
In mathematics, more specifically in group theory, the character of a group representation is a function on the group that associates to each group element the trace of the corresponding matrix. The character carries the essential information about the representation in a more condensed form. Georg Frobenius initially developed representation theory of finite groups entirely based on the characters, and without any explicit matrix realization of representations themselves. This is possible because a complex representation of a finite group is determined (up to isomorphism) by its character. The situation with representations over a field of positive characteristic, so-called "modular representations", is more delicate, but Richard Brauer developed a powerful theory of characters in this case as well. Many deep theorems on the structure of finite groups use characters of modular representations.
Applications
Characters of irreducible representations encode many important properties of a group and can thus be used to study its structure. Character theory is an essential tool in the classification of finite simple groups. Close to half of the proof of the Feit–Thompson theorem involves intricate calculations with character values. Easier, but still essential, results that use character theory include Burnside's theorem (a purely group-theoretic proof of Burnside's theorem has since been found, but that proof came over half a century after Burnside's original proof), and a theorem of Richard Brauer and Michio Suzuki stating that a finite simple group cannot have a generalized quaternion group as its Sylow 2-subgroup.
Definitions
Let V be a finite-dimensional vector space over a field F and let ρ : G → GL(V) be a representation of a group G on V. The character of ρ is the function χρ : G → F given by
where Tr is the trace.
A character χρ is called irreducible or simple if ρ is an irreducible representation. The degree of the character χ is the dimension of ρ; in characteristic zero this is equal to the value χ(1). A character of degree 1 is called linear. When G is finite and F has characteristic zero, the kernel of the character χρ is the normal subgroup:
which is precisely the kernel of the representation ρ. However, the character is not a group homomorphism in general.
Properties
- Characters are class functions, that is, they each take a constant value on a given conjugacy class. More precisely, the set of irreducible characters of a given group G into a field F form a basis of the F-vector space of all class functions G → F.
- Isomorphic representations have the same characters. Over a field of characteristic 0, two representations are isomorphic if and only if they have the same character.
- If a representation is the direct sum of subrepresentations, then the corresponding character is the sum of the characters of those subrepresentations.
- If a character of the finite group G is restricted to a subgroup H, then the result is also a character of H.
- Every character value χ(g) is a sum of n m-th roots of unity, where n is the degree (that is, the dimension of the associated vector space) of the representation with character χ and m is the order of g. In particular, when F = C, every such character value is an algebraic integer.
- If F = C and χ is irreducible, then
is an algebraic integer for all x in G.
- If F is algebraically closed and char(F) does not divide the order of G, then the number of irreducible characters of G is equal to the number of conjugacy classes of G. Furthermore, in this case, the degrees of the irreducible characters are divisors of the order of G (and they even divide [G : Z(G)] if F = C).
Arithmetic properties
Let ρ and σ be representations of G. Then the following identities hold:
where ρ⊕σ is the direct sum, ρ⊗σ is the tensor product, ρ∗ denotes the conjugate transpose of ρ, and Alt2 is the alternating product Alt2ρ = ρ ∧ ρ and Sym2 is the symmetric square, which is determined by
Character tables
The irreducible complex characters of a finite group form a character table which encodes much useful information about the group G in a compact form. Each row is labelled by an irreducible representation and the entries in the row are the characters of the representation on the respective conjugacy class of G. The columns are labelled by (representatives of) the conjugacy classes of G. It is customary to label the first row by the character of the trivial representation, which is the trivial action of G on a 1-dimensional vector space by for all
. Each entry in the first row is therefore 1. Similarly, it is customary to label the first column by the identity. Therefore, the first column contains the degree of each irreducible character.
Here is the character table of
the cyclic group with three elements and generator u:
(1) | (u) | (u2) | |
1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
χ1 | 1 | ω | ω2 |
χ2 | 1 | ω2 | ω |
where ω is a primitive third root of unity.
The character table is always square, because the number of irreducible representations is equal to the number of conjugacy classes.
