A Group H is a Lie Subgroup to Lie Group G if H is a closed subgroup to G.
The word Lie need not be there.
Now first of all, is this a definition of Lie Subgroup?
Yes, but the wording is bad. This is why you are asking about "closed".
Second, what does it mean that the subgroup is "closed"? I thought all groups where closed under group multiplication.. :/ Help?
A subgroup H of a group G is a subset {h} of elements of G which closes with respect to the multiplication already defined by G ( h.k in H for all h,k in H) and which contains the inverse of each of its elements h, and the identity e. If the subset {h} does not close, i.e., if
<br />
h.k \in G \ \mbox{not in H}, \ h,k \in H<br />
then the set {h} does form a group.
Subgroups arise by imposing a restriction on the original group, e.g. restricting the 3-dimensional group of rotations to rotations about one axis, or to discrete rotations.
The most interesting subgroups are the so-called invariant subgroups; an invariant subgroup H of G is one which is invariant with respect to conjugation with G, i.e.,
<br />
ghg^{-1} \in H \ \ \mbox{for all} \ \ h \in H, \ g \in G<br />
The translation subgroups of the spacetime groups are invariant subgroups because they are transformed into themselves by rotations.
Also, when H is an invariant subgroup, the coset manifold G/H forms a group called the quotient group.
regards
sam