The
center Z(U(\mathfrak{g})) of U(\mathfrak{g}) can be identified with the centralizer of \mathfrak{g} in U(\mathfrak{g}). Any element of Z(U(\mathfrak{g})) must commute with all of U(\mathfrak{g}), and in particular with the canonical embedding of \mathfrak{g} into U({\mathfrak {g}}). Because of this, the center is directly useful for classifying representations of \mathfrak{g}. For a finite-dimensional
semisimple Lie algebra, the
Casimir operators form a distinguished basis from the center Z(U(\mathfrak{g})). These may be constructed as follows. The center Z(U(\mathfrak{g})) corresponds to linear combinations of all elements z=v\otimes w \otimes \cdots \otimes u \in U(\mathfrak{g}) that commute with all elements x\in \mathfrak{g}; that is, for which [z,x]=\mbox{ad}_x(z)=0. That is, they are in the kernel of \mbox{ad}_\mathfrak{g}. Thus, a technique is needed for computing that kernel. What we have is the action of the
adjoint representation on \mathfrak{g}; we need it on U(\mathfrak{g}). The easiest route is to note that \mbox{ad}_\mathfrak{g} is a
derivation, and that the space of derivations can be lifted to T(\mathfrak{g}) and thus to U(\mathfrak{g}). This implies that both of these are
differential algebras. By definition, \delta:\mathfrak{g}\to\mathfrak{g} is a derivation on \mathfrak{g} if it obeys
Leibniz's law: :\delta([v,w])=[\delta(v),w]+[v,\delta(w)] (When \mathfrak{g} is the space of left invariant vector fields on a group G, the Lie bracket is that of vector fields.) The lifting is performed by
defining :\begin{align}\delta(v\otimes w \otimes \cdots \otimes u) =& \, \delta(v) \otimes w \otimes \cdots \otimes u \\ &+ v\otimes \delta(w) \otimes \cdots\otimes u \\ &+ \cdots + v\otimes w \otimes \cdots \otimes \delta(u). \end{align} Since \mbox{ad}_x is a derivation for any x\in\mathfrak{g}, the above defines \mbox{ad}_x acting on T(\mathfrak{g}) and U(\mathfrak{g}). From the PBW theorem, it is clear that all central elements are linear combinations of symmetric
homogeneous polynomials in the basis elements e_a of the Lie algebra. The
Casimir invariants are the irreducible homogeneous polynomials of a given, fixed degree. That is, given a basis e_a, a Casimir operator of order m has the form :C_{(m)} = \kappa^{ab\cdots c}e_a\otimes e_b\otimes \cdots\otimes e_c where there are m terms in the tensor product, and \kappa^{ab\cdots c} is a completely symmetric tensor of order m belonging to the adjoint representation. That is, \kappa^{ab\cdots c} can be (should be) thought of as an element of \left(\operatorname{ad}_\mathfrak{g}\right)^{\otimes m}. Recall that the adjoint representation is given directly by the
structure constants, and so an explicit indexed form of the above equations can be given, in terms of the Lie algebra basis; this is originally a theorem of
Israel Gel'fand. That is, from [x,C_{(m)}]=0, it follows that :f_{ij}^{\;\; k} \kappa^{jl\cdots m} + f_{ij}^{\;\; l} \kappa^{kj\cdots m} + \cdots + f_{ij}^{\;\; m} \kappa^{kl\cdots j} = 0 where the structure constants are :[e_i,e_j]=f_{ij}^{\;\; k}e_k As an example, the quadratic Casimir operator is :C_{(2)} = \kappa^{ij} e_i\otimes e_j where \kappa^{ij} is the inverse matrix of the
Killing form \kappa_{ij}. That the Casimir operator C_{(2)} belongs to the center Z(U(\mathfrak{g})) follows from the fact that the Killing form is invariant under the adjoint action. The center of the universal enveloping algebra of a simple Lie algebra is given in detail by the
Harish-Chandra isomorphism.
