- Special linear group
In
mathematics , the special linear group of degree "n" over a field "F" is the set of "n"×"n" matrices withdeterminant 1, with the group operations of ordinarymatrix multiplication andmatrix inversion .This is thenormal subgroup of thegeneral linear group , given by the kernel of the determinant:where we write "F"× for the multiplicative group of "F" (that is, excluding 0).
These elements are "special" in that they fall on a
subvariety of the general linear group – they satisfy a polynomial equation (since the determinant is polynomial in the entries).Geometric interpretation
The special linear group SL("n", R) can be characterized as the group of "
volume and orientation preserving" linear transformations of R"n"; this corresponds to the interpretation of the determinant as measuring change in volume and orientation.Lie subgroup
When "F" is R or C, SL("n") is a
Lie subgroup of GL("n") of dimension "n"2 − 1. TheLie algebra of SL("n") consists of all "n"×"n" matrices over "F" with vanishing trace. The Lie bracket is given by thecommutator .Topology
Any invertible matrix can be uniquely represented according to the
polar decomposition as the product of aunitary matrix and ahermitian matrix with positiveeigenvalue s. Thedeterminant of the unitary matrix is on theunit circle while that of the hermitian matrix is real and positive, and since in the case of a matrix from the special linear group the product of these two determinants must be 1, then each of them must be 1. Therefore, a special linear matrix can be written as the product of aspecial unitary matrix (orspecial orthogonal matrix in the real case) and apositive definite hermitian matrix (orsymmetric matrix in the real case) having determinant 1.Thus the topology of the group SL("n", C) is the product of the topology of SU("n") and the topology of the group of hermitian matrices of unit determinant with positive eigenvalues. A hermitian matrix of unit determinant and having positive eigenvalues can be uniquely expressed as the exponential of a
traceless hermitian matrix, and therefore the topology of this is that of n^2-1 dimensionalEuclidean space .The topology of SL("n", R) is the product of the topology of SO("n") and the topology of the group of symmetric matrices with positive eigenvalues. Since the latter matrices can be uniquely expressed as the exponential of symmetric traceless matrices, then this latter topology is that of (n+2)(n-1)/2 dimensional Euclidean space.
The group SL("n", C), like SU("n"), is simply connected while SL("n", R), like SO("n"), is not. SL("n", R) has the same fundamental group as GL+("n", R) or SO("n"), that is, Z for "n" = 2 and Z2 for "n" > 2.
Relations to other subgroups of GL("n","A")
Two related subgroups, which in some cases coincide with SL, and in other cases are accidentally conflated with SL, are the
commutator subgroup of GL, and the group generated bytransvection s. These are both subgroups of SL (transvections have determinant 1, and det is a map to an abelian group, so ), but in general do not coincide with it.The group generated by transvections is denoted (for
elementary matrices ) or . By the second Steinberg relation, for , transvections are commutators, sofor , . For , transvections need not be commutators (of 2×2 matrices), as seen for example when is the field of two elements, thenIn some circumstances these coincide: the special linear group over a field or the integers is generated by transvections, and the "stable" special linear group over a
Dedekind domain is generated by transvections. For more general rings the stable difference is measured by thespecial Whitehead group , where and are the stable groups of the special linear group and elementary matrices.Generators and relations
If working over a ring where SL is generated by transvections (such as a ring or the integers), one can give a presentation of SL using transvections with some relations. Transvections satisfy the
Steinberg relations , but these are not sufficient: the resulting group is theSteinberg group , which is not the special linear group, but rather theuniversal central extension of the commutator subgroup of GL.A sufficient set of relations for for is given by two of the Steinberg relations, plus a third relation harv|Conder|Robertson|Williams|1992|p=19.Let be the elementary matrix with 1's on the diagonal and in the position, and 0's elsewhere (and ). Then:are a complete set of relations for ,
tructure of GL("n","F")
The group splits over its determinant (we use as the
monomorphism from to ,seesemidirect product ), and therefore GL("n", "F") can be written as asemidirect product of SL("n", "F") by "F"×::GL("n", "F") = SL("n", "F") ⋊ "F"×.ee also
* SL2(R)
* SL2(C)
*Modular group
*Projective linear group References
*Citation | last1=Conder | first1=Marston | last2=Robertson | first2=Edmund | last3=Williams | first3=Peter | title=Presentations for 3-dimensional special linear groups over integer rings | id=MathSciNet | id = 1079696 | year=1992 | journal=Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society | issn=0002-9939 | volume=115 | issue=1 | pages=19–26 |doi=10.2307/2159559
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