For an
algebraically closed field k, much of the structure of an
algebraic variety X over
k is encoded in its set
X(
k) of
k-
rational points, which allows an elementary definition of a linear algebraic group. First, define a function from the abstract group
GL(
n,
k) to
k to be
regular if it can be written as a polynomial in the entries of an
n×
n matrix
A and in 1/det(
A), where det is the
determinant. Then a
linear algebraic group G over an algebraically closed field
k is a subgroup
G(
k) of the abstract group
GL(
n,
k) for some natural number
n such that
G(
k) is defined by the vanishing of some set of regular functions. For an arbitrary field
k, algebraic varieties over
k are defined as a special case of
schemes over
k. In that language, a
linear algebraic group G over a field
k is a
smooth closed subgroup scheme of
GL(
n) over
k for some natural number
n. In particular,
G is defined by the vanishing of some set of
regular functions on
GL(
n) over
k, and these functions must have the property that for every commutative
k-
algebra R,
G(
R) is a subgroup of the abstract group
GL(
n,
R). (Thus an algebraic group
G over
k is not just the abstract group
G(
k), but rather the whole family of groups
G(
R) for commutative
k-algebras
R; this is the philosophy of describing a scheme by its
functor of points.) In either language, one has the notion of a
homomorphism of linear algebraic groups. For example, when
k is algebraically closed, a homomorphism from
G ⊂
GL(
m) to
H ⊂
GL(
n) is a homomorphism of abstract groups
G(
k) →
H(
k) which is defined by regular functions on
G. This makes the linear algebraic groups over
k into a
category. In particular, this defines what it means for two linear algebraic groups to be
isomorphic. In the language of schemes, a linear algebraic group
G over a field
k is in particular a
group scheme over
k, meaning a scheme over
k together with a
k-point 1 ∈
G(
k) and morphisms :m\colon G \times_k G \to G, \; i\colon G \to G over
k which satisfy the usual axioms for the multiplication and inverse maps in a group (associativity, identity, inverses). A linear algebraic group is also smooth and of
finite type over
k, and it is
affine (as a scheme). Conversely, every affine group scheme
G of finite type over a field
k has a
faithful representation into
GL(
n) over
k for some
n. An example is the embedding of the additive group
Ga into
GL(2), as mentioned above. As a result, one can think of linear algebraic groups either as matrix groups or, more abstractly, as smooth affine group schemes over a field. (Some authors use "linear algebraic group" to mean any affine group scheme of finite type over a field.) For a full understanding of linear algebraic groups, one has to consider more general (non-smooth) group schemes. For example, let
k be an algebraically closed field of
characteristic p > 0. Then the homomorphism
f:
Gm →
Gm defined by
x ↦
xp induces an isomorphism of abstract groups
k* →
k*, but
f is not an isomorphism of algebraic groups (because
x1/
p is not a regular function). In the language of group schemes, there is a clearer reason why
f is not an isomorphism:
f is surjective, but it has nontrivial
kernel, namely the
group scheme μp of
pth roots of unity. This issue does not arise in characteristic zero. Indeed, every group scheme of finite type over a field
k of characteristic zero is smooth over
k. A group scheme of finite type over any field
k is smooth over
k if and only if it is
geometrically reduced, meaning that the
base change G_{\overline k} is
reduced, where \overline k is an
algebraic closure of
k. Since an affine scheme
X is determined by its
ring O(
X) of regular functions, an affine group scheme
G over a field
k is determined by the ring
O(
G) with its structure of a
Hopf algebra (coming from the multiplication and inverse maps on
G). This gives an
equivalence of categories (reversing arrows) between affine group schemes over
k and commutative Hopf algebras over
k. For example, the Hopf algebra corresponding to the multiplicative group
Gm =
GL(1) is the
Laurent polynomial ring
k[
x,
x−1], with comultiplication given by :x \mapsto x \otimes x.
Basic notions For a linear algebraic group
G over a field
k, the
identity component Go (the
connected component containing the point 1) is a
normal subgroup of finite
index. So there is a
group extension :1 \to G^\circ \to G \to F \to 1, where
F is a finite algebraic group. (For
k algebraically closed,
F can be identified with an abstract finite group.) Because of this, the study of algebraic groups mostly focuses on connected groups. Various notions from
abstract group theory can be extended to linear algebraic groups. It is straightforward to define what it means for a linear algebraic group to be
commutative,
nilpotent, or
solvable, by analogy with the definitions in abstract group theory. For example, a linear algebraic group is
solvable if it has a
composition series of linear algebraic subgroups such that the quotient groups are commutative. Also, the
normalizer, the
center, and the
centralizer of a closed subgroup
H of a linear algebraic group
G are naturally viewed as closed subgroup schemes of
G. If they are smooth over
k, then they are linear algebraic groups as defined above. One may ask to what extent the properties of a connected linear algebraic group
G over a field
k are determined by the abstract group
G(
k). A useful result in this direction is that if the field
k is
perfect (for example, of characteristic zero),
or if
G is reductive (as defined below), then
G is
unirational over
k. Therefore, if in addition
k is infinite, the group
G(
k) is
Zariski dense in
G. For example, under the assumptions mentioned,
G is commutative, nilpotent, or solvable if and only if
G(
k) has the corresponding property. The assumption of connectedness cannot be omitted in these results. For example, let
G be the group μ
3 ⊂
GL(1) of cube roots of unity over the
rational numbers
Q. Then
G is a linear algebraic group over
Q for which
G(
Q) = 1 is not Zariski dense in
G, because G(\overline {\mathbf Q}) is a group of order 3. Over an algebraically closed field, there is a stronger result about algebraic groups as algebraic varieties: every connected linear algebraic group over an algebraically closed field is a
rational variety. ==The Lie algebra of an algebraic group==