Jump to content

Class function

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by ViolaPlayer (talk | contribs) at 20:47, 11 April 2015 (ViolaPlayer moved page Class function to Class function (algebra): Distingishing from the set theoretic class function). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In mathematics, especially in the fields of group theory and representation theory of groups, a class function is a function f on a group G, such that f is constant on the conjugacy classes of G. In other words, f is invariant under the conjugation map on G. Such functions play a basic role in representation theory.

Characters

The character of a linear representation of G over a field K is always a class function with values in K. The class functions form the center of the group ring K[G]. Here a class function f is identified with the element .

Inner products

The set of class functions of a group G with values in a field K form a K-vector space. If G is finite and the characteristic of the field does not divide the order of G, then there is an inner product defined on this space defined by where |G| denotes the order of G. The set of irreducible characters of G forms an orthogonal basis, and if K is a splitting field for G, for instance if K is algebraically closed, then the irreducible characters form an orthonormal basis.

In the case of a compact group and K = C the field of complex numbers, the notion of Haar measure allows one to replace the finite sum above with an integral:

When K is the real numbers or the complex numbers, the inner product is a non-degenerate Hermitian bilinear form.

See also

References

  • Jean-Pierre Serre, Linear representations of finite groups, Graduate Texts in Mathematics 42, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1977.