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SL(n,R) and Diff(n,R) -  Decontraction formula and Unitary Irreducible Representations

SL(n,R) and Diff(n,R) -  Decontraction formula and Unitary Irreducible Representations. Dj ordje Sijacki and Igor Salom Institute of Physics, University of Belgrade. Quantum Integrable Systems and Geometry, September 2012, Olhao, Portugal. sl(n,R) and diff(n,R) algebras in gravity and HEP.

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SL(n,R) and Diff(n,R) -  Decontraction formula and Unitary Irreducible Representations

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  1. SL(n,R) and Diff(n,R) - Decontraction formula and Unitary Irreducible Representations Djordje Sijacki and Igor Salom Institute of Physics, University of Belgrade Quantum Integrable Systems and Geometry, September 2012, Olhao, Portugal

  2. sl(n,R) and diff(n,R)algebras in gravity and HEP • Affine models of gravity in n space-time dimensions (gauging Rn ΛGL(n,R) symmetry) • “World spinors” - infinite-component Diff(n,R) spinors in n space-time dimensions • Systems with conserved n-dimensional volume (strings, pD-branes...) • SL(3,R), SL(4,R) unirreps and Regge trajectories of hadrons (3-quark and quark-antiquark bound states) • Chromogravity as an effective IR region QCD

  3. Cromogravity – Effective QCD in the IR region SU(3) color gauge – B is dressed gluon field, g is SU(3) Cartan metric SU(3) variation: Expand B around a constant vacuum solution N (pure gauge) of the instanton type:

  4. In the IR region (variation of pseudo-metric G):

  5. Generalization to colorless n-gluon fields: d is the color SU(3) totally symmetric 8x8x8 → 1 tensor QCD variation in the IR region:

  6. Operators of the Chromo-Diffeomorphism algebra

  7. - Diff(n,R) linearly realized - Diff(n,R) realized nonlineary over SL(n,R)

  8. Spinorial matter fields of SL(n,R), GL(n,R) and/or Diff(n,R) nonlinearly realized w.r.t. SL(n,R), are infinite-component fields coupled to GL(n,R) connections: Q are the SL(n,R), GL(n,R) group generators (infinite matrices!) Frame fields: Infinite pseudo-frame (alephzeroads)

  9. Affine theory of gravity • A generic affine theory Lagrangian in n space-time dimensions : • A symmetry breaking mechanism is required.

  10. DOUBLE COVERING of SL(n,R), GL(n,R) and Diff(n,R) Iwasawa decomposition of a semisimple Lie algebra: g=k+a+n; G=KxAxN is any connected group with Lie algebra g, K (compact), A (Abelian) and N (nilpotent) are its corresponding analytic subgroups – the groups A and N are simply connected. There exists a universal covering group where Is the universal covering of K. For SL(n,R), GL(n,R), the universal covering group of K=SO(n)is a double covering given bySpin(n)

  11. For the group of diffeomorphisms Diff(n,R) Stewart proved: where the subgroup H is contractible to a point. As a result, as O(n) is the compact subgroup of GL(n,R), there is a double cover: For SL(4,R)

  12. A finite dimensional coveringof SL(n,R), i.e. Diff(n,R) exists providedone can embed their covering into a group of finite complex matrices that contain Spin(n) as a subgroup. The natural candidate for SL(n,R) covering, from the set of Cartan's classical Lie groups, is SL(n,C), however there is no match of the group dimensionalities, i.e. dim(SL(n,C)) = n < dim(Spin(n)) = 2^[(n-1)/2] except for n=8, but than the maximal compact subgroup of SL(8,C) is SO(8) and not Spin(8)! The universal (double) coverings of SL(n,R), GL(n,R)andDiff(n,R),for n>2,aregroups of infinite complex matrices.

  13. SL(n,R) generetors representations I is necessary to know, for various (math) physics applications, how to represent the SL(n,R) generators, i.e. to find their infinite-dimensional unirreps ... • in some simple, “easy to use” form, • in SO(n)(orSO(1,n-1)) subgroup basis, • for infinite-dimensional unitary representations, • and, in particular, for infinite-dimensional spinorial representations!

  14. How to findSL(n,R) generators? • Induction from parabolic subgroups • Construct generators as differential operators in the space of group parameters • Analytical continuation of complexified SU(n) representations • ... • By making use of the Gell-Mann decontraction formula

  15. Now, what is the Gell-Mann decontraction formula? Loosely speaking: it is formula inverse to the Inönü-Wigner contraction.

  16. The Gell-Mann decontraction formula Inönü-Wigner contraction ? Gell-Mann formula Gell-Mann formula (as named by R. Hermann)

  17. Example: Poincare to de Sitter • Define function of Poincare generators: • Check: • …unfortunately, this works so nicely only for so(m,n) cases. Not for sl(n,R).