Orthogonality relations
The space of complex-valued class functions of a finite group G has a natural inner product:
where β(g) is the complex conjugate of β(g). With respect to this inner product, the irreducible characters form an orthonormal basis for the space of class-functions, and this yields the orthogonality relation for the rows of the character table:
For g, h in G, applying the same inner product to the columns of the character table yields:
where the sum is over all of the irreducible characters χi of G and the symbol |CG(g)| denotes the order of the centralizer of g. Note that since g and h are conjugate iff they are in the same column of the character table, this implies that the columns of the character table are orthogonal.
The orthogonality relations can aid many computations including:
- Decomposing an unknown character as a linear combination of irreducible characters.
- Constructing the complete character table when only some of the irreducible characters are known.
- Finding the orders of the centralizers of representatives of the conjugacy classes of a group.
- Finding the order of the group.
Character table properties
Certain properties of the group G can be deduced from its character table:
- The order of G is given by the sum of the squares of the entries of the first column (the degrees of the irreducible characters). More generally, the sum of the squares of the absolute values of the entries in any column gives the order of the centralizer of an element of the corresponding conjugacy class.
- All normal subgroups of G (and thus whether or not G is simple) can be recognised from its character table. The kernel of a character χ is the set of elements g in G for which χ(g) = χ(1); this is a normal subgroup of G. Each normal subgroup of G is the intersection of the kernels of some of the irreducible characters of G.
- The commutator subgroup of G is the intersection of the kernels of the linear characters of G.
- If G is finite, then since the character table is square and has as many rows as conjugacy classes, it follows that G is abelian iff each conjugacy class is a singleton iff the character table of G is
iff each irreducible character is linear.
- It follows, using some results of Richard Brauer from modular representation theory, that the prime divisors of the orders of the elements of each conjugacy class of a finite group can be deduced from its character table (an observation of Graham Higman).
The character table does not in general determine the group up to isomorphism: for example, the quaternion group Q and the dihedral group of 8 elements, D4, have the same character table. Brauer asked whether the character table, together with the knowledge of how the powers of elements of its conjugacy classes are distributed, determines a finite group up to isomorphism. In 1964, this was answered in the negative by E. C. Dade.
The linear representations of G are themselves a group under the tensor product, since the tensor product of 1-dimensional vector spaces is again 1-dimensional. That is, if and
are linear representations, then
defines a new linear representation. This gives rise to a group of linear characters, called the character group under the operation
. This group is connected to Dirichlet characters and Fourier analysis.
Induced characters and Frobenius reciprocity
The characters discussed in this section are assumed to be complex-valued. Let H be a subgroup of the finite group G. Given a character χ of G, let χH denote its restriction to H. Let θ be a character of H. Ferdinand Georg Frobenius showed how to construct a character of G from θ, using what is now known as Frobenius reciprocity. Since the irreducible characters of G form an orthonormal basis for the space of complex-valued class functions of G, there is a unique class function θG of G with the property that
for each irreducible character χ of G (the leftmost inner product is for class functions of G and the rightmost inner product is for class functions of H). Since the restriction of a character of G to the subgroup H is again a character of H, this definition makes it clear that θG is a non-negative integer combination of irreducible characters of G, so is indeed a character of G. It is known as the character of G induced from θ. The defining formula of Frobenius reciprocity can be extended to general complex-valued class functions.
Given a matrix representation ρ of H, Frobenius later gave an explicit way to construct a matrix representation of G, known as the representation induced from ρ, and written analogously as ρG. This led to an alternative description of the induced character θG. This induced character vanishes on all elements of G which are not conjugate to any element of H. Since the induced character is a class function of G, it is only now necessary to describe its values on elements of H. If one writes G as a disjoint union of right cosets of H, say
then, given an element h of H, we have:
Because θ is a class function of H, this value does not depend on the particular choice of coset representatives.
This alternative description of the induced character sometimes allows explicit computation from relatively little information about the embedding of H in G, and is often useful for calculation of particular character tables. When θ is the trivial character of H, the induced character obtained is known as the permutation character of G (on the cosets of H).
