Amenable group: Difference between revisions

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m →‎Equivalent conditions for amenability: Corrected Kesten's condition to be about the L^2 operator rather than the L^1.
 
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Hello! My name is Carri. <br>It is a little about myself: I live in Germany, my city of Wadern. <br>It's called often Northern or cultural capital of SL. I've married 2 years ago.<br>I have 2 children - a son (Sebastian) and the daughter (Waylon). We all like Footbag.<br><br>my homepage - [http://facebook18.com/index.php?do=/profile-11827/info/ Online Coupon Coupon Code 4inkjets]
 
In [[mathematics]], an '''infinitesimal transformation''' is a [[limit (mathematics)|limiting]] form of ''small'' [[transformation (geometry)|transformation]]. For example one may talk about an '''[[infinitesimal rotation]]''' of a [[rigid body]], in three-dimensional space. This is conventionally represented by a 3&times;3 [[skew-symmetric matrix]] ''A''. It is not the matrix of an actual [[rotation]] in space; but for small real values of a parameter ε we have
 
:<math>I+\varepsilon A</math>
 
a small rotation, up to quantities of order ε<sup>2</sup>.
==History==
A comprehensive theory of infinitesimal transformations was first given by [[Sophus Lie]]. Indeed this was at the heart of his work, on what are now called [[Lie group]]s and their accompanying [[Lie algebra]]s; and the identification of their role in [[geometry]] and especially the theory of [[differential equation]]s. The properties of an abstract [[Lie algebra]] are exactly those definitive of infinitesimal transformations, just as the axioms of [[group theory]] embody [[symmetry]]. The term "Lie algebra" was introduced in 1934 by [[Hermann Weyl]], for what had until then been known as the ''algebra of infinitesimal transformations'' of a Lie group.
==Examples==
For example, in the case of infinitesimal rotations, the Lie algebra structure is that provided by the [[cross product]], once a skew-symmetric matrix has been identified with a 3-[[Vector (geometric)|vector]]. This amounts to choosing an axis vector for the rotations; the defining [[Jacobi identity]] is a well-known property of cross products.
 
The earliest example of an infinitesimal transformation that may have been recognised as such was in [[Euler's theorem on homogeneous functions]]. Here it is stated that a function ''F'' of ''n'' variables ''x''<sub>1</sub>, ..., ''x''<sub>''n''</sub> that is homogeneous of degree ''r'', satisfies
 
:<math>H\cdot F=rF \, </math>
 
with
 
:<math>H=\sum_i x_i{\partial\over\partial x_i},</math>
 
a [[differential operator]]. That is, from the property
 
:<math>F(\lambda x_1,\dots, \lambda x_n)=\lambda^r F(x_1,\dots,x_n)\,</math>
 
we can in effect differentiate with respect to λ and then set λ equal to 1. This then becomes a [[necessary condition]] on a [[smooth function]] ''F'' to have the homogeneity property; it is also sufficient (by using [[Schwartz distribution]]s one can reduce the [[mathematical analysis]] considerations here). This setting is typical, in that we have a [[one-parameter group]] of [[scaling (mathematics)|scalings]] operating; and the information is in fact coded in an infinitesimal transformation that is a [[first-order differential operator]].
==Operator version of Taylor's theorem==
The operator equation
 
:<math>e^{tD}f(x)=f(x+t)\,</math>
 
where
 
:<math>D={d\over dx}</math>
 
is an [[Operator (mathematics)|operator]] version of [[Taylor's theorem]] &mdash; and is therefore only valid under ''caveats'' about ''f'' being an [[analytic function]]. Concentrating on the operator part, it shows in effect that ''D'' is an infinitesimal transformation, generating translations of the real line via the [[exponential function|exponential]]. In Lie's theory, this is generalised a long way. Any [[connected space|connected]] Lie group can be built up by means of its [[Lie group#The Lie algebra associated with a Lie group|infinitesimal generator]]s (a basis for the Lie algebra of the group); with explicit if not always useful information given in the [[Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula]].
 
== References ==
*{{Springer|id=L/l058370|title=Lie algebra}}
 
[[Category:Lie groups]]
[[Category:Transformation (function)]]

Latest revision as of 06:21, 9 January 2015

Hello! My name is Carri.
It is a little about myself: I live in Germany, my city of Wadern.
It's called often Northern or cultural capital of SL. I've married 2 years ago.
I have 2 children - a son (Sebastian) and the daughter (Waylon). We all like Footbag.

my homepage - Online Coupon Coupon Code 4inkjets