Homogeneous space

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In mathematics, particularly in the theories of Lie groups, algebraic groups and topological groups, a homogeneous space for a group G is a non-empty manifold or topological space X on which G acts continuously by symmetry in a transitive way. Some authors insist that the action of G be effective (i.e. faithful), although the present article does not. Thus there is a group action of G on X which can be thought of as preserving some "geometric structure" on X, and making X into a single G-orbit.

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[edit] Formal definition

Let X be a non-empty set and G a group. Then X is called a G-space if there exists an action of G on X.[1] Note that automatically G acts by automorphisms (bijections) on the set. If X in addition belongs to some category, then the elements of G are assumed to act as automorphisms in the same category. Thus the maps on X effected by G are structure preserving. A homogeneous space is a G-space on which G acts transitively.

Succinctly, if X is an object of the category C, then the structure of a G-space is a homomorphism

\rho : G \to \mathrm{Aut}_{\mathbf{C}}(X)

into the group of automorphisms of the object X in the category C. The pair (X,ρ) defines a homogeneous space provided ρ(G) is a transitive group of symmetries of the underlying set of X.

[edit] Examples

For example, if X is a topological space, then group elements are assumed to act as homeomorphisms on X. The structure of a G-space is a group homomorphism ρ : G → Homeo(X) into the homeomorphism group of X.

Similarly, if X is a differentiable manifold, then the group elements are diffeomorphisms. The structure of a G-space is a group homomorphism ρ : G → Diffeo(X) into the diffeomorphism group of X.

[edit] Geometry

From the point of view of the Erlangen programme, one may understand that "all points are the same", in the geometry of X. This was true of essentially all geometries proposed before Riemannian geometry, in the middle of the nineteenth century.

Thus, for example, Euclidean space, affine space and projective space are all in natural ways homogeneous spaces for their respective symmetry groups. The same is true of the models found of non-Euclidean geometry, of constant curvature, such as hyperbolic space.

A further classical example is the space of lines in projective space of three dimensions (equivalently, the space of two-dimensional subspaces of a four-dimensional vector space). It is simple linear algebra to show that GL4 acts transitively on those. We can parameterize them by line co-ordinates: these are the 2×2 minors of the 2×4 matrix with columns two basis vectors for the subspace. The geometry of the resulting homogeneous space is the line geometry of Julius Plücker.

[edit] Homogeneous spaces as coset spaces

In general, if X is a homogeneous space, and Ho is the stabilizer of some marked point o in X (a choice of origin), the points of X correspond to the left cosets G/Ho.

In general, a different choice of origin o will lead to a quotient of G by a different subgroup Ho′ which is related to Ho by an inner automorphism of G. Specifically,

Ho' = gHog − 1    (1)

where g is any element of G for which go = o′. Note that the inner automorphism (1) does not depend on which such g is selected; it depends only on g modulo Ho.

If the action of G on X is continuous, then H is a closed subgroup of G. In particular, if G is a Lie group, then H is a closed Lie subgroup by Cartan's theorem. Hence G/H is a smooth manifold and so X carries a unique smooth structure compatible with the group action.

If H is the identity subgroup {e}, then X is a principal homogeneous space.

[edit] Example

For example in the line geometry case, we can identify H as a 12-dimensional subgroup of the 16-dimensional general linear group

GL4,

defined by conditions on the matrix entries

h13 = h14 = h23 = h24 = 0,

by looking for the stabilizer of the subspace spanned by the first two standard basis vectors. That shows that X has dimension 4.

Since the homogeneous coordinates given by the minors are 6 in number, this means that the latter are not independent of each other. In fact a single quadratic relation holds between the six minors, as was known to nineteenth-century geometers.

This example was the first known example of a Grassmannian, other than a projective space. There are many further homogeneous spaces of the classical linear groups in common use in mathematics.

[edit] Prehomogeneous vector spaces

The idea of a prehomogeneous vector space was introduced by Mikio Sato.

It is a finite-dimensional vector space V with a group action of an algebraic group G, such that there is an orbit of G that is open for the Zariski topology (and so, dense). An example is GL1 acting on a one-dimensional space.

The definition is more restrictive than it initially appears: such spaces have remarkable properties, and there is a classification of irreducible prehomogeneous vector spaces, up to a transformation known as "castling".

[edit] Homogeneous spaces in physics

Cosmology using the general theory of relativity makes use of the Bianchi classification system. Homogeneous spaces in relativity represent the space part of background metrics for some cosmological models; for example, the three cases of the Friedmann-Lemaître-Robertson-Walker metric are represented by subsets of the Bianchi I, V, and IX types, while the Mixmaster universe represents an anisotropic example of a Bianchi IX cosmology.[2]

Homogenous spaces are useful descriptions of universes because they have the property that every point in the space is connected to every other point in the space by a geodesic; that is, a traveler beginning at any point in the space can, eventually, reach any other point in the space (although this is not necessarily true of any two events in space-time).

A homogeneous space of N dimensions admits a set of N(N-1)/2 Killing vectors.[3] These Killing vectors, which constitute the eigenvectors of the space, furthermore in homogeneous spaces have the property that for a given Killing vector \xi^{(a)}_{i},

\xi^{(a)}_{i;k}=C^{a}_{\ bc}\xi^{(b)}_i \xi^{(c)}_k

where the object C^{a}_{\ bc}, the "structure constant", is a constant rank-three tensor antisymmetric in its lower two indices, ; represents the covariant differential operator. In the case of a flat isotropic universe, C^{a}_{\ bc}=0, but in the case of a closed FLRW universe, C^{a}_{\ bc}=\varepsilon^{a}_{\ bc} where \varepsilon^{a}_{\ bc} is the Levi-Civita symbol.

[edit] References

  1. ^ We assume that the action is on the left. The distinction is only important in the description of X as a coset space.
  2. ^ Lev Landau and Evgeny Lifshitz, Course of Theoretical Physics vol. 2: The Classical Theory of Fields, Butterworth-Heinemann, 1980.
  3. ^ Steven Weinberg, Gravitation and Cosmology, John Wiley and Sons, 1972.

[edit] See also