The general technique of character induction and later refinements found numerous applications in finite group theory and elsewhere in mathematics, in the hands of mathematicians such as Emil Artin, Richard Brauer, Walter Feit and Michio Suzuki, as well as Frobenius himself.
Mackey decomposition
The Mackey decomposition was defined and explored by George Mackey in the context of Lie groups, but is a powerful tool in the character theory and representation theory of finite groups. Its basic form concerns the way a character (or module) induced from a subgroup H of a finite group G behaves on restriction back to a (possibly different) subgroup K of G, and makes use of the decomposition of G into (H, K)-double cosets.
If is a disjoint union, and θ is a complex class function of H, then Mackey's formula states that
where θt is the class function of t−1Ht defined by θt(t−1ht) = θ(h) for all h in H. There is a similar formula for the restriction of an induced module to a subgroup, which holds for representations over any ring, and has applications in a wide variety of algebraic and topological contexts.
Mackey decomposition, in conjunction with Frobenius reciprocity, yields a well-known and useful formula for the inner product of two class functions θ and ψ induced from respective subgroups H and K, whose utility lies in the fact that it only depends on how conjugates of H and K intersect each other. The formula (with its derivation) is:
(where T is a full set of (H, K)-double coset representatives, as before). This formula is often used when θ and ψ are linear characters, in which case all the inner products appearing in the right hand sum are either 1 or 0, depending on whether or not the linear characters θt and ψ have the same restriction to t−1Ht ∩ K. If θ and ψ are both trivial characters, then the inner product simplifies to |T|.
"Twisted" dimension
One may interpret the character of a representation as the "twisted" dimension of a vector space. Treating the character as a function of the elements of the group χ(g), its value at the identity is the dimension of the space, since χ(1) = Tr(ρ(1)) = Tr(IV) = dim(V). Accordingly, one can view the other values of the character as "twisted" dimensions.[clarification needed]
One can find analogs or generalizations of statements about dimensions to statements about characters or representations. A sophisticated example of this occurs in the theory of monstrous moonshine: the j-invariant is the graded dimension of an infinite-dimensional graded representation of the Monster group, and replacing the dimension with the character gives the McKay–Thompson series for each element of the Monster group.
Characters of Lie groups and Lie algebras
If is a Lie group and
a finite-dimensional representation of
, the character
of
is defined precisely as for any group as
.
Meanwhile, if is a Lie algebra and
a finite-dimensional representation of
, we can define the character
by
.
The character will satisfy for all
in the associated Lie group
and all
. If we have a Lie group representation and an associated Lie algebra representation, the character
of the Lie algebra representation is related to the character
of the group representation by the formula
.
Suppose now that is a complex semisimple Lie algebra with Cartan subalgebra
. The value of the character
of an irreducible representation
of
is determined by its values on
. The restriction of the character to
can easily be computed in terms of the weight spaces, as follows:
,
where the sum is over all weights of
and where
is the multiplicity of
.
The (restriction to of the) character can be computed more explicitly by the Weyl character formula.
See also
- Irreducible representation § Applications in theoretical physics and chemistry
- Association schemes, a combinatorial generalization of group-character theory.
- Clifford theory, introduced by A. H. Clifford in 1937, yields information about the restriction of a complex irreducible character of a finite group G to a normal subgroup N.
- Frobenius formula
- Real element, a group element g such that χ(g) is a real number for all characters χ
References
- Nicolas Bourbaki, Algèbre, Springer-Verlag, 2012, Chap. 8, p392
- Serre, §2.5
- (Gannon 2006)
- Hall 2015 Proposition 10.12
- Lecture 2 of Fulton, William; Harris, Joe (1991). Representation theory. A first course. Graduate Texts in Mathematics, Readings in Mathematics. Vol. 129. New York: Springer-Verlag. doi:10.1007/978-1-4612-0979-9. ISBN 978-0-387-97495-8. MR 1153249. OCLC 246650103. online
- Gannon, Terry (2006). Moonshine beyond the Monster: The Bridge Connecting Algebra, Modular Forms and Physics. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-83531-2.