Rank The number of
algebraically independent Casimir operators of a finite-dimensional
semisimple Lie algebra is equal to the rank of that algebra, i.e. is equal to the rank of the
Cartan–Weyl basis. This may be seen as follows. For a -dimensional vector space , recall that the
determinant is the
completely antisymmetric tensor on V^{\otimes d}. Given a matrix , one may write the
characteristic polynomial of as :\det(tI-M)=\sum_{n=0}^d p_nt^n For a -dimensional Lie algebra, that is, an algebra whose
adjoint representation is -dimensional, the linear operator :\operatorname{ad}:\mathfrak{g}\to\operatorname{End}(\mathfrak{g}) implies that \operatorname{ad}_x is a -dimensional endomorphism, and so one has the characteristic equation :\det(tI-\operatorname{ad}_x)=\sum_{n=0}^d p_n(x)t^n for elements x\in \mathfrak{g}. The non-zero roots of this characteristic polynomial (that are roots for all ) form the
root system of the algebra. In general, there are only such roots; this is the rank of the algebra. This implies that the highest value of for which the p_n(x) is non-vanishing is The p_n(x) are
homogeneous polynomials of degree This can be seen in several ways: Given a constant k\in K, ad is linear, so that \operatorname{ad}_{kx}=k\,\operatorname{ad}_x. By
plugging and chugging in the above, one obtains that :p_n(kx)=k^{d-n}p_n(x). By linearity, if one expands in the basis, :x=\sum_{i=1}^d x_i e_i then the polynomial has the form :p_n(x)=x_ax_b\cdots x_c \kappa^{ab\cdots c} that is, a \kappa is a tensor of rank m=d-n. By linearity and the commutativity of addition, i.e. that \operatorname{ad}_{x+y}=\operatorname{ad}_{y+x},, one concludes that this tensor must be completely symmetric. This tensor is exactly the Casimir invariant of order The center Z(\mathfrak{g}) corresponded to those elements z\in Z(\mathfrak{g}) for which \operatorname{ad}_x(z)=0 for all by the above, these clearly corresponds to the roots of the characteristic equation. One concludes that the roots form a space of rank and that the Casimir invariants span this space. That is, the Casimir invariants generate the center Z(U(\mathfrak{g})).
Example: Rotation group SO(3) The
rotation group SO(3) is of rank one, and thus has one Casimir operator. It is three-dimensional, and thus the Casimir operator must have order (3 − 1) = 2 i.e. be quadratic. Of course, this is the Lie algebra of A_1. As an elementary exercise, one can compute this directly. Changing notation to e_i=L_i, with L_i belonging to the adjoint rep, a general algebra element is xL_1+yL_2+zL_3 and direct computation gives :\det\left(xL_1+yL_2+zL_3-tI\right)=-t^3-(x^2+y^2+z^2)t The quadratic term can be read off as \kappa^{ij}=\delta^{ij}, and so the squared
angular momentum operator for the rotation group is that Casimir operator. That is, :C_{(2)} = L^2 = e_1\otimes e_1 + e_2\otimes e_2 + e_3\otimes e_3 and explicit computation shows that :[L^2, e_k]=0 after making use of the
structure constants :[e_i, e_j]=\varepsilon_{ij}^{\;\;k}e_k
Example: Pseudo-differential operators A key observation during the construction of U(\mathfrak{g}) above was that it was a differential algebra, by dint of the fact that any derivation on the Lie algebra can be lifted to U(\mathfrak{g}). Thus, one is led to a ring of
pseudo-differential operators, from which one can construct Casimir invariants. If the Lie algebra \mathfrak{g} acts on a space of linear operators, such as in
Fredholm theory, then one can construct Casimir invariants on the corresponding space of operators. The quadratic Casimir operator corresponds to an
elliptic operator. If the Lie algebra acts on a
differentiable manifold, then each Casimir operator corresponds to a higher-order differential on the cotangent manifold, the second-order differential being the most common and most important. If the action of the algebra is
isometric, as would be the case for
Riemannian or
pseudo-Riemannian manifolds endowed with a metric and the symmetry groups
SO(N) and
SO (P, Q), respectively, one can then contract upper and lower indices (with the metric tensor) to obtain more interesting structures. For the quadratic Casimir invariant, this is the
Laplacian. Quartic Casimir operators allow one to square the
stress–energy tensor, giving rise to the
Yang-Mills action. The
Coleman–Mandula theorem restricts the form that these can take, when one considers ordinary Lie algebras. However, the
Lie superalgebras are able to evade the premises of the Coleman–Mandula theorem, and can be used to mix together space and internal symmetries. ==Examples in particular cases==