Overview In many cases, it is convenient to study representations of a Lie group by studying representations of the associated Lie algebra. In general, however, not every representation of the Lie algebra comes from a representation of the group. For example, this underlies the distinction between
integer spin and
half-integer spin in quantum mechanics. On the other hand, if
G is a
simply connected group, then a theorem says that we do, in fact, get a one-to-one correspondence between the group and Lie algebra representations. Let be a Lie group with Lie algebra \mathfrak g, and assume that a representation \pi of \mathfrak g is at hand. The
Lie correspondence may be employed for obtaining group representations of the connected component of . Roughly speaking, this is effected by taking the
matrix exponential of the matrices of the Lie algebra representation. A subtlety arises if is not
simply connected. This may result in
projective representations or, in physics parlance, multi-valued representations of . These are actually representations of the
universal covering group of . These results will be explained more fully below. The Lie correspondence gives results only for the connected component of the groups, and thus the other components of the full group are treated separately by giving representatives for matrices representing these components, one for each component. These form (representatives of) the
zeroth homotopy group of . For example, in the case of the four-component
Lorentz group, representatives of
space inversion and
time reversal must be put in
by hand. Further illustrations will be drawn from the
representation theory of the Lorentz group below.
The exponential mapping , the originator of
Lie theory. The theory of
manifolds was not discovered in Lie's time, so he worked
locally with subsets of \R^n. The structure would today be called a
local group. If G is a Lie group with Lie algebra \mathfrak g, then we have the exponential map from \mathfrak g to G, written as :X\mapsto e^X,\quad X\in\mathfrak g. If G is a matrix Lie group, the expression e^X can be computed by the usual power series for the exponential. In any Lie group, there exist neighborhoods U of the identity in G and V of the origin in \mathfrak g with the property that every g in U can be written uniquely as g=e^X with X\in V. That is, the exponential map has a
local inverse. In most groups, this is only local; that is, the exponential map is typically neither one-to-one nor onto.
Lie algebra representations from group representations It is always possible to pass from a representation of a Lie group to a representation of its Lie algebra \mathfrak{g}. If is a group representation for some vector space , then its
pushforward (differential) at the identity, or
Lie map, \pi : \mathfrak{g} \to \text{End} V is a Lie algebra representation. It is explicitly computed using {{NumBlk|:|\pi(X) = \left .\frac{d}{dt}\Pi(e^{tX})\right|_{t = 0}, \quad X \in \mathfrak{g}.|}} A basic property relating \Pi and \pi involves the exponential map: :
Theorem: If G is simply connected, then every representation \pi of the Lie algebra \mathfrak g of G comes from a representation \Pi of G itself. From this we easily deduce the following: :
Corollary: If G is connected but not simply connected, every representation \pi of \mathfrak g comes from a representation \Pi of \tilde G, the universal cover of G. If \pi is irreducible, then \Pi descends to a
projective representation of G. A projective representation is one in which each \Pi(g),\,g\in G, is defined only up to multiplication by a constant. In quantum physics, it is natural to allow projective representations in addition to ordinary ones, because states are really defined only up to a constant. (That is to say, if \psi is a vector in the quantum Hilbert space, then c\psi represents the same physical state for any constant c.) Every
finite-dimensional projective representation of a connected Lie group G comes from an ordinary representation of the universal cover \tilde G of G. Conversely, as we will discuss below, every irreducible ordinary representation of \tilde G descends to a projective representation of G. In the physics literature, projective representations are often described as multi-valued representations (i.e., each \Pi(g) does not have a single value but a whole family of values). This phenomenon is important to the study of
fractional spin in quantum mechanics. We now outline the proof of the main results above. Suppose \pi : \mathfrak{g} \to \mathfrak{gl}(V) is a representation of \mathfrak g on a vector space . If there is going to be an associated Lie group representation \Pi, it must satisfy the exponential relation of the previous subsection. Now, in light of the local invertibility of the exponential, we can
define a map \Pi from a neighborhood U of the identity in G by this relation: :\Pi(e^X)=e^{\pi(X)},\quad g=e^X\in U. A key question is then this: Is this locally defined map a "local homomorphism"? (This question would apply even in the special case where the exponential mapping is globally one-to-one and onto; in that case, \Pi would be a globally defined map, but it is not obvious why \Pi would be a homomorphism.) The answer to this question is yes: \Pi is a local homomorphism, and this can be established using the
Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula. If G is connected, then every element of G is at least a
product of exponentials of elements of \mathfrak g. Thus, we can tentatively define \Pi globally as follows. {{NumBlk|:|\begin{align} \Pi(g = e^{X}) &\equiv e^{\pi(X)}, && X \in \mathfrak g, \quad g = e^{X} \in \operatorname{im}(\exp),\\ \Pi(g = g_1g_2\cdots g_n) &\equiv \Pi(g_1)\Pi(g_2)\cdots \Pi(g_n), && g \notin \operatorname{im}(\exp), \quad g_1 , g_2, \ldots, g_n \in \operatorname{im}(\exp). \end{align}|}} Note, however, that the representation of a given group element as a product of exponentials is very far from unique, so it is very far from clear that \Pi is actually well defined. To address the question of whether \Pi is well defined, we connect each group element g\in G to the identity using a continuous path. It is then possible to define \Pi along the path, and to show that the value of \Pi(g) is unchanged under continuous deformation of the path with endpoints fixed. If G is simply connected, any path starting at the identity and ending at g can be continuously deformed into any other such path, showing that \Pi(g) is fully independent of the choice of path. Given that the initial definition of \Pi near the identity was a local homomorphism, it is not difficult to show that the globally defined map is also a homomorphism satisfying . If G is not simply connected, we may apply the above procedure to the universal cover \tilde G of G. Let p:\tilde G\rightarrow G be the covering map. If it should happen that the kernel of \Pi:\tilde G\rightarrow \operatorname{GL}(V) contains the kernel of p, then \Pi descends to a representation of the original group G. Even if this is not the case, note that the kernel of p is a discrete normal subgroup of \tilde G, which is therefore in the center of \tilde G. Thus, if \pi is irreducible,
Schur's lemma implies that the kernel of p will act by scalar multiples of the identity. Thus, \Pi descends to a
projective representation of G, that is, one that is defined only modulo scalar multiples of the identity. A pictorial view of how the universal covering group contains
all such homotopy classes, and a technical definition of it (as a set and as a group) is given in
geometric view. For example, when this is specialized to the
doubly connected , the universal covering group is \text{SL}(2,\Complex), and whether its corresponding representation is
faithful decides whether is
projective. == Classification in the compact case ==