- Hall, Brian C. (2015), Lie groups, Lie algebras, and representations: An elementary introduction, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 222 (2nd ed.), Springer, ISBN 978-3319134666
- Isaacs, I.M. (1994). Character Theory of Finite Groups (Corrected reprint of the 1976 original, published by Academic Press. ed.). Dover. ISBN 978-0-486-68014-9.
- James, Gordon; Liebeck, Martin (2001). Representations and Characters of Groups (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-00392-6.
- Serre, Jean-Pierre (1977). Linear Representations of Finite Groups. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 42. Translated from the second French edition by Leonard L. Scott. New York-Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag. doi:10.1007/978-1-4684-9458-7. ISBN 978-0-387-90190-9. MR 0450380.
External links
- Character at PlanetMath.
In mathematics more specifically in group theory the character of a group representation is a function on the group that associates to each group element the trace of the corresponding matrix The character carries the essential information about the representation in a more condensed form Georg Frobenius initially developed representation theory of finite groups entirely based on the characters and without any explicit matrix realization of representations themselves This is possible because a complex representation of a finite group is determined up to isomorphism by its character The situation with representations over a field of positive characteristic so called modular representations is more delicate but Richard Brauer developed a powerful theory of characters in this case as well Many deep theorems on the structure of finite groups use characters of modular representations ApplicationsCharacters of irreducible representations encode many important properties of a group and can thus be used to study its structure Character theory is an essential tool in the classification of finite simple groups Close to half of the proof of the Feit Thompson theorem involves intricate calculations with character values Easier but still essential results that use character theory include Burnside s theorem a purely group theoretic proof of Burnside s theorem has since been found but that proof came over half a century after Burnside s original proof and a theorem of Richard Brauer and Michio Suzuki stating that a finite simple group cannot have a generalized quaternion group as its Sylow 2 subgroup DefinitionsLet V be a finite dimensional vector space over a field F and let r G GL V be a representation of a group G on V The character of r is the function xr G F given by xr g Tr r g displaystyle chi rho g operatorname Tr rho g where Tr is the trace A character xr is called irreducible or simple if r is an irreducible representation The degree of the character x is the dimension of r in characteristic zero this is equal to the value x 1 A character of degree 1 is called linear When G is finite and F has characteristic zero the kernel of the character xr is the normal subgroup ker xr g G xr g xr 1 displaystyle ker chi rho left lbrace g in G mid chi rho g chi rho 1 right rbrace which is precisely the kernel of the representation r However the character is not a group homomorphism in general PropertiesCharacters are class functions that is they each take a constant value on a given conjugacy class More precisely the set of irreducible characters of a given group G into a field F form a basis of the F vector space of all class functions G F Isomorphic representations have the same characters Over a field of characteristic 0 two representations are isomorphic if and only if they have the same character If a representation is the direct sum of subrepresentations then the corresponding character is the sum of the characters of those subrepresentations If a character of the finite group G is restricted to a subgroup H then the result is also a character of H Every character value x g is a sum of n m th roots of unity where n is the degree that is the dimension of the associated vector space of the representation with character x and m is the order of g In particular when F C every such character value is an algebraic integer If F C and x is irreducible then G CG x x x x 1 displaystyle G C G x frac chi x chi 1 is an algebraic integer for all x in G If F is algebraically closed and char F does not divide the order of G then the number of irreducible characters of G is equal to the number of conjugacy classes of G Furthermore in this case the degrees of the irreducible characters are divisors of the order of G and they even divide G Z G if F C Arithmetic properties Let r and s be representations of G Then the following identities hold xr s xr xs displaystyle chi rho oplus sigma chi rho chi sigma xr s xr xs displaystyle chi rho otimes sigma chi rho cdot chi sigma xr xr displaystyle chi rho overline