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| In mathematics, the '''Schur orthogonality relations''' express a central fact about [[group representation|representations]] of finite [[group (mathematics)|groups]].
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| They admit a generalization to the case of [[compact group]]s in general, and in particular [[compact group|compact Lie groups]], such as the
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| [[Rotation group SO(3)|rotation group ''SO''(3)]].
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| ==Finite groups==
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| ===Intrinsic statement===
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| The space of complex-valued [[class function]]s of a finite group G has a natural [[inner product space|inner product]]:
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| :<math>\left \langle \alpha, \beta\right \rangle := \frac{1}{ \left | G \right | }\sum_{g \in G} \alpha(g) \overline{\beta(g)}</math>
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| where <math>\overline{\beta(g)}</math> means the complex conjugate of the value of <math>\beta</math> on ''g''. With respect to this inner product, the irreducible [[character theory|characters]] form an orthonormal basis
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| for the space of class functions, and this yields the orthogonality relation for the rows of the character
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| table:
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| :<math>\left \langle \chi_i, \chi_j \right \rangle = \begin{cases} 0 & \mbox{ if } i \ne j, \\ 1 & \mbox{ if } i = j. \end{cases}</math>
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| For <math>g, h \in G</math> the orthogonality relation for columns is as follows:
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| :<math>\sum_{\chi_i} \chi_i(g) \overline{\chi_i(h)} = \begin{cases} \left | C_G(g) \right |, & \mbox{ if } g, h \mbox{ are conjugate } \\ 0 & \mbox{ otherwise.}\end{cases}</math>
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| where the sum is over all of the irreducible characters <math>\chi_i</math> of ''G'' and the symbol <math>\left | C_G(g) \right |</math> denotes the order of the [[centralizer]] of <math>g</math>.
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| The orthogonality relations can aid many computations including:
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| * decomposing an unknown character as a linear combination of irreducible characters;
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| * constructing the complete character table when only some of the irreducible characters are known;
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| * finding the orders of the centralizers of representatives of the conjugacy classes of a group; and
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| * finding the order of the group.
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| ===Coordinates statement===
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| Let <math>\Gamma^{(\lambda)} (R)_{mn}</math> be a [[Matrix (mathematics)|matrix]] element of an [[irreducible representation|irreducible]] [[Group representation|matrix representation]]
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| <math>\Gamma^{(\lambda)}</math> of a finite group <math>G=\{R\}</math> of order |''G''|, i.e., ''G'' has |''G''| elements. Since it can be proven that any matrix representation of any finite group is equivalent to a [[unitary representation]], we assume <math>\Gamma^{(\lambda)}</math> is unitary:
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| :<math>
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| \sum_{n=1}^{l_\lambda} \; \Gamma^{(\lambda)} (R)_{nm}^*\;\Gamma^{(\lambda)} (R)_{nk} = \delta_{mk} \quad \hbox{for all}\quad R \in G,
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| </math>
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| where <math>l_\lambda</math> is the (finite) dimension of the irreducible representation <math>\Gamma^{(\lambda)}</math>.<ref>The finiteness of <math>l_\lambda</math> follows from the fact that any irreducible representation of a finite group ''G'' is contained in the [[regular representation]].</ref> | |
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| The '''orthogonality relations''', only valid for matrix elements of ''irreducible'' representations, are:
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| :<math>
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| \sum_{R\in G}^{|G|} \; \Gamma^{(\lambda)} (R)_{nm}^*\;\Gamma^{(\mu)} (R)_{n'm'} =
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| \delta_{\lambda\mu} \delta_{nn'}\delta_{mm'} \frac{|G|}{l_\lambda}.
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| </math>
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| Here <math>\Gamma^{(\lambda)} (R)_{nm}^*</math> is the complex conjugate of <math>\Gamma^{(\lambda)} (R)_{nm}\,</math> and the sum is over all elements of ''G''.
