Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of tables
- Notation
- PART I LINEAR ALGEBRAIC GROUPS
- 1 Basic concepts
- 2 Jordan decomposition
- 3 Commutative linear algebraic groups
- 4 Connected solvable groups
- 5 G-spaces and quotients
- 6 Borel subgroups
- 7 The Lie algebra of a linear algebraic group
- 8 Structure of reductive groups
- 9 The classification of semisimple algebraic groups
- 10 Exercises for Part I
- PART II SUBGROUP STRUCTURE AND REPRESENTATION THEORY OF SEMISIMPLE ALGEBRAIC GROUPS
- PART III FINITE GROUPS OF LIE TYPE
- Appendix A Root systems
- Appendix B Subsystems
- Appendix C Automorphisms of root systems
- References
- Index
9 - The classification of semisimple algebraic groups
from PART I - LINEAR ALGEBRAIC GROUPS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of tables
- Notation
- PART I LINEAR ALGEBRAIC GROUPS
- 1 Basic concepts
- 2 Jordan decomposition
- 3 Commutative linear algebraic groups
- 4 Connected solvable groups
- 5 G-spaces and quotients
- 6 Borel subgroups
- 7 The Lie algebra of a linear algebraic group
- 8 Structure of reductive groups
- 9 The classification of semisimple algebraic groups
- 10 Exercises for Part I
- PART II SUBGROUP STRUCTURE AND REPRESENTATION THEORY OF SEMISIMPLE ALGEBRAIC GROUPS
- PART III FINITE GROUPS OF LIE TYPE
- Appendix A Root systems
- Appendix B Subsystems
- Appendix C Automorphisms of root systems
- References
- Index
Summary
The aim here is to achieve a classification of semisimple algebraic groups in terms of combinatorial data. It is clear from the previous section that the set of roots plays an essential role in the structure of reductive groups. We now formalize this concept.
Root systems
Let G be a connected reductive group and T ≤ G a maximal torus. Then associated to this we have a finite set of roots Φ ⊂ X ≔ X(T) with the finite Weyl group W acting faithfully on X, preserving Φ (see Proposition 8.4). Recall the group Y = Y(T) of cocharacters of T and the pairing 〈, 〉 : X × Y → ℤ defined in Section 3.2. We identify X and Y with subgroups of E ≔ X ⊗ℤ ℝ and E∨ ≔ Y ⊗ℤ ℝ, respectively, and denote the induced pairing on E × E∨ also by 〈, 〉. The actions of W on X and on Y may be extended to actions on E and E∨. Recall the reflections sα ∈ W introduced in Section 8.4.
We first axiomatize the combinatorial properties satisfied by these data.
Definition 9.1 A subset Φ of a finite-dimensional real vector space E is called an (abstract) root system in E if the following properties are satisfied:
(R1) Φ is finite, 0 ∉ Φ, 〈Φ〉 = E;
(R2) if c ∈ ℝ is such that α, cα ∈ Φ, then c = ±1;
(R3) […]
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- Information
- Linear Algebraic Groups and Finite Groups of Lie Type , pp. 63 - 73Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011