Cohomological Induction and Unitary Representations (PMS-45), Volume 45
By (Author) Anthony W. Knapp
By (author) David A. Vogan
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
31st July 1995
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Algebraic topology
514.23
Hardback
968
Width 152mm, Height 235mm
1474g
This book offers a systematic treatment--the first in book form--of the development and use of cohomological induction to construct unitary representations. George Mackey introduced induction in 1950 as a real analysis construction for passing from a unitary representation of a closed subgroup of a locally compact group to a unitary representation of the whole group. Later a parallel construction using complex analysis and its associated co-homology theories grew up as a result of work by Borel, Weil, Harish-Chandra, Bott, Langlands, Kostant, and Schmid. Cohomological induction, introduced by Zuckerman, is an algebraic analog that is technically more manageable than the complex-analysis construction and leads to a large repertory of irreducible unitary representations of reductive Lie groups. The book, which is accessible to students beyond the first year of graduate school, will interest mathematicians and physicists who want to learn about and take advantage of the algebraic side of the representation theory of Lie groups.Cohomological Induction and Unitary Representations develops the necessary background in representation theory and includes an introductory chapter of motivation, a thorough treatment of the "translation principle," and four appendices on algebra and analysis.
Winner of the 1996 Award for Best Professional/Scholarly Book in Mathematics, Association of American Publishers "This book is a thorough and excellent presentation of the 'cohomological' approach to the construction and classification of irreducible representations of semisimple real Lie groups..."--Zentralblatt fr Mathematik
Anthony W. Knapp is Professor of Mathematics at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. David A. Vogan, Jr., is Professor of Mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.