In the mathematical theory of Lie groups, the Chevalley restriction theorem describes functions on a Lie algebra which are invariant under the action of a Lie group in terms of functions on a Cartan subalgebra.

Statement

Chevalley's theorem requires the following notation:

assumptionexample
Gcomplex connected semisimple Lie groupSLn, the special linear group
the Lie algebra of G, the Lie algebra of matrices with trace zero
the polynomial functions on which are invariant under the adjoint G-action
a Cartan subalgebra of the subalgebra of diagonal matrices with trace 0
Wthe Weyl group of Gthe symmetric group Sn
the polynomial functions on which are invariant under the natural action of Wpolynomials f on the space which are invariant under all permutations of the xi

Chevalley's theorem asserts that the restriction of polynomial functions induces an isomorphism

.

Proofs

Humphreys (1980) gives a proof using properties of representations of highest weight. Chriss & Ginzburg (2010) give a proof of Chevalley's theorem exploiting the geometric properties of the map .

References

  • Chriss, Neil; Ginzburg, Victor (2010), Representation theory and complex geometry., Birkhäuser, doi:10.1007/978-0-8176-4938-8, ISBN 978-0-8176-4937-1, S2CID 14890248, Zbl 1185.22001
  • Humphreys, James E. (1980), Introduction to Lie algebras and representation theory, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 9, Springer, Zbl 0447.17002
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