Jordan pairs (Q1215698)

From MaRDI portal
Revision as of 17:40, 19 February 2024 by RedirectionBot (talk | contribs) (‎Changed an Item)
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Jordan pairs
scientific article

    Statements

    Jordan pairs (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    1975
    0 references
    Let \(k\) denote a commutative associative ring of scalars. A Jordan pair is a pair \(V= (V^+,V^-)\) of \(k\)-modules, and quadratic maps \(Q_+\colon V^+\rightarrow \Hom_k(V^-,V^+)\) and \(Q_-\colon V^-\rightarrow \Hom_k(V^+,V^-)\) satisfying three technical identities in all scalar extensions. This generalizes the notions of a (unital) quadratic Jordan algebra \((J,U,1)\) (set \(V^+ = V^- = J\), \(Q_+ = Q_- = U)\), and of a Jordan triple system \((T,U)\) (set \(V^+ = V^- = T\), \(Q_+ = Q_- =U)\). In the case of a quadratic Jordan algebra \((J,U,1)\), there is an isomorphism between the structure group of autotopisms of \(J\) and the automorphism group of \((J,J)\). Thus, theorems which hold for Jordan algebras up to isotopy hold for associated Jordan pairs without this restriction. In a Jordan pair \((V^+,V^-)\), \(V^+\) and \(V^-\) have homotopic structures as (non-unital) quadratic Jordan algebras, and the condition that \((V^+,V^-)\) be of the form \((J,J)\) is that \(V^-\) contains an invertible element \(v\) (i.e. \(Q_-(v)\) is invertible). Here the unital quadratic Jordan algebra \(J\) is an isotope of \(V^+\), so Jordan pairs containing invertible elements are roughly the same as unital Jordan algebras up to isotopy. It also turns out that Jordan triple systems are essentially the same as Jordan pairs with involution, involution defined in the appropriate sense. The author offers the following arguments for studying this generalized concept. Inner automorphisms are naturally defined (in contrast to the other systems). Jordan pairs always contain ``enough'' idempotents (not so in the other systems). They arise naturally in the Koecher-Tits construction of Lie algebras and associated algebraic groups. As in the theory of Jordan and alternative algebras, the author also discusses alternative pairs, which turn out to have useful connections with Jordan pairs. An alternative pair is a pair \(A = (A^+,A^-)\) of \(k\)-modules and two trilinear maps: \(A^+ \times A^- \times A^+ \rightarrow A^+\) and \(A^- \times A^+ \times A^- \rightarrow A^-\) satisfying three technical identities. We list the titles of the four chapters and of the 18 sections. I. Jordan pairs. 1. Definitions and relations with Jordan algebras and triple systems. 2. Identities and Representations. 3. The quasi-inverse. 4. Radicals. 5, Peirce decomposition. II. Alternative pairs. 6. Basic properties and relations with alternative algebras. 7. The Jordan pair associated with an alternative pair. 8. Imbedding into Jordan pairs. 9. Peirce decomposition. III. Alternative and Jordan pairs with chain conditions. 10. Inner ideals and chain conditions. 11. Classification of alternative pairs. 12. Classification of Jordan pairs. IV. Finite-dimensional Jordan pairs. 13. Universal enveloping algebras. 14. Solvability and nilpotence. 15. Cartan subpairs. 16. The generic minimum polynomial. 17. Simple Jordan pairs. 18. Appendix: Polynomial and rational functions. \{The following four corrections were sent by the author to the reviewer. p. 40, line 11 top: read, Nil \(V\) instead of Nil \(J\); p. 101, line 1 top: insert ``of 9.3'' after ``analogue''; p. 159, statement (iv) of 14.14: read ``the ideal \(\tilde B\) \dots''; p. 177, line 2 bottom: read ``\(X^{(h,Y)} \ne 0\)''. \}
    0 references
    Jordan pairs
    0 references
    alternative pairs
    0 references
    chain conditions
    0 references
    finite dimensional Jordan pairs
    0 references
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references