well as the other rank-three root systems) may be modeled in the
Zometool construction set. In general, the
An root lattice is the vertex arrangement of the
n-dimensional
simplicial honeycomb.
Bn Let
E =
Rn, and let Φ consist of all integer vectors in
E of length 1 or . The total number of roots is 2
n2. One choice of simple roots is for (the above choice of simple roots for
An−1), and the shorter root . The reflection
σn through the hyperplane perpendicular to the short root
αn is of course simply negation of the
nth coordinate. For the long simple root
αn−1, σ
n−1(
αn) =
αn +
αn−1, but for reflection perpendicular to the short root,
σn(
αn−1) =
αn−1 + 2
αn, a difference by a multiple of 2 instead of 1. The
Bn root lattice—that is, the lattice generated by the
Bn roots—consists of all integer vectors.
B1 is isomorphic to
A1 via scaling by , and is therefore not a distinct root system.
Cn and
octahedron Let
E =
Rn, and let Φ consist of all integer vectors in
E of length together with all vectors of the form 2
λ, where
λ is an integer vector of length 1. The total number of roots is 2
n2. One choice of simple roots is:
αi =
ei −
ei+1, for 1 ≤
i ≤
n − 1 (the above choice of simple roots for
An−1), and the longer root
αn = 2
en. The reflection
σn(
αn−1) =
αn−1 +
αn, but
σn−1(
αn) =
αn + 2
αn−1. The
Cn root lattice—that is, the lattice generated by the
Cn roots—consists of all integer vectors whose components sum to an even integer.
C2 is isomorphic to
B2 via scaling by and a 45 degree rotation, and is therefore not a distinct root system.
Dn Let , and let Φ consist of all integer vectors in
E of length . The total number of roots is . One choice of simple roots is for (the above choice of simple roots for ) together with . Reflection through the hyperplane perpendicular to
αn is the same as
transposing and negating the adjacent
n-th and (
n − 1)-th coordinates. Any simple root and its reflection perpendicular to another simple root differ by a multiple of 0 or 1 of the second root, not by any greater multiple. The
Dn root lattice – that is, the lattice generated by the
Dn roots – consists of all integer vectors whose components sum to an even integer. This is the same as the
Cn root lattice. The
Dn roots are expressed as the vertices of a
rectified n-
orthoplex,
Coxeter–Dynkin diagram: .... The vertices exist in the middle of the edges of the
n-orthoplex.
D3 coincides with
A3, and is therefore not a distinct root system. The twelve
D3 root vectors are expressed as the vertices of , a lower symmetry construction of the
cuboctahedron.
D4 has additional symmetry called
triality. The twenty-four
D4 root vectors are expressed as the vertices of , a lower symmetry construction of the
24-cell.
E6, E7, E8 • The
E8 root system is any set of vectors in
R8 that is
congruent to the following set: D_8 \cup \left\{ \frac 1 2 \left( \sum_{i=1}^8 \varepsilon_i \mathbf e_i \right) : \varepsilon_i = \pm1, \, \varepsilon_1 \cdots \varepsilon_8 = +1 \right\}. The root system has 240 roots. The set just listed is the set of vectors of length in the E8 root lattice, also known simply as the
E8 lattice or Γ8. This is the set of points in
R8 such that: • all the coordinates are
integers or all the coordinates are
half-integers (a mixture of integers and half-integers is not allowed), and • the sum of the eight coordinates is an
even integer. Thus, E_8 = \left\{ \alpha\in\mathbb Z^8 \cup \left(\mathbb Z + \tfrac 1 2\right)^8 : |\alpha|^2 = \sum\alpha_i^2 = 2,\, \sum\alpha_i \in 2\mathbb Z. \right\} • The root system
E7 is the set of vectors in
