lavinia said:
I have read most Chevalley's book.
Then you know more than I do about Lie groups.
How shall we go about this? It might be boring to go through Emanuel's book in order. I'll jump to a crucial point and we can go back and pick up the background. Perhaps you can explain what a "once extended group" is.
Summarizing the first section of Chaper 5 with some excerpts:
The general form for a first-order ODE is:
[itex]f(x,y,y') = 0 \[/itex] (5.1)
(I don't know how to make LaTex leave more spaces between the equations and the numbers, which follow them.)
"We assume this ODE is invariant under a [one parameter] group whose symbol is [itex]U f[/itex].
That sounds like old-fashioned jargon. What would the "symbol" of the group be? Is it the so-called "infinitesimal transformation"? I'll explain what he says about it below.
In a previous chapter he discusses "function invariance" under groups. Of "function invariance", he begins by saying:
We start with a function [itex]f(x,y)[/itex]. The condition under which it is invariant with respect to the the group is determined next. By this we mean that
[itex]f_1 = f(x_1, y_1) = f(x,y)[/itex] (4.1)
I have to go back another chapter to make sense of that notation. In the previous chapters he has defined the group element corresponding to the value of the parameter [itex]\alpha[/itex] as the transformation that sends [itex](x,y)[/itex] to [itex](x_1,y_1)[/itex] by the formulae:
[itex]x_1 = \phi(x,y,\alpha)[/itex] (2.3)
[itex]y_1 = \psi(x,y,\alpha)[/itex]
Where [itex]\phi[/itex] and [itex]\psi[/itex] are known functions.
In terms of those functions, he defines:
[itex]\zeta = \frac{\partial \phi}{\partial \alpha}|_0[/itex]
[itex]\eta = \frac{\partial \psi}{\partial \alpha}|_0[/itex]
The differential operator [itex]U[/itex] is defined by
[itex]U f = \zeta f_x + \eta f_y[/itex], which is (I think)
[itex]U f = \zeta \frac{\partial f}{\partial x} + \eta \frac{\partial f}{\partial y}[/itex].
Returning to his treatment of function invariance, he says
[tex]f(x_1,y_1) = f(x,y) + \alpha U f + \frac{\alpha^2}{2} U^2 f + ...[/tex]
we observe that a necessary a sufficient condition for [itex]f[/itex] to be an invariant function of the group, is for
[itex]Uf = 0[/itex] (4.2)
I'll end this post with that note. To formulate the definition of invariance for [itex]f(x,y,y')[/itex] he has to introduce the notion of the "once extended" group.
Anyone have any geometric insight about the above concepts?