- Indefinite orthogonal group
In
mathematics , the indefinite orthogonal group, O("p","q") is theLie group of alllinear transformation s of a "n" = "p" + "q" dimensional realvector space which leave invariant anondegenerate ,symmetric bilinear form of signature ("p", "q"). The dimension of the group is :"n"("n" − 1)/2.The indefinite special orthogonal group, SO("p","q") is thesubgroup of O("p","q") consisting of all elements withdeterminant 1.The signature of the metric ("p" positive and "q" negative
eigenvalue s) determines the group up toisomorphism ; interchanging "p" with "q" amounts to replacing the metric by its negative, and so gives the same group. If either "p" or "q" equals zero, then the group is isomorphic to the ordinaryorthogonal group O("n"). We assume in what follows that both "p" and "q" are positive.The group O("p","q") is defined for vector spaces over the reals. For complex spaces, all groups O("p","q"; C) are isomorphic to the usual
orthogonal group O("p" + "q"; C), since the transform changes the signature of a form.Matrix definition
One can define O("p","q") as a group of matrices, just as for the classical orthogonal group O("n"). The standard inner product on R"p","q" is given in coordinates by the
diagonal matrix ::As a quadratic form,The group O("p","q") is then the group of a "n"×"n" matrices "M" (where "n" = "p"+"q") such that ; as a bilinear form,:Here "M""T" denotes the
transpose of the matrix "M". One can easily verify that the set of all such matrices forms a group. The inverse of "M" is given by:One obtains an isomorphic group (indeed, a conjugate subgroup of GL(V)) by replacing η with any
symmetric matrix with "p" positive eigenvalues and "q" negative ones (such a matrix is necessarily nonsingular); equivalently, any quadratic form with signature ("p","q"). Diagonalizing this matrix gives a conjugation of this group with the standard group O("p","q").Topology
Neither of the groups O("p","q") or SO("p","q") are connected, having 4 and 2 components respectively. is the
Klein four-group , with each factor being whether an element preserves or reverses the respective orientations on the "p" and "q" dimensional subspaces on which the form is definite.The special orthogonal group has components which either preserves both orientations or reverses both orientations.The
identity component of O("p","q") is often denoted SO+("p","q") and can be identified with the set of elements in SO("p","q") which preserves both orientations.The group O("p","q") is also not compact, but contains the compact subgroups O("p") and O("q") acting on the subspaces on which the form is definite. In fact, O("p")×O("q") is a
maximal compact subgroup of O("p","q"), while is a maximal compact subgroup of SO("p","q").Likewise, SO("p")×SO("q") is a maximal compact subgroup of SO+("p", "q").Thus up to homotopy, the spaces are products of (special) orthogonal groups, from which algebro-topological invariants can be computed.In particular, the
fundamental group of SO+("p", "q") is the product of the fundamental groups of the components, , and is given by::References
*springer|id=O/o070300|title=Orthogonal group|author=V. L. Popov
*Anthony Knapp, "Lie Groups Beyond an Introduction", Second Edition, Progress in Mathematics, vol. 140, Birkhäuser, Boston, 2002. ISBN 0-8176-4259-5. (see page 372 for a description of the indefinite orthogonal group)*Joseph A. Wolf, "Spaces of constant curvature", (1967) page. 335.
ee also
*
Lorentz group
*orthogonal group
*pin group
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