  18. SL(n,R) group • Definition: group of unimodular n x n real matrices (with matrix multiplication) • Algebra relations: so(n) irrep. of traceless symmetric matrices

  19. Inönü-Wigner contraction of SL(n,R) Find representations of the contracted semidirect product and apply Gell-Mann formula to get sl(n,R) representations. Rn(n+1)/2-1 Λ Spin(n) SL(n,R) Representations of this group are rather easy to find

  20. Space of square integrable functions over Spin(n) manifold • Space of square integrable functions is rich enough to contain representatives from all equivalence classes of irreps. of both SL(n,R) and Tn(n+1)/2-1 Λ Spin(n) groups (Harish Chandra). • As a basis we choose Wigner D functions: k indices label SL(n,R)  SО(n) multiplicity Chain of groups: Spin(n); Spin(n-1), Spin(n-2), …, Spin(2)

  21. Contracted algebra representations • Contracted abelian operators U represent as multiplicative Wigner D functions: • Action of spin(n) subalgebra is “natural” one: Matrix elements are simply products of Spin(n) CG coefficients

  22. Try to use Gell-Mann formula • Take and plug it in the Gell-Mann formula, i.e.: and then check commutation relations. • works only in spaces over SO(n)/(SO(p)×SO(q)), q+p=n • no spinorial representations here • no representations with multiplicity w.r.t. Spin(n) → Insufficient for most of physical applications! (“Conditions for Validity of the Gell-Mann Formula in the Case of sl(n,R) and/or su(n) Algebras”, Igor Salom and Djordje Šijački, in Lie theory and its applications in physics, American Institute of Physics Conference Proceedings, 1243 (2010) 191-198.)

  23. Learning from the solved cases • All irreducible representations of SL(3,R)andSL(4,R)are known (Dj. Šijački,using different approach) • Matrix elements of SL(3,R)representations with multiplicity indicate an expression of the form: • This is a correct, “generalized” formula! • Similarly in SL(4,R)case. ! Additional label, overall 2, matching the group rank!

  24. Spin(n) left action generators

  25. Generalized formula in SL(5,R) case 4 labels, matching the group rank. new terms Not easy even to check that this is correct (i.e. closes algebra relations). Generalization of the Gell-Mann formula for sl(5,R) and su(5) algebras,Igor Salom and Djordje Šijački, International Journal of Geometric Methods in Modern Physics, 7 (2010) 455-470.

  26. Can we find the generalized formula for arbitraryn? • Idea: rewrite all generalized formulas (n=3,4,5) in Cartesian coordinates. • All formulas fit into a general expression, now valid for arbitratry n: • Using a D-functions identity: direct calculation shows that the expression satisfies algebra relations. Overalln-1parameters, matching the group rank! They determine Casimir values. Igor Salom and Djordje Šijački, International Journal of Geometric Methods in Modern Physics, 8 (2011), 395-410

  27. Matrix elements for arbitrary SL(n,R) irreducible representation • Matrix elements: • All required properties met: • Simple closed expression • in Spin(n) basis • valid for arbitrary representation (including infinite dimensional ones, and spinorial ones, and with nontrivial multiplicity)!

  28. Collateral result for su(n) • Multiplying shear generators T → iT turns algebra into su(n) • All results applicable tosu(n): su(n)matrices inso(n)basis – a nontrivial result (relevant in various nuclear physics applications).

  29. UNITARY IRREDUCIBLE REPRESENTATIONS Harish-Chandra proved that all unitary irreducible representations of a noncompact group G can be obtained in Hilbert spaces H of square-integrable functions over the maximal compact subgroup K. Unitarity means that: and the additional conditions that the bilinear form is a scalar product are hermiticity and positive definiteness:

  30. In order to obtain ALL unitary irreducible representations we consider the most general scalar product of functions over K=Spin(n), with an invariant measure dk and an arbitrary kernel function over KxK

  31. Now we combine: (1) SL(n,R) generators matrix elements expressions for an arbitrary representation, as given by the generalized decontraction formula, (2) representation unitarity requirement, (3) scalar product hermiticity and positive definiteness, (4) irreducibility requirement, as given by invariant lattices of the Spin(n) labels weight space.

  32. Simplest case: Principal series of (infite-dimensional) unitary irreducible (spinorial and tensorial) representations of the SL(n,R) double covering group: representation labels – purely imaginary kernel function – Dirac's delta function All matrix elements of the noncompact generators for an arbitrary unirrep given by generalized decontraction formula

  33. Application – affine theory of gravity • A generic affine theory Lagrangian in n space-time dimensions : • A symmetry breaking mechanism is required. What kind of fields are these?

  34. sl(n,R) matrix elements appear in vertices

  35. Example: n=5, multiplicity free • Vector component of infinite-component bosonic multifield, transforming as a multiplicity free SL(5,R) representation labelled by • Similarly for the term:

  36. Example: n=5, nontrivial multiplicity From the form of the generalized Gell-Mann formula we deduce that all component can not belong to the same irreducible representation • Due to multiplicity, there are , a priori, 5 different 5-dimensional vector components, i.e. Lorentz subfields, of the infinite-component bosonic multifield – one vector field for each valid combination of left indices k.

  37. Example: n=5, nontrivial multiplicity • Sheer connection transforms these fields one into another. Interaction terms are:

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