13 research outputs found
Can solvable extensions of a nilpotent subalgebra be useful in the classification of solvable algebras with the given nilradical?
We construct all solvable Lie algebras with a specific n-dimensional
nilradical n_{n,3} which contains the previously studied filiform nilpotent
algebra n_{n-2,1} as a subalgebra but not as an ideal. Rather surprisingly it
turns out that the classification of such solvable algebras can be reduced to
the classification of solvable algebras with the nilradical n_{n-2,1} together
with one additional case. Also the sets of invariants of coadjoint
representation of n_{n,3} and its solvable extensions are deduced from this
reduction. In several cases they have polynomial bases, i.e. the invariants of
the respective solvable algebra can be chosen to be Casimir invariants in its
enveloping algebra.Comment: 19 page
Description of D-branes invariant under the Poisson-Lie T-plurality
We write the conditions for open strings with charged endpoints in the
language of gluing matrices. We identify constraints imposed on the gluing
matrices that are essential in this setup and investigate the question of their
invariance under the Poisson-Lie T-plurality transformations. We show that the
chosen set of constraints is equivalent to the statement that the lifts of
D-branes into the Drinfel'd double are right cosets with respect to a maximally
isotropic subgroup and therefore it is invariant under the Poisson-Lie
T-plurality transformations.Comment: 22 pages; added references, the final version accepted for
publicatio
On renormalization of Poisson-Lie T-plural sigma models
Covariance of the one-loop renormalization group equations with respect to
Poisson-Lie T-plurality of sigma models is discussed. The role of ambiguities
in renormalization group equations of Poisson-Lie sigma models with truncated
matrices of parameters is investigated.Comment: 11 pages, The sources of disagreements with references [1],[2],[3] in
previous versions are identified as differences in notation
On the Poisson-Lie T-plurality of boundary conditions
Conditions for the gluing matrix defining consistent boundary conditions of
two-dimensional nonlinear sigma-models are analyzed and reformulated.
Transformation properties of the right-invariant fields under Poisson-Lie
T-plurality are used to derive a formula for the transformation of the boundary
conditions. Examples of transformation of D-branes in two and three dimensions
are presented. We investigate obstacles arising in this procedure and propose
possible solutions.Comment: 25 pages, LaTeX; major revision, discussion of boundary fields added;
author's version of the published pape
On modular spaces of semisimple Drinfeld doubles
We construct modular spaces of all 6-dimensional real semisimple Drinfeld
doubles, i.e. the sets of all possible decompositions of the Lie algebra of the
Drinfeld double into Manin triples. These modular spaces are significantly
different from the known one for Abelian Drinfeld double, since some of these
Drinfeld doubles allow decomposition into several non-isomorphic Manin triples
and their modular spaces are therefore written as unions of homogeneous spaces
of different dimension. Implications for Poisson-Lie T-duality and especially
Poisson-Lie T-plurality are mentioned.Comment: 15 pages; introduction enlarged, added reference
Classification and identification of Lie algebras
The purpose of this book is to serve as a tool for researchers and practitioners who apply Lie algebras and Lie groups to solve problems arising in science and engineering. The authors address the problem of expressing a Lie algebra obtained in some arbitrary basis in a more suitable basis in which all essential features of the Lie algebra are directly visible. This includes algorithms accomplishing decomposition into a direct sum, identification of the radical and the Levi decomposition, and the computation of the nilradical and of the Casimir invariants. Examples are given for each algorithm. For low-dimensional Lie algebras this makes it possible to identify the given Lie algebra completely. The authors provide a representative list of all Lie algebras of dimension less or equal to 6 together with their important properties, including their Casimir invariants. The list is ordered in a way to make identification easy, using only basis independent properties of the Lie algebras. They also describe certain classes of nilpotent and solvable Lie algebras of arbitrary finite dimensions for which complete or partial classification exists and discuss in detail their construction and properties. The book is based on material that was previously dispersed in journal articles, many of them written by one or both of the authors together with their collaborators. The reader of this book should be familiar with Lie algebra theory at an introductory level. Titles in this series are co-published with the Centre de Recherches Mathematiques.The purpose of this book is to serve as a tool for researchers and practitioners who apply Lie algebras and Lie groups to solve problems arising in science and engineering. The authors address the problem of expressing a Lie algebra obtained in some arbitrary basis in a more suitable basis in which all essential features of the Lie algebra are directly visible. This includes algorithms accomplishing decomposition into a direct sum, identification of the radical and the Levi decomposition, and the computation of the nilradical and of the Casimir invariants. Examples are given for each algorithm. For low-dimensional Lie algebras this makes it possible to identify the given Lie algebra completely. The authors provide a representative list of all Lie algebras of dimension less or equal to 6 together with their important properties, including their Casimir invariants. The list is ordered in a way to make identification easy, using only basis independent properties of the Lie algebras. They also describe certain classes of nilpotent and solvable Lie algebras of arbitrary finite dimensions for which complete or partial classification exists and discuss in detail their construction and properties. The book is based on material that was previously dispersed in journal articles, many of them written by one or both of the authors together with their collaborators. The reader of this book should be familiar with Lie algebra theory at an introductory level