Prove that Casimir operators commute with the elements of Lie algebra

JTFreitas
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Homework Statement
Consider a vector space of dimension ##n## of a semi-simple Lie algebra ##\mathcal{L}## with basis ##{a_1, a_2, ..., a_n}##, and the composition law:

$$ [a_r, a_s] = \sum_{p = 1}^{n} c_{rs}^{p}a_{p} $$

Prove that the Casimir operator acting on the vector space commutes with all the elements of the Lie algebra, ##a_r##:
Relevant Equations
The Casimir operator ##C## is defined as
$$C = \sum_{i,j} g_{ij}a_{i}a_{j} $$
where
$$g_{ij} = \sum_{l,k}c_{ik}^{l}c_{jl}^{k} $$

Where the numbers ##c_{rs}^{p}## are the structure constants of ##\mathcal{L}##, defined according to

$$[a, a_{s}] = \sum_{p = 1}^{n} \text{ad}(a)_{ps}a_{p} $$
and
$$[a_{r}, a_{s}] = \sum_{p=1}^{n} c_{rs}^{p}a_{p}$$
which implies that
$${\text{ad}(a_r)}_{ps} = c_{rs}^{p}$$
I want to show that ##[C, a_{r}] = 0##. This means that:
$$ Ca_{r} - a_{r}C = \sum_{i,j} g_{ij}a_{i}a_{j}a_{r} - a_{r}\sum_{i,j} g_{ij}a_{i}a_{j} = 0$$

I don't understand what manipulating I can do here. I have tried to rewrite ##g_{ij}## in terms of the structure constants:$$\sum_{i,j}\sum_{l,k}c_{ik}^{l}c_{jl}^{k}a_{i}a_{j}a_{r} - a_{r}\sum_{i,j}\sum_{l,k}c_{ik}^{l}c_{jl}^{k}a_{i}a_{j}$$

Now, I am not sure I can do this, since ##a_r## isn't necessarily part of the sums, but I know that

$$a_{j}a_{r} = [a_{j}, a_{r}] + a_{r}a_{j}$$

Hence the expression becomes

$$\sum_{i,j}\sum_{l,k}c_{ik}^{l}c_{jl}^{k}a_{i}([a_{j}, a_{r}] + a_{r}a_{j}) - a_{r}\sum_{i,j}\sum_{l,k}c_{ik}^{l}c_{jl}^{k}a_{i}a_{j}$$
And based on the composition law, the expression becomes

$$\sum_{i,j}\sum_{l,k}c_{ik}^{l}c_{jl}^{k}a_{i}\left(\sum_{p = 1}^{n} c_{jr}^{p}a_{p} + a_{r}a_{j}\right) - a_{r}\sum_{i,j}\sum_{l,k}c_{ik}^{l}c_{jl}^{k}a_{i}a_{j}$$

And this is where I am completely out of ideas about tackling the expression.
Is my work up to this point even valid? Any pointers on how to proceed from here would be very much appreciated.
 
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JTFreitas said:
The Casimir operator ##C## is defined as
##C = \sum_{i,j} g_{ij}a_{i}a_{j}##
where
##g_{ij} = \sum_{l,k}c_{ik}^{l}c_{jl}^{k}##

Is this really how ##C## is defined? My references use the inverse of ##g_{ij}## in the definition of ##C##.
 
George Jones said:
Is this really how ##C## is defined? My references use the inverse of ##g_{ij}## in the definition of ##C##.
Thank you for taking a look at it.
I just double-checked, and according to my textbook, it is defined with ##g_{ij}## as is.
 
We have to show that ##C(X)\in \operatorname{Z(U}(\mathfrak{g}))##. Wikipedia mentions that this is due to the invariance of the bilinear form the Casimir operator is defined by (which also might explain the two different definitions in your and @George Jones' book). In the case above it is the Killing-form ##\operatorname{B}(X,Y)=\operatorname{trace}(\operatorname{ad}(X)\circ \operatorname{ad}(Y))## of the semesimple Lie algebra ##\mathfrak{g}.## Thus invariance means
$$
B(\operatorname{ad}(Z)(X),Y)= B([Z,X],Y)=-B(X,[Z,Y])=-B(X,\operatorname{ad}(Z)(Y))
$$
where the Casimir operator is given by ##C=\sum_{i=1}^n a_iB(a_i,-).##I assume if you take these equations and fight your way through the coordinates, then you will be able to prove that ##C(X)## is in the center of ##\operatorname{U}(\mathfrak{g})## for all ##X\in \mathfrak{g}.##
 
Last edited:
JTFreitas said:
Homework Statement:: Consider a vector space of dimension ##n## of a semi-simple Lie algebra ##\mathcal{L}## with basis ##{a_1, a_2, ..., a_n}##, and the composition law:

$$ [a_r, a_s] = \sum_{p = 1}^{n} c_{rs}^{p}a_{p} $$

Prove that the Casimir operator acting on the vector space commutes with all the elements of the Lie algebra, ##a_r##:
Relevant Equations:: The Casimir operator ##C## is defined as
$$C = \sum_{i,j} g_{ij}a_{i}a_{j} $$
where
$$g_{ij} = \sum_{l,k}c_{ik}^{l}c_{jl}^{k} $$

Where the numbers ##c_{rs}^{p}## are the structure constants of ##\mathcal{L}##, defined according to

$$[a, a_{s}] = \sum_{p = 1}^{n} \text{ad}(a)_{ps}a_{p} $$
and
$$[a_{r}, a_{s}] = \sum_{p=1}^{n} c_{rs}^{p}a_{p}$$
which implies that
$${\text{ad}(a_r)}_{ps} = c_{rs}^{p}$$

Since your Lie algebra is semi-simple, can you choose a basis such that ##g_{ij}## has a particularly nice form?
 
George Jones said:
Since your Lie algebra is semi-simple, can you choose a basis such that ##g_{ij}## has a particularly nice form?
It already has a particularly nice form, namely the Killing form. I am pretty sure it would be a lot easier to prove without coordinates, just using the adjoint representation and the fact that the Killing form is non degenerate.
 
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