Left-invariant affine structures on reductive Lie groups (Q1913985): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 01:50, 20 March 2024
scientific article
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English | Left-invariant affine structures on reductive Lie groups |
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Left-invariant affine structures on reductive Lie groups (English)
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9 July 1996
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An affine structure on a manifold \(M\) is equivalent to the existence of a flat torsion-free affine connection \(\nabla\) on the tangent bundle of the manifold. The author investigates the real reductive linear Lie groups \(G\) that admit a left-invariant affine structure. The study of complete left-invariant affine structures leads to solvable groups. By a standard result, there is a one-to-one correspondence between such structures on \(G\) and LSA-structures on \(\mathfrak g\), the Lie algebra of \(G\). Here, LSA stands for left-symmetric algebra. It is equivalent to study, then, the reductive Lie algebras \({\mathfrak g}={\mathfrak z}\oplus{\mathfrak s}\) where \(\mathfrak z\) is the center of \(\mathfrak g\) and \(\mathfrak s\) is the semi-simple part, which will be assumed to be simple. The first result is that the only such Lie algebras with one-dimensional center that admit LSA-structures are those whose simple part is (isomorphic to) \({\mathfrak g}{\mathfrak l}(n)\). (For algebras with a bigger center, there is a greater variety possible.) The second result of the paper is the description of LSA-structures on \({\mathfrak g}{\mathfrak l}(n)\) which are different from the standard one given by ordinary matrix multiplication. The others come as deformations of the matrix algebra. For \(n>2\), these (plus the standard one) exhaust the LSA-structures on \(\mathfrak g\) and, hence, the left-invariant affine structures on \(G\).
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reductive group
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affine structure
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left-symmetric algebra
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