E8 that are perpendicular to a fixed root in
E8. The root system
E7 has 126 roots. • The root system
E6 is not the set of vectors in
E7 that are perpendicular to a fixed root in
E7, indeed, one obtains
D6 that way. However,
E6 is the subsystem of
E8 perpendicular to two suitably chosen roots of
E8. The root system
E6 has 72 roots. An alternative description of the
E8 lattice which is sometimes convenient is as the set Γ'8 of all points in
R8 such that • all the coordinates are integers and the sum of the coordinates is even, or • all the coordinates are half-integers and the sum of the coordinates is odd. The lattices Γ8 and Γ'8 are
isomorphic; one may pass from one to the other by changing the signs of any odd number of coordinates. The lattice Γ8 is sometimes called the
even coordinate system for
E8 while the lattice Γ'8 is called the
odd coordinate system. One choice of simple roots for
E8 in the even coordinate system with rows ordered by node order in the alternate (non-canonical) Dynkin diagrams (above) is: :
αi =
ei −
ei+1, for 1 ≤
i ≤ 6, and :
α7 =
e7 +
e6 (the above choice of simple roots for
D7) along with \boldsymbol\alpha_8 = \boldsymbol\beta_0 = -\frac{1}{2} \sum_{i=1}^8\mathbf{e}_i = (-1/2,-1/2,-1/2,-1/2,-1/2,-1/2,-1/2,-1/2). One choice of simple roots for
E8 in the odd coordinate system with rows ordered by node order in alternate (non-canonical) Dynkin diagrams (above) is :
αi =
ei −
ei+1, for 1 ≤
i ≤ 7 (the above choice of simple roots for
A7) along with :
α8 =
β5, where :\boldsymbol\beta_j = \frac{1}{2} \left(- \sum_{i=1}^j e_i + \sum_{i=j+1}^8 e_i\right). (Using
β3 would give an isomorphic result. Using
β1,7 or
β2,6 would simply give
A8 or
D8. As for
β4, its coordinates sum to 0, and the same is true for
α1...7, so they span only the 7-dimensional subspace for which the coordinates sum to 0; in fact −2
β4 has coordinates (1,2,3,4,3,2,1) in the basis (
αi).) Since perpendicularity to
α1 means that the first two coordinates are equal,
E7 is then the subset of
E8 where the first two coordinates are equal, and similarly
E6 is the subset of
E8 where the first three coordinates are equal. This facilitates explicit definitions of
E7 and
E6 as :{{math|1=
E7 = {
α ∈
Z7 ∪ (
Z+1/2)7
: Σ
αi2 +
α12 = 2, Σ
αi +
α1 ∈ 2
Z},}} :{{math|1=
E6 = {
α ∈
Z6 ∪ (
Z+1/2)6
: Σ
αi2 + 2
α12 = 2, Σ
αi + 2
α1 ∈ 2
Z} }} Note that deleting
α1 and then
α2 gives sets of simple roots for
E7 and
E6. However, these sets of simple roots are in different
E7 and
E6 subspaces of
E8 than the ones written above, since they are not orthogonal to
α1 or
α2.
F4 and its dual, viewed in the
Coxeter plane For
F4, let
E =
R4, and let Φ denote the set of vectors α of length 1 or such that the coordinates of 2α are all integers and are either all even or all odd. There are 48 roots in this system. One choice of simple roots is: the choice of simple roots given above for
B3, plus \boldsymbol\alpha_4 = -\frac{1}{2} \sum_{i=1}^4 e_i. The
F4 root lattice—that is, the lattice generated by the
F4 root system—is the set of points in
R4 such that either all the coordinates are
integers or all the coordinates are
half-integers (a mixture of integers and half-integers is not allowed). This lattice is isomorphic to the lattice of
Hurwitz quaternions.
G2 The root system
G2 has 12 roots, which form the vertices of a
hexagram. See the picture
above. One choice of simple roots is (
α1,
β =
α2 −
α1) where
αi =
ei −
ei+1 for
i = 1, 2 is the above choice of simple roots for
A2. The
G2 root lattice—that is, the lattice generated by the
G2 roots—is the same as the
A2 root lattice. ==The root poset==