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6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration Measure, Orthonormality and Completeness Relations 6.5 Multi-Valued Representations 6.6 Continuous Translational Group in One Dimension 6.7 Conjugate Basis Vectors

6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

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Page 1: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups

6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration Measure, Orthonormality and

Completeness Relations 6.5 Multi-Valued Representations 6.6 Continuous Translational Group in One Dimension 6.7 Conjugate Basis Vectors

Page 2: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

Introduction

• Lie Group, rough definition:

Infinite group that can be parametrized smoothly & analytically.

• Exact definition:

A differentiable manifold that is also a group.• Linear Lie groups = Classical Lie groups

= Matrix groups

E.g. O(n), SO(n), U(n), SU(n), E(n), SL(n), L, P, …• Generators, Lie algebra• Invariant measure• Global structure / Topology

Page 3: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

6.1. The Rotation Group SO(2)

1 1 2cos sinR e e e

2 1 2sin cosR e e e

ji j iR e e R cos sin

sin cosR

1 2 1 2

cos sin

sin cosR e R e e e

2 1 2,span e e E2-D Euclidean space

Rotations about origin O by angle :

Page 4: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

2 x Eiie xx

2 2:R E E

by R x x x iiR e x j i

j ie R x j

je x

jj i

ix R x

2 iix x x

2 jjx x x j ki

ki jR x R x

Rotation is length preserving:

j k kii j

R R TR R E

i.e., R() is special orthogonal.

2det det det 1TO O O det 1O

O n All n n orthogonal matrices

2SO R det 1R

If O is orthogonal,

T TO O E O O

Page 5: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

Theorem 6.1:

There is a 1–1 correspondence between rotations in n & SO(n) matrices.

Proof: see Problem 6.1

Geometrically: 2 1 1 2 1 2R R R R R

and 2R n R n Z

Theorem 6.2: 2-D Rotational Group R2 = SO(2)

2 2R SO is an Abelian group under matrix multiplication with

0E R

and inverse

identity element

1 2R R R

Proof: Straightforward.

SO(2) group manifoldSO(2) is a Lie group of 1 (continuous) parameter

Page 6: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

6.2. The Generator of SO(2)

Lie group: elements connected to E can be acquired by a few generators.

0R d E i d J

For SO(2), there is only 1 generator J defined by

d RR d R d

d

R() is continuous function of

R R d R i d R J

d Ri R J

d

with 0R E

J is a 22 matrix

Theorem 6.3: Generator J of SO(2)

i JR e

Page 7: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

Comment:

• Structure of a Lie group ( the part that's connected to E ) is determined by a set of generators.

• These generators are determined by the local structure near E.

• Properties of the portions of the group not connected to E are determined by global topological properties.

cos sin

sin cos

d dR d

d d

1

1

d

d

E i d J

0

0

iJ

i

y Pauli matrix

J is traceless, Hermitian, & idempotent ( J2 = E ) i JR e

12 2 1

0 12 ! 2 1 !

j jj j

j j

E i Jj j

cos sinE i J cos sin

sin cos

Page 8: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

6.3. IRs of SO(2)

Let U() be the realization of R() on V.

2 1 1 2U U U 1 2U U 2U n U

U d E i d J i JU e

U() unitary J Hermitian

SO(2) Abelian All of its IRs are 1-D

The basis | of a minimal invariant subspace under SO(2) can be chosen as

J iU e so that

2U n U 2i n ie e m Z

IR Um : J m m m m i mU m m e

m = 0: 0 1U Identity representation

Page 9: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

m = 1: 1 iU e SO(2) mapped clockwise onto unit circle in C plane

m = 1: 1 iU e … counterclockwise …

m = n:

n i nU e SO(2) mapped n times around unit circle in C plane

Theorem 6.4: IRs of SO(2)

Single-valued IRs of SO(2) are given by m i mU e mZ

Only m = 1 are faithful

Representation cos sin

sin cosR

is reducible

1 1R U U

0

0

iJ

i

has eigenvalues 1 with eigenvectors

1 2

1

2e e i e

Problem 6.2

J e e iR e e e

Page 10: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

6.4. Invariant Integration Measure, Orthonormality & Completeness Relations

Finite group g Continuous group dgIssue 1: Different parametrizations

d f g d f g

ξ

ξ ξ φ φφ

d f g φ φ

Remedy: Introduce weight :

gd d φ φ

d f g d f g ξ ξ ξ φ φ φso that &analytic f ξ φ

ξφ ξ φ

φ

Changing parametrization to = (), we have,

gd f g d f g φ φ

where = ( 1, …n ) & f is any complex-valued function of g.

1 nd d d φ

1

1

, ,

, ,n

n

ξ

φ

Let G = { g() } & define

Page 11: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

Issue 2: Rearrangement Theorem

1g gM g Md f g d f g g

gg g G ξ

Let g g gd d ξ ξ

g g g g g gd d ξ ξ

g g gd d g g g g g gd d ξ ξ ξ ξ

g gG Gd f g d f g g

M G Since

R.T. is satisfied by setting M = G if dg is (left) invariant, i.e.,

g g gd d g G

g g g gg g g ξ ξ ξ

e g gd d 0 ξ ξ ξ , eg e ξ 0

( Notation changed ! )

g gMd f g g

Page 12: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

g g g gg g g ξ ξ ξFrom one can determine the (vector) function : ;g g g g ξ χ ξ ξ

g g ed J dξ ξ ξ

;g gξ χ 0 ξ

where deti

g g jJ Jξ ξ

;

g

ii g g

g jjg

J

ξ 0

ξ ξξ

eg g e

g

d

d ξξ 0

ξ e

gJ

0

ξ e(0) is arbitrary

g e

Theorem 6.5: SO(2) gd d

Proof: R R R ;

0

;J

1 Setting e(0) = 1 completes proof.

Page 13: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

Theorem 6.6: Orthonormality & Completeness Relations for SO(2)

2

0 2m m

n n

dU U

Orthonormality

†nn

n

U U

Completeness

Proof: These are just the Fourier theorem since n i nU e

Comments:

• These relations are generalizations of the finite group results with g dg

• Cf. results for Td ( roles of continuous & discrete labels reversed )

Page 14: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

6.5. Multi-Valued Representations

Consider representation / 21/ 2

iR U e

/ 21/ 2 1/ 22 iU e U

/ 21/ 2 1/ 24 iU e U 2-valued representation

m-valued representations :

//

i n mn mR U e ( if n,m has no common factor )

Comments:

• Multi-connected manifold multi-valued IRs:

• For SO(2): group manifold = circle Multi-connected because paths of different winding numbers cannot be continuously deformed into each other.

• Only single & double valued reps have physical correspondence in 3-D systems ( anyons can exist in 2-D systems ).

Page 15: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

6.6. Continuous Translational Group in 1-D

R() ~ translation on unit circle by arc length

Similarity between reps of R(2) & Td

Let the translation by distance x be denoted by T(x)

Given a state | x0 localized at x0,

0 0T x x x x is localized at x0+x

0 0T x T x x T x x x 0x x x 0T x x x 0x

T x T x T x x

0 00 0T x x 0x 0E x 0x 0T E

T x T x T x x 0T E 1T x T x

1T T x x R is a 1-parameter Abelian Lie group

= Continuous Translational Group in 1-D

Page 16: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

T dx E i dx P Generator P:

dTT x dx T x dx

d x

T x T dx T x i dx P

dT xi P T x

d x

i P xT x e

For a unitary representation T(x) Up(x), P is Hermitian with real eigenvalue p. Basis of Up(x) is the eigenvector | p of P:

P p p p p i p xU x p p e pR

Comments:

1. IRs of SO(2), Td & T1 are all exponentials: e–i m , e–i k n b & e–i p x, resp.

Cause: same group multiplication rules.

2. Group parameters arecontinuous & bounded for SO(2) = { R() }discrete & unbounded for Td = { T(n) }continuous & unbounded for T1 = { T(x) }

Page 17: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

Invariant measure for T1: gd C dx

2p

p

d xU x U x p p

Orthonormality

2p

p

d pU x U x x x

Completeness

C = (2)–1 is determined by comparison with the Fourier theorem.

SO(2) Td T1

Orthonormality mn (k–k) (p–p)

Completeness (–) nn (x–x)

Page 18: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

6.7. Conjugate Basis Vectors

Reminder: 2 kind of basis vectors for Td.

• | x localized state

• | E k extended normal mode

,E ku x x E k

T n x x nb

i k n bT n E k E k e

H E k E E k

For SO(2):

• | = localized state at ( r=const, )

• | m = eigenstate of J & R()

0 0U

0U m

m m

0m m U † 0U m

0 i mm e

i mU m m e

Setting 0 1m gives i mm e m

transfer matrix elements m | = representation function e–i m

Page 19: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

i m

m

m e

i mm e

2 2

0 02 2i m mi m

m

d de m e

m mm

m

m

mm

m

2 ways to expand an arbitrary state | :

2

0 2

d

m

m m i mm

m

e

m m 2

0 2

dm

2

0 2i md

e

Page 20: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

i m

m

J J m e

i m

m

m m e

i

1

Ji

in the x-representation

J J J is Hermitian:1

i

1

i

J = angular momentum component plane of rotation

Page 21: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

For T1:

• | x = localized state at x

• | p = eigenstate of P & T(x)

0 0T x x x x

i p xT x p p e

2

d px p p x

0p x p T x 0i p xe p i p xe p | 0 set to 1

2i p xd p

p e

2i p p xi p x d p

d x e x p d x e

2i p xd p

x x x p e

2i p x xd pe

x x

d p p p p

p

i p xp p d x e p x

i p p xd x e

2 p p

T is unitary

Page 22: 6. One-Dimensional Continuous Groups 6.1 The Rotation Group SO(2) 6.2 The Generator of SO(2) 6.3 Irreducible Representations of SO(2) 6.4 Invariant Integration

2 ways to expand an arbitrary state | :

d x x x

2

d pp p

d x x x

2

d pp p

x x 2

d px p p

2

i p xd pe p

p p d x p x x

i p xd x e x

x P P x P+ = P :

2i p xd p

P x P p e

i xx

1x

i x

1

xi x

1P

i x

on V = span{ | x } P = linear momentum