- Casimir invariant
In
mathematics , a Casimir invariant or Casimir operator is a distinguished element of the centre of theuniversal enveloping algebra of aLie algebra . A prototypical example is the squaredangular momentum operator , which is a Casimir invariant of the three-dimensionalrotation group .Definition
Suppose that is an -dimensional
semisimple Lie algebra .Let:be anybasis of , and:be the dual basis of with respect to a fixed invariant bilinear form (e.g. theKilling form ) on . The quadratic Casimir element is an element of the universal enveloping algebra given by the formula :Although the definition of the Casimir element refers to a particular choice of basis in the Lie algebra, it is easy to show that the resulting element is independent of this choice. Moreover, the invariance of the bilinear form used in the definition implies that the Casimir element commutes with all elements of the Lie algebra , and hence lies in the center of the universal enveloping algebraGiven any representation of on a vector space "V", possibly infinite-dimensional, the corresponding quadratic Casimir invariant is , the
linear operator on "V" given by the formula:A special case of this construction plays an important role indifferential geometry andglobal analysis . Suppose that a connectedLie group "G" with the Lie algebra acts on adifferentiable manifold "M", then elements of are represented by first orderdifferential operator s on "M". The representation is on the space of smooth functions on "M".In this situation the Casimir invariant is the "G"-invariant second order differential operator on "M" defined by the above formula.More general Casimir invariants may also be defined, commonly occurring in the study of
pseudo-differential operator s inFredholm theory .Properties
The Casimir operator is a distinguished element of the center of the
universal enveloping algebra of the Lie algebra. In other words, it is a member of the algebra of all differential operators that commutes with all the generators in the Lie algebra.The number of independent elements of the center of the universal enveloping algebra is also the rank in the case of a
semisimple Lie algebra . The Casimir operator gives the concept of theLaplacian on a generalsemisimple Lie group ; but this way of counting shows that there may be no unique analogue of the Laplacian, for rank > 1.In any
irreducible representation of the Lie algebra, bySchur's Lemma , any member of the center of the universal enveloping algebra commutes with everything and thus is proportional to the identity. This constant of proportionality can be used to classify the representations of the Lie algebra (and hence, also of itsLie group ). Physical mass and spin are examples of these constants, as are many otherquantum number s found inquantum mechanics . Superficially,topological quantum number s form an exception to this pattern; although deeper theories hint that these are two facets of the same phenomenon.Example: so(3)
The Lie algebra "so"(3) is the Lie algebra of "SO"(3), the
rotation group for three-dimensionalEuclidean space . It is semisimple of rank 1, and so it has a single independent Casimir. The Killing form for the rotation group is just theKronecker delta , and so the Casimir invariant is simply the sum of the squares of the generators of the algebra. That is, the Casimir invariant is given by:
The invariance of the Casimir operator implies that it is a multiple of the identity element "e" of the algebra, so that
:
In
quantum mechanics , the scalar value is referred to as thetotal angular momentum . For finite-dimensional matrix-valued representations of the rotation group, always takes on integer values (for bosonic representations) or half-integer values (for fermionic representations).For a given value of , the matrix representation is -dimensional. Thus, for example, the three-dimensional representation for "so"(3) corresponds to , and is given by the generators
:
The quadratic Casimir invariant is then
:as when . Similarly, the two dimensional representation has a basis given by the
Pauli matrices , which correspond to spin 1/2.ee also
*
Harish-Chandra isomorphism
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