Mathematical Methods for Physics and Engineering : A Comprehensive Guide

(Darren Dugan) #1

REPRESENTATION THEORY


of a particular group of symmetry operations has been brought to irreducible


form, the implications are as follows.


(i) Those components of the basis vector that correspond to rows in the
representation matrices with a single-entry block, i.e. a 1×1block,are
unchanged by the operations of the group. Such a coordinate or function
is said to transform according to a one-dimensional irrep ofG.Inthe
example given in (29.10), that the entry on the third row forms a 1× 1
block implies that the third entry in the basis vector (xyz···)T,
namelyz, is invariant under the two-dimensional symmetry operations on
an equilateral triangle in thexy-plane.
(ii) If, in any of thegmatrices of the representation, the largest-sized block
located on the row or column corresponding to a particular coordinate
(or function) in the basis vector isn×n, then that coordinate (or function)
is mixed by the symmetry operations withn−1 others and is said to
transform according to ann-dimensional irrep ofG. Thus in the matrix
(29.10),xis the first entry in the complete basis vector; the first row of
the matrix contains two non-zero entries, as does the first column, and so
xis part of a two-component basis vector whose components are mixed
by the symmetry operations ofG. The other component isy.

The result (29.11) may also be formulated in terms of the more abstract notion

of vector spaces (chapter 8). The set ofgmatrices that forms ann-dimensional


representationDof the groupGcan be thought of as acting on column matrices


corresponding to vectors in ann-dimensional vector spaceVspanned by the basis


functions of the representation. If there exists aproper subspaceWofV,such


that if a vector whose column matrix iswbelongs toWthen the vector whose


column matrix isD(X)walso belongs toW, for allXbelonging toG,thenit


follows thatDis reducible. We say that the subspaceWis invariant under the


actions of the elements ofG. WithDunitary, the orthogonal complementW⊥of


W,i.e.thevectorspaceVremaining when the subspaceWhas been removed, is


also invariant, and all the matricesD(X) split into two blocks acting separately


onWandW⊥.BothW andW⊥may contain further invariant subspaces, in


which case the matrices will be split still further.


As a concrete example of this approach, consider in plane polar coordinates

ρ, φthe effect of rotations about the polar axis on the infinite-dimensional vector


spaceVof all functions ofφthat satisfy the Dirichlet conditions for expansion


as a Fourier series (see section 12.1). We take as our basis functions the set


{sinmφ,cosmφ}for integer valuesm=0, 1 , 2 ,...; this is an infinite-dimensional


representation (n=∞) and, since a rotation about the polar axis can be through


any angleα(0≤α< 2 π), the groupGis a subgroup of the continuous rotation


group and has its ordergformally equal to infinity.

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