Pietjuh
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I've been starting to study some things about representation theory. I've come to the point where they introduced the dual of a representation.
Suppose that \rho is a representation on a vector space V.
They then define the dual representation \rho^* as:
\rho^*(g) = \rho(g^{-1})^t: V^* \to V^*
But the thing is that I don't see why they use g^{-1} in this definition instead of just g?
Suppose that \rho is a representation on a vector space V.
They then define the dual representation \rho^* as:
\rho^*(g) = \rho(g^{-1})^t: V^* \to V^*
But the thing is that I don't see why they use g^{-1} in this definition instead of just g?