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| The [[Kronecker delta]] <math>\delta_{\lambda\mu}</math> is unity if the matrices are in the same irreducible representation <math>\Gamma^{(\lambda)}= \Gamma^{(\mu)}</math>. If <math>\Gamma^{(\lambda)}</math> and <math>\Gamma^{(\mu)}</math> are non-equivalent
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| it is zero. The other two Kronecker delta's state that
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| the row and column indices must be equal (<math>n=n'</math> and <math>m=m'</math>) in order to obtain a non-vanishing result. This theorem is also known as the Great (or Grand) Orthogonality Theorem.
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| Every group has an identity representation (all group elements mapped onto the real number 1).
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| This is an irreducible representation. The great orthogonality relations immediately imply that
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| :<math>
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| \sum_{R\in G}^{|G|} \; \Gamma^{(\mu)} (R)_{nm} = 0
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| </math>
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| for <math>n,m=1,\ldots,l_\mu</math> and any irreducible representation <math>\Gamma^{(\mu)}\,</math> not equal to the identity representation.
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| ===Example of the permutation group on 3 objects===
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| The 3! permutations of three objects form a group of order 6, commonly denoted by <math>S_3</math> ([[symmetric group]]). This group is isomorphic to the [[Point groups in three dimensions#The seven infinite series|point group]] <math>C_{3v}</math>, consisting of a threefold rotation axis and three vertical mirror planes. The groups have a 2-dimensional irreducible representation (''l'' = 2). In the case of <math>S_3</math> one usually labels this representation
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| by the [[Young tableau]] <math> \lambda = [2,1]</math> and in the case of <math>C_{3v}</math>
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| one usually writes <math> \lambda = E</math>. In both cases the representation consists of the following six real matrices, each representing a single group element:<ref>This choice is not unique, any orthogonal similarity transformation
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| applied to the matrices gives a valid irreducible representation.</ref>
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| :<math>
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| \begin{pmatrix}
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| 1 & 0 \\
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| 0 & 1 \\
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| \end{pmatrix}
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| \quad
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| \begin{pmatrix}
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| 1 & 0 \\
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| 0 & -1 \\
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| \end{pmatrix}
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| \quad
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| \begin{pmatrix}
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| -\frac{1}{2} & \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2} \\
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| \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}& \frac{1}{2} \\
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| \end{pmatrix}
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| \quad
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| \begin{pmatrix}
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| -\frac{1}{2} & -\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2} \\
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| -\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}& \frac{1}{2} \\
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| \end{pmatrix}
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| \quad
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| \begin{pmatrix}
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| -\frac{1}{2} & \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2} \\
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| -\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}& -\frac{1}{2} \\
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| \end{pmatrix}
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| \quad
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| \begin{pmatrix}
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| -\frac{1}{2} & -\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2} \\
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| \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}& -\frac{1}{2} \\
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| \end{pmatrix}
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| </math>
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| The normalization of the (1,1) element:
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| :<math> \sum_{R\in G}^{6} \; \Gamma(R)_{11}^*\;\Gamma(R)_{11} = 1^2+1^2+\left(-\tfrac{1}{2}\right)^2+\left(-\tfrac{1}{2}\right)^2 +\left(-\tfrac{1}{2}\right)^2 +\left(-\tfrac{1}{2}\right)^2
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| = 3 .
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| </math>
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| In the same manner one can show the normalization of the other matrix elements: (2,2), (1,2), and (2,1).
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| The orthogonality of the (1,1) and (2,2) elements:
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| :<math> \sum_{R\in G}^{6} \; \Gamma(R)_{11}^*\;\Gamma(R)_{22} = 1^2+(1)(-1)+\left(-\tfrac{1}{2}\right)\left(\tfrac{1}{2}\right)
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| +\left(-\tfrac{1}{2}\right)\left(\tfrac{1}{2}\right)
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| +\left(-\tfrac{1}{2}\right)^2 +\left(-\tfrac{1}{2}\right)^2
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| = 0 .
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| </math>
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| Similar relations hold for the orthogonality of the elements (1,1) and (1,2), etc.
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| One verifies easily in the example that all sums of corresponding matrix elements vanish because of
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| the orthogonