Complexifying su(2) to get sl(2,C)-group thread footnote

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The discussion centers on the relationship between the Lie algebra su(2) and the complexified Lie algebra sl(2,C). It explains that sl(2,C) consists of trace-zero 2x2 matrices, and any matrix in sl(2,C) can be uniquely decomposed into skew-Hermitian components. The decomposition reveals that any matrix X in sl(2,C) can be expressed as a sum of two matrices A and B from su(2). The conversation also touches on the representation of SL(2,C) in physics, particularly in relation to boosts and rotations, and hints at the complexities of topology and geometry in these contexts. Overall, the thread emphasizes the mathematical connections between these algebraic structures.
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Complexifying su(2) to get sl(2,C)---group thread footnote

On the group thread midterm exam (which we never had to take!) it says what is the LA of the matrix group SL(2, C)
and the answer is the TRACE ZERO 2x2 matrices.
So that is what sl(2,C) is.
When you exponentiate one of the little critters, det = exp trace,
so the determinant is one which is what SL means.

Any X in sl(2,C) has a unique decomposition into skew hermitians that goes like this

X = (X - X*)/2 + i(X + X*)/2i

and these two skew hermitians
(X - X*)/2 and (X + X*)/2i
are trace zero, because trace is linear

check the skew hermitiandom of them:
(X - X*)* = (X* - X) = - (X - X*)

the other one checks because (1/2i)* = - (1/2i)
since conjugation does not change (X + X*)* = (X + X*)

so the upshot is that any X in sl(2,C) is composed
X = A + iB
of two matrices A and B in su(2)

Also on the midterm was the fact that su(2) is the skew hermitian ones: A* = - A.

There was this footnote on complexification of LAs and the above suffices to show, without much further ado, that su(2)C the complexification of su(2) is isomorphic to sl(2, C)
 
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SL(2,C) is a representation of the group of boosts and turns, so why doesn't it show up in our descriptions instead of the 4×4 Dirac spinors?
 
Well, there you go: Topology/Non-Euclidian Geomerty, like poverty and ignorance: We will always have them with us.

Rudy

"Go Figure." - Archimedes
 
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Here is a little puzzle from the book 100 Geometric Games by Pierre Berloquin. The side of a small square is one meter long and the side of a larger square one and a half meters long. One vertex of the large square is at the center of the small square. The side of the large square cuts two sides of the small square into one- third parts and two-thirds parts. What is the area where the squares overlap?

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