chi rho xAlt2r g 12 xr g 2 xr g2 displaystyle chi scriptscriptstyle rm Alt 2 rho g tfrac 1 2 left left chi rho g right 2 chi rho g 2 right xSym2r g 12 xr g 2 xr g2 displaystyle chi scriptscriptstyle rm Sym 2 rho g tfrac 1 2 left left chi rho g right 2 chi rho g 2 right where r s is the direct sum r s is the tensor product r denotes the conjugate transpose of r and Alt2 is the alternating product Alt2r r r and Sym2 is the symmetric square which is determined by r r r r Sym2r displaystyle rho otimes rho left rho wedge rho right oplus textrm Sym 2 rho Character tablesThe irreducible complex characters of a finite group form a character table which encodes much useful information about the group G in a compact form Each row is labelled by an irreducible representation and the entries in the row are the characters of the representation on the respective conjugacy class of G The columns are labelled by representatives of the conjugacy classes of G It is customary to label the first row by the character of the trivial representation which is the trivial action of G on a 1 dimensional vector space by r g 1 displaystyle rho g 1 for all g G displaystyle g in G Each entry in the first row is therefore 1 Similarly it is customary to label the first column by the identity Therefore the first column contains the degree of each irreducible character Here is the character table of C3 u u3 1 displaystyle C 3 langle u mid u 3 1 rangle the cyclic group with three elements and generator u 1 u u2 1 1 1 1x1 1 w w2x2 1 w2 w where w is a primitive third root of unity The character table is always square because the number of irreducible representations is equal to the number of conjugacy classes Orthogonality relations The space of complex valued class functions of a finite group G has a natural inner product a b 1 G g Ga g b g displaystyle left langle alpha beta right rangle frac 1 G sum g in G alpha g overline beta g where b g is the complex conjugate of b g With respect to this inner product the irreducible characters form an orthonormal basis for the space of class functions and this yields the orthogonality relation for the rows of the character table xi xj 0 if i j 1 if i j displaystyle left langle chi i chi j right rangle begin cases 0 amp mbox if i neq j 1 amp mbox if i j end cases For g h in G applying the same inner product to the columns of the character table yields xixi g xi h CG g if g h are conjugate 0 otherwise displaystyle sum chi i chi i g overline chi i h begin cases left C G g right amp mbox if g h mbox are conjugate 0 amp mbox otherwise end cases where the sum is over all of the irreducible characters xi of G and the symbol CG g denotes the order of the centralizer of g Note that since g and h are conjugate iff they are in the same column of the character table this implies that the columns of the character table are orthogonal The orthogonality relations can aid many computations including Decomposing an unknown character as a linear combination of irreducible characters Constructing the complete character table when only some of the irreducible characters are known Finding the orders of the centralizers of representatives of the conjugacy classes of a group Finding the order of the group Character table properties Certain properties of the group G can be deduced from its character table The order of G is given by the sum of the squares of the entries of the first column the degrees of the irreducible characters More generally the sum of the squares of the absolute values of the entries in any column gives the order of the centralizer of an element of the corresponding conjugacy class All normal subgroups of G and thus whether or not G is simple can be recognised from its character table The kernel of a character x is the set of elements g in G for which x g x 1 this is a normal subgroup of G Each normal subgroup of G is the intersection of the kernels of some of the irreducible characters of G The commutator subgroup of G is the intersection of the kernels of the linear characters of G If G is finite then since the character table is square and has as many rows as conjugacy classes it follows that G is abelian iff each conjugacy class is a singleton iff the character table of G is G G displaystyle G times G iff each irreducible character is linear It follows using some results of Richard Brauer from modular representation theory that the prime divisors of the orders of the elements of each conjugacy class of a finite group can be deduced from its character table an observation of Graham Higman The character table does not in general determine the group up to isomorphism for example the quaternion group Q and the dihedral group of 8 elements D4 have the same character table Brauer asked whether the character table together with the knowledge of how the powers of elements of its conjugacy classes are distributed determines a finite group up to isomorphism In 1964 this was answered in the negative by E C Dade The linear representations of G are themselves a group under the tensor product since the tensor product of 1 dimensional vector spaces is again 1 dimensional That is if r1 G V1 displaystyle rho 1 G to V 1 and r2 G V2 displaystyle rho 2 G to V 2 are linear representations then r1 r2 g r1 g r2 g displaystyle rho 1 otimes rho 2 g rho 1 g otimes rho 2 g defines a new linear representation This gives rise to a group of linear characters called the character group under the operation x1 x2 g x1 g x2 g displaystyle chi 1 chi 2 g chi 1 g chi 2 g This group is connected to Dirichlet characters and Fourier analysis Induced characters and Frobenius reciprocityThe characters discussed in this section are assumed to be complex valued Let H be a subgroup of the finite group G Given a character x of G let xH denote its restriction to H Let 8 be a character of H Ferdinand Georg Frobenius showed how to construct a character of G from 8 using what is now known as Frobenius reciprocity Since the irreducible characters of G form an orthonormal basis for the space of complex valued class functions of G there is a unique class function 8G of G with the property that 8G x G 8 xH H displaystyle langle theta G chi rangle G langle theta chi H rangle H for each irreducible character x of G the leftmost inner product is for class functions of G and the rightmost inner product is for class functions of H Since the restriction of a character of G to the subgroup H is again a character of H this definition makes it clear that 8G is a non negative integer combination of irreducible characters of G so is indeed a character of G It is known as the character of G induced from 8 The defining formula of Frobenius reciprocity can be extended to general complex valued class functions Given a matrix representation r of H Frobenius later gave an explicit way to construct a matrix representation of G known as the representation induced from r and written analogously as rG This led to an alternative description of the induced character 8G This induced character vanishes on all elements of G which are not conjugate to any element of H Since the induced character is a class function of G it is only now necessary to describe its values on elements of H If one writes G as a disjoint union of right cosets of H say G Ht1 Htn displaystyle G Ht 1 cup ldots cup Ht n then given an element h of H we have 8G h i tihti 1 H8 tihti 1 displaystyle theta G h sum i t i ht i 1 in H theta left t i ht i 1 right Because 8 is a class function of H this value does not depend on the particular choice of coset representatives This alternative description of the induced character sometimes allows explicit computation from relatively little information about the embedding of H in G and is often useful for calculation of particular character tables When 8 is the trivial character of H the induced character obtained is known as the permutation character of G on the cosets of H The general technique of character induction and later refinements found numerous applications in finite group theory and elsewhere in mathematics in the hands of mathematicians such as Emil Artin Richard Brauer Walter Feit and Michio Suzuki as well as Frobenius himself Mackey decompositionThe Mackey decomposition was defined and explored by George Mackey in the context of Lie groups but is a powerful tool in the character theory and representation theory of finite groups Its basic form concerns the way a character or module induced from a subgroup H of a finite group G behaves on restriction back to a possibly different subgroup K of G and makes use of the decomposition of G into H K double cosets If G t THtK textstyle G bigcup t in T HtK is a disjoint union and 8 is a complex class function of H then Mackey s formula states that 8G K t T 8t t 1Ht K K displaystyle left theta G right K sum t in T left left theta t right t 1 Ht cap K right K where 8t is the class function of t 1Ht defined by 8t t 1ht 8 h for all h in H There is a similar formula for the restriction of an induced module to a subgroup which holds for representations over any ring and has applications in a wide variety of algebraic and topological contexts Mackey decomposition in conjunction with Frobenius reciprocity yields a well known and useful formula for the inner product of two class functions 8 and ps induced from respective subgroups H and K whose utility lies in the fact that it only depends on how conjugates of H and K intersect each other The formula with its derivation is 8G psG 8G K ps t T 8t t 1Ht K K ps t T 8t t 1Ht K pst 1Ht K displaystyle begin aligned left langle theta G psi G right rangle amp left langle left theta G right K psi right rangle amp sum t in T left langle left left theta t right t 1 Ht cap K right K psi right rangle amp sum t in T left langle left theta t right t 1 Ht cap K psi t 1 Ht cap K right rangle end aligned where T is a full set of H K double coset representatives as before This formula is often used when 8 and ps are linear characters in which case all the inner products appearing in the right hand sum are either 1 or 0 depending on whether or not the linear characters 8t and ps have the same restriction to t 1Ht K If 8 and ps are both trivial characters then the inner product simplifies to T Twisted dimensionOne may interpret the character of a representation as the twisted dimension of a vector space Treating the character as a function of the elements of the group x g its value at the identity is the dimension of the space since x 1 Tr r 1 Tr IV dim V Accordingly one can view the other values of the character as twisted dimensions clarification needed One can find analogs or generalizations of statements about dimensions to statements about characters or representations A sophisticated example of this occurs in the theory of monstrous moonshine the j invariant is the graded dimension of an infinite dimensional graded representation of the Monster group and replacing the dimension with the character gives the McKay Thompson series for each element of the Monster group Characters of Lie groups and Lie algebrasIf G displaystyle G is a Lie group and r displaystyle rho a finite dimensional representation of G displaystyle G the character xr displaystyle chi rho of r displaystyle rho is defined precisely as for any group as xr g Tr r g displaystyle chi rho g operatorname Tr rho g Meanwhile if g displaystyle mathfrak g is a Lie algebra and r displaystyle rho a finite dimensional representation of g displaystyle mathfrak g we can define the character xr displaystyle chi rho by xr X Tr er X displaystyle chi rho X operatorname Tr e rho X The character will satisfy xr Adg X xr X displaystyle chi rho operatorname Ad g X chi rho X for all g displaystyle g in the associated Lie group G displaystyle G and all X g displaystyle X in mathfrak g If we have a Lie group representation and an associated Lie algebra representation the character xr displaystyle chi rho of the Lie algebra representation is related to the character Xr displaystyle mathrm X rho of the group representation by the formula xr X Xr eX displaystyle chi rho X mathrm X rho e X Suppose now that g displaystyle mathfrak g is a complex semisimple Lie algebra with Cartan subalgebra h displaystyle mathfrak h The value of the character xr displaystyle chi rho of an irreducible representation r displaystyle rho of g displaystyle mathfrak g is determined by its values on h displaystyle mathfrak h The restriction of the character to h displaystyle mathfrak h can easily be computed in terms of the weight spaces as follows xr H lmlel H H h displaystyle chi rho H sum lambda m lambda e lambda H quad H in mathfrak h where the sum is over all weights l displaystyle lambda of r displaystyle rho and where ml displaystyle m lambda is the multiplicity of l displaystyle lambda The restriction to h displaystyle mathfrak h of the character can be computed more explicitly by the Weyl character formula See alsoIrreducible representation Applications in theoretical physics and chemistry Association schemes a combinatorial generalization of group character theory Clifford theory introduced by A H Clifford in 1937 yields information about the restriction of a complex irreducible character of a finite group G to a normal subgroup N Frobenius formula Real element a group element g such that x g is a real number for all characters xReferencesNicolas Bourbaki Algebre Springer Verlag 2012 Chap 8 p392 Serre 2 5 Gannon 2006 Hall 2015 Proposition 10 12 Lecture 2 of Fulton William Harris Joe 1991 Representation theory A first course Graduate Texts in Mathematics Readings in Mathematics Vol 129 New York Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 0979 9 ISBN 978 0 387 97495 8 MR 1153249 OCLC 246650103 online Gannon Terry 2006 Moonshine beyond the Monster The Bridge Connecting Algebra Modular Forms and Physics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 83531 2 Hall Brian C 2015 Lie groups Lie algebras and representations An elementary introduction Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 222 2nd ed Springer ISBN 978 3319134666 Isaacs I M 1994 Character Theory of Finite Groups Corrected reprint of the 1976 original published by Academic Press ed Dover ISBN 978 0 486 68014 9 James Gordon Liebeck Martin 2001 Representations and Characters of Groups 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 00392 6 Serre Jean Pierre 1977 Linear Representations of Finite Groups Graduate Texts in Mathematics Vol 42 Translated from the second French edition by Leonard L Scott New York Heidelberg Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 1 4684 9458 7 ISBN 978 0 387 90190 9 MR 0450380 External linksCharacter at PlanetMath