Definition with matrices Consider the
group \mathbb{U}_n of
upper-triangular matrices with 1's along the diagonal, so they are the group of
matrices :\mathbb{U}_n = \left\{ \begin{bmatrix} 1 & * & \cdots & * & * \\ 0 & 1 & \cdots & * & * \\ \vdots & \vdots & &\vdots & \vdots \\ 0& 0& \cdots & 1 &* \\ 0 & 0 & \cdots & 0 & 1 \end{bmatrix} \right\}. Then, a
unipotent group can be defined as a
subgroup of some \mathbb{U}_n. Using
scheme theory the group \mathbb{U}_n can be defined as the
group scheme :\text{Spec}\left( \frac{\mathbb{C}\!\left[x_{11},x_{12},\ldots, x_{nn}, \frac{1}{\text{det}}\right]}{ (x_{ii} = 1, x_{i > j} = 0) } \right) and an affine group scheme is unipotent if it is a closed group scheme of this scheme.
Definition with ring theory An element
x of an affine
algebraic group is unipotent when its associated right translation operator,
rx, on the
affine coordinate ring A[
G] of
G is locally unipotent as an element of the ring of
linear endomorphism of
A[
G]. (Locally unipotent means that its restriction to any finite-dimensional stable subspace of
A[
G] is unipotent in the usual ring-theoretic sense.) An affine algebraic group is called
unipotent if all its elements are unipotent. Any unipotent algebraic group is
isomorphic to a closed subgroup of the group of upper triangular matrices with diagonal entries 1, and
conversely any such subgroup is unipotent. In particular any unipotent group is a
nilpotent group, though the converse is not true (counterexample: the
diagonal matrices of GL
n(
k)). For example, the standard representation of \mathbb{U}_n on k^n with standard basis e_i has the fixed vector e_1.
Definition with representation theory If a unipotent group acts on an
affine variety, all its orbits are closed, and if it acts linearly on a finite-dimensional
vector space then it has a non-zero fixed vector. In fact, the latter property characterizes unipotent groups. In particular, this implies there are no non-trivial
semisimple representations. == Examples ==