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E6 (mathematics)

In mathematics, E<sub>6</sub> is the name of some closely related Lie groups, linear algebraic groups or their Lie algebras , all of which have dimension 78; the same notation E<sub>6</sub> is used for the corresponding root lattice, which has rank&nbsp;6. The designation E<sub>6</sub> comes from the Cartan–Killing classification of the complex simple Lie algebras (see ). This classifies Lie algebras into four infinite series labeled A<sub>n</sub>, B<sub>n</sub>, C<sub>n</sub>, D<sub>n</sub>, and five exceptional cases labeled E<sub>6</sub>, E<sub>7</sub>, E<sub>8</sub>, F<sub>4</sub>, and G<sub>2</sub>. The E<sub>6</sub> algebra is thus one of the five exceptional cases.

The fundamental group of the adjoint form of E<sub>6</sub> (as a complex or compact Lie group) is the cyclic group Z/3Z, and its outer automorphism group is the cyclic group Z/2Z. For the simply-connected form, its fundamental representation is 27-dimensional, and a basis is given by the 27 lines on a cubic surface. The dual representation, which is inequivalent, is also 27-dimensional.

In particle physics, E<sub>6</sub> plays a role in some grand unified theories.

Real and complex forms

There is a unique complex Lie algebra of type E<sub>6</sub>, corresponding to a complex group of complex dimension 78. The complex adjoint Lie group E<sub>6</sub> of complex dimension 78 can be considered as a simple real Lie group of real dimension 156. This has fundamental group Z/3Z, has maximal compact subgroup the compact form (see below) of E<sub>6</sub>, and has an outer automorphism group non-cyclic of order 4 generated by complex conjugation and by the outer automorphism which already exists as a complex automorphism.

As well as the complex Lie group of type E<sub>6</sub>, there are five real forms of the Lie algebra, and correspondingly five real forms of the group with trivial center (all of which have an algebraic double cover, and three of which have further non-algebraic covers, giving further real forms), all of real dimension 78, as follows:

  • The compact form (which is usually the one meant if no other information is given), which has fundamental group Z/3Z and outer automorphism group Z/2Z.
  • The split form, EI (or E<sub>6(6)</sub>), which has maximal compact subgroup Sp(4)/(±1), fundamental group of order 2 and outer automorphism group of order 2.
  • The quasi-split form EII (or E<sub>6(2)</sub>), which has maximal compact subgroup SU(2) × SU(6)/(center), fundamental group cyclic of order 6 and outer automorphism group of order 2.
  • EIII (or E<sub>6(-14)</sub>), which has maximal compact subgroup SO(2) × Spin(10)/(center), fundamental group Z and trivial outer automorphism group.
  • EIV (or E<sub>6(-26)</sub>), which has maximal compact subgroup F<sub>4</sub>, trivial fundamental group cyclic and outer automorphism group of order 2.

The EIV form of E<sub>6</sub> is the group of collineations (line-preserving transformations) of the octonionic projective plane OP<sup>2</sup>. It is also the group of determinant-preserving linear transformations of the exceptional Jordan algebra. The exceptional Jordan algebra is 27-dimensional, which explains why the compact real form of E<sub>6</sub> has a 27-dimensional complex representation. The compact real form of E<sub>6</sub> is the isometry group of a 32-dimensional Riemannian manifold known as the 'bioctonionic projective plane'; similar constructions for E<sub>7</sub> and E<sub>8</sub> are known as the Rosenfeld projective planes, and are part of the Freudenthal magic square.

E<sub>6</sub> as an algebraic group

By means of a Chevalley basis for the Lie algebra, one can define E<sub>6</sub> as a linear algebraic group over the integers and, consequently, over any commutative ring and in particular over any field: this defines the so-called split (sometimes also known as "untwisted") adjoint form of E<sub>6</sub>. Over an algebraically closed field, this and its triple cover are the only forms; however, over other fields, there are often many other forms, or "twists" of E<sub>6</sub>, which are classified in the general framework of Galois cohomology (over a perfect field k) by the set H<sup>1</sup>(k, Aut(E<sub>6</sub>)) which, because the Dynkin diagram of E<sub>6</sub> (see below) has automorphism group Z/2Z, maps to H<sup>1</sup>(k, Z/2Z) = Hom (Gal(k), Z/2Z) with kernel .

Over the field of real numbers, the real component of the identity of these algebraically twisted forms of E<sub>6</sub> coincide with the three real Lie groups mentioned above, but with a subtlety concerning the fundamental group: all adjoint forms of E<sub>6</sub> have fundamental group Z/3Z in the sense of algebraic geometry, with Galois action as on the third roots of unity; this means that they admit exactly one triple cover (which may be trivial on the real points); the further non-compact real Lie group forms of E<sub>6</sub> are therefore not algebraic and admit no faithful finite-dimensional representations. The compact real form of E<sub>6</sub> as well as the noncompact forms and are said to be inner or of type <sup>1</sup>E<sub>6</sub> meaning that their class lies in or that complex conjugation induces the trivial automorphism on the Dynkin diagram, whereas the other two real forms are said to be outer or of type <sup>2</sup>E<sub>6</sub>.

Over finite fields, the Lang–Steinberg theorem implies that H<sup>1</sup>(k, E<sub>6</sub>) = 0, meaning that E<sub>6</sub> has exactly one twisted form, known as <sup>2</sup>E<sub>6</sub>: see below.

Automorphisms of an Albert algebra

Similar to how the algebraic group G<sub>2</sub> is the automorphism group of the octonions and the algebraic group F<sub>4</sub> is the automorphism group of an Albert algebra, an exceptional Jordan algebra, the algebraic group E<sub>6</sub> is the group of linear automorphisms of an Albert algebra that preserve a certain cubic form, called the "determinant".

Algebra

Dynkin diagram

The Dynkin diagram for E<sub>6</sub> is given by , which may also be drawn as .

Roots of E<sub>6</sub>

Although they span a six-dimensional space, it is much more symmetrical to consider them as vectors in a six-dimensional subspace of a nine-dimensional space. Then one can take the roots to be

(1,&minus;1,0;0,0,0;0,0,0), (&minus;1,1,0;0,0,0;0,0,0),
(&minus;1,0,1;0,0,0;0,0,0), (1,0,&minus;1;0,0,0;0,0,0),
(0,1,&minus;1;0,0,0;0,0,0), (0,&minus;1,1;0,0,0;0,0,0),
(0,0,0;1,&minus;1,0;0,0,0), (0,0,0;&minus;1,1,0;0,0,0),
(0,0,0;&minus;1,0,1;0,0,0), (0,0,0;1,0,&minus;1;0,0,0),
(0,0,0;0,1,&minus;1;0,0,0), (0,0,0;0,&minus;1,1;0,0,0),
(0,0,0;0,0,0;1,&minus;1,0), (0,0,0;0,0,0;&minus;1,1,0),
(0,0,0;0,0,0;&minus;1,0,1), (0,0,0;0,0,0;1,0,&minus;1),
(0,0,0;0,0,0;0,1,&minus;1), (0,0,0;0,0,0;0,&minus;1,1),

plus all 27 combinations of where is one of plus all 27 combinations of where is one of

Simple roots

One possible selection for the simple roots of E<sub>6</sub> is:

(0,0,0;0,0,0;0,1,&minus;1)
(0,0,0;0,0,0;1,&minus;1,0)
(0,0,0;0,1,&minus;1;0,0,0)
(0,0,0;1,&minus;1,0;0,0,0)
(0,1,&minus;1;0,0,0;0,0,0)

E<sub>6</sub> roots derived from the roots of E<sub>8</sub>

E<sub>6</sub> is the subset of E<sub>8</sub> where a consistent set of three coordinates are equal (e.g. first or last). This facilitates explicit definitions of E<sub>7</sub> and E<sub>6</sub> as:

E<sub>7</sub> = {α ∈ Z<sup>7</sup> ∪ (Z+)<sup>7</sup> : Σα<sub>i</sub><sup>2</sup> + α<sub>1</sub><sup>2</sup> = 2, Σα<sub>i</sub> + α<sub>1</sub> ∈ 2Z},
E<sub>6</sub> = {α ∈ Z<sup>6</sup> ∪ (Z+)<sup>6</sup> : Σα<sub>i</sub><sup>2</sup> + 2α<sub>1</sub><sup>2</sup> = 2, Σα<sub>i</sub> + 2α<sub>1</sub> ∈ 2Z}

The following 72 E<sub>6</sub> roots are derived in this manner from the split real even E<sub>8</sub> roots. Notice the last 3 dimensions being the same as required:

An alternative description

An alternative (6-dimensional) description of the root system, which is useful in considering E<sub>6</sub> × SU(3) as a subgroup of E<sub>8</sub>, is the following:

All permutations of

preserving the zero at the last entry,

and all of the following roots with an odd number of plus signs

Thus the 78 generators consist of the following subalgebras:

A 45-dimensional SO(10) subalgebra, including the above generators plus the five Cartan generators corresponding to the first five entries.
Two 16-dimensional subalgebras that transform as a Weyl spinor of and its complex conjugate. These have a non-zero last entry.
1 generator which is their chirality generator, and is the sixth Cartan generator.

One choice of simple roots for E<sub>6</sub> is given by the rows of the following matrix, indexed in the order :

Weyl group

The Weyl group of E<sub>6</sub> is of order 51840: it is the automorphism group of the unique simple group of order 25920 (which can be described as any of: PSU<sub>4</sub>(2), PSΩ<sub>6</sub><sup>−</sup>(2), PSp<sub>4</sub>(3) or PSΩ<sub>5</sub>(3)).

Cartan matrix

Important subalgebras and representations

The Lie algebra E<sub>6</sub> has an F<sub>4</sub> subalgebra, which is the fixed subalgebra of an outer automorphism, and an SU(3) × SU(3) × SU(3) subalgebra. Other maximal subalgebras which have an importance in physics (see below) and can be read off the Dynkin diagram, are the algebras of SO(10) × U(1) and SU(6) × SU(2).

In addition to the 78-dimensional adjoint representation, there are two dual 27-dimensional "vector" representations.

The characters of finite dimensional representations of the real and complex Lie algebras and Lie groups are all given by the Weyl character formula. The dimensions of the smallest irreducible representations are :

<u>1</u>, 27 (twice), <u>78</u>, 351 (four times), <u>650</u>, 1728 (twice), <u>2430</u>, <u>2925</u>, <u>3003 (twice)</u>, <u>5824 (twice)</u>, 7371 (twice), 7722 (twice), 17550 (twice), 19305 (four times), 34398 (twice), <u>34749</u>, <u>43758</u>, 46332 (twice), 51975 (twice), 54054 (twice), 61425 (twice), <u>70070</u>, <u>78975 (twice)</u>, <u>85293</u>, 100386 (twice), <u>105600</u>, 112320 (twice), <u>146432 (twice)</u>, <u>252252 (twice)</u>, 314496 (twice), 359424 (four times), <u>371800 (twice)</u>, 386100 (twice), 393822 (twice), 412776 (twice), <u>442442 (twice)</u>...

The underlined terms in the sequence above are the dimensions of those irreducible representations possessed by the adjoint form of E<sub>6</sub> (equivalently, those whose weights belong to the root lattice of E<sub>6</sub>), whereas the full sequence gives the dimensions of the irreducible representations of the simply connected form of E<sub>6</sub>.

The symmetry of the Dynkin diagram of E<sub>6</sub> explains why many dimensions occur twice, the corresponding representations being related by the non-trivial outer automorphism; however, there are sometimes even more representations than this, such as four of dimension 351, two of which are fundamental and two of which are not.

The fundamental representations have dimensions 27, 351, 2925, 351, 27 and 78 (corresponding to the six nodes in the Dynkin diagram in the order chosen for the Cartan matrix above, i.e., the nodes are read in the five-node chain first, with the last node being connected to the middle one).

The embeddings of the maximal subgroups of E<sub>6</sub> up to dimension 78 are shown to the right.

E6 polytope

The E<sub>6</sub> polytope is the convex hull of the roots of E<sub>6</sub>. It therefore exists in 6 dimensions; its symmetry group contains the Coxeter group for E<sub>6</sub> as an index 2 subgroup.

Chevalley and Steinberg groups of type E<sub>6</sub> and <sup>2</sup>E<sub>6</sub>

The groups of type E<sub>6</sub> over arbitrary fields (in particular finite fields) were introduced by .

The points over a finite field with q elements of the (split) algebraic group E<sub>6</sub> (see above), whether of the adjoint (centerless) or simply connected form (its algebraic universal cover), give a finite Chevalley group. This is closely connected to the group written , however there is ambiguity in this notation, which can stand for several things:

  • the finite group consisting of the points over F<sub>q</sub> of the simply connected form of E<sub>6</sub> (for clarity, this can be written or more rarely and is known as the "universal" Chevalley group of type E<sub>6</sub> over F<sub>q</sub>),
  • (rarely) the finite group consisting of the points over F<sub>q</sub> of the adjoint form of E<sub>6</sub> (for clarity, this can be written , and is known as the "adjoint" Chevalley group of type E<sub>6</sub> over F<sub>q</sub>), or
  • the finite group which is the image of the natural map from the former to the latter: this is what will be denoted by in the following, as is most common in texts dealing with finite groups.

From the finite group perspective, the relation between these three groups, which is quite analogous to that between SL(n,q), PGL(n,q) and PSL(n,q), can be summarized as follows: is simple for any q, is its Schur cover, and lies in its automorphism group; furthermore, when q−1 is not divisible by 3, all three coincide, and otherwise (when q is congruent to 1 mod 3), the Schur multiplier of E<sub>6</sub>(q) is 3 and E<sub>6</sub>(q) is of index 3 in , which explains why and are often written as 3·E<sub>6</sub>(q) and E<sub>6</sub>(q)·3. From the algebraic group perspective, it is less common for E<sub>6</sub>(q) to refer to the finite simple group, because the latter is not in a natural way the set of points of an algebraic group over F<sub>q</sub> unlike and .

Beyond this "split" (or "untwisted") form of E<sub>6</sub>, there is also one other form of E<sub>6</sub> over the finite field F<sub>q</sub>, known as <sup>2</sup>E<sub>6</sub>, which is obtained by twisting by the non-trivial automorphism of the Dynkin diagram of E<sub>6</sub>. Concretely, <sup>2</sup>E<sub>6</sub>(q), which is known as a Steinberg group, can be seen as the subgroup of E<sub>6</sub>(q<sup>2</sup>) fixed by the composition of the non-trivial diagram automorphism and the non-trivial field automorphism of F<sub>q<sup>2</sup></sub>. Twisting does not change the fact that the algebraic fundamental group of is , but it does change those q for which the covering of by is non-trivial on the F<sub>q</sub>-points. Precisely: is a covering of , and lies in its automorphism group; when q+1 is not divisible by 3, all three coincide, and otherwise (when q is congruent to 2 mod 3), the degree of over is 3 and is of index 3 in , which explains why and are often written as 3·<sup>2</sup>E<sub>6</sub>(q) and <sup>2</sup>E<sub>6</sub>(q)·3.

Two notational issues should be raised concerning the groups . One is that this is sometimes written , a notation which has the advantage of transposing more easily to the Suzuki and Ree groups, but the disadvantage of deviating from the notation for the F<sub>q</sub>-points of an algebraic group. Another is that whereas and are the F<sub>q</sub>-points of an algebraic group, the group in question also depends on q (e.g., the points over F<sub>q<sup>2</sup></sub> of the same group are the untwisted and ).

The groups and are simple for any q, and constitute two of the infinite families in the classification of finite simple groups. Their order is given by the following formula :

. The order of or (both are equal) can be obtained by removing the dividing factor from the first formula , and the order of or (both are equal) can be obtained by removing the dividing factor from the second .

The Schur multiplier of is always (i.e., is its Schur cover). The Schur multiplier of ) is (i.e., is its Schur cover) outside of the exceptional case q=2 where it is 2<sup>2</sup>·3 (i.e., there is an additional 2<sup>2</sup>-fold cover). The outer automorphism group of is the product of the diagonal automorphism group (given by the action of ), the group Z/2Z of diagram automorphisms, and the group of field automorphisms (i.e., cyclic of order f if q=p<sup>f</sup> where p is prime). The outer automorphism group of <sup>2</sup>E<sub>6</sub>(q) is the product of the diagonal automorphism group (given by the action of ) and the group of field automorphisms (i.e., cyclic of order f if q=p<sup>f</sup> where p is prime).

Importance in physics<span class="anchor" id="Physics"></span>

supergravity in five dimensions, which is a dimensional reduction from eleven-dimensional supergravity, admits an bosonic global symmetry and an bosonic local symmetry. The fermions are in representations of , the gauge fields are in a representation of , and the scalars are in a representation of both (Gravitons are singlets with respect to both). Physical states are in representations of the coset .

In grand unification theories, appears as a possible gauge group which, after its breaking, gives rise to the gauge group of the Standard Model. One way of achieving this is through breaking to . The adjoint representation breaks, as explained above, into an adjoint , spinor and as well as a singlet of the subalgebra. Including the charge we have

Where the subscript denotes the charge.

Likewise, the fundamental representation and its conjugate break into a scalar , a vector and a spinor, either or :

Thus, one can get the Standard Model's elementary fermions and Higgs boson.

See also

References