Quantized enveloping algebra

In mathematics, a quantum or quantized enveloping algebra is a q-analog of a universal enveloping algebra.[1] Given a Lie algebra , the quantum enveloping algebra is typically denoted as . The notation was introduced by Drinfeld and independently by Jimbo.[2]

Among the applications, studying the limit led to the discovery of crystal bases.

The case of edit

Michio Jimbo considered the algebras with three generators related by the three commutators

 

When  , these reduce to the commutators that define the special linear Lie algebra  . In contrast, for nonzero  , the algebra defined by these relations is not a Lie algebra but instead an associative algebra that can be regarded as a deformation of the universal enveloping algebra of  .[3]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kassel, Christian (1995), Quantum groups, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 155, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-0-387-94370-1, MR 1321145
  2. ^ Tjin 1992, § 5.
  3. ^ Jimbo, Michio (1985), "A  -difference analogue of   and the Yang–Baxter equation", Letters in Mathematical Physics, 10 (1): 63–69, Bibcode:1985LMaPh..10...63J, doi:10.1007/BF00704588, S2CID 123313856

External links edit