- #1
mnb96
- 715
- 5
Hello,
I want to prove that the set SO(2) of orthogonal 2x2 matrices with det=1 is a Lie group.
The group operation is of course assumed to be the ordinary matrix multiplication [itex]\times[/itex]:SO(2)→SO(2).
I made the following attempt but then got stuck at one point.
We basically have to prove that SO(2) is a differentiable manifold.
In order to do so I consider the group isomorphism [tex]\left( SO(2), \times \right) \cong \left( [0,2\pi), +_{\mathrm{mod\, 2\pi}} \right)[/tex] where +mod 2∏ means addition modulo 2∏.
At this point I should prove that [itex]f(x,y) = (x+y)\, \mathrm{mod}\, 2\pi[/itex] is smooth, and that [itex]f^{-1}(x) = (2\pi -x)\, \mathrm{mod}\, 2\pi[/itex] is also smooth.
This is where I get stuck.
For instance, [itex]f^{-1}[/itex] is certainly smooth in the open interval (0,2∏), but it is not differentiable at x=0, because at x=0 we don't have an open neighborhood where the [itex]f^{-1}[/itex] would be defined.
How do we address this issue?
I want to prove that the set SO(2) of orthogonal 2x2 matrices with det=1 is a Lie group.
The group operation is of course assumed to be the ordinary matrix multiplication [itex]\times[/itex]:SO(2)→SO(2).
I made the following attempt but then got stuck at one point.
We basically have to prove that SO(2) is a differentiable manifold.
In order to do so I consider the group isomorphism [tex]\left( SO(2), \times \right) \cong \left( [0,2\pi), +_{\mathrm{mod\, 2\pi}} \right)[/tex] where +mod 2∏ means addition modulo 2∏.
At this point I should prove that [itex]f(x,y) = (x+y)\, \mathrm{mod}\, 2\pi[/itex] is smooth, and that [itex]f^{-1}(x) = (2\pi -x)\, \mathrm{mod}\, 2\pi[/itex] is also smooth.
This is where I get stuck.
For instance, [itex]f^{-1}[/itex] is certainly smooth in the open interval (0,2∏), but it is not differentiable at x=0, because at x=0 we don't have an open neighborhood where the [itex]f^{-1}[/itex] would be defined.
How do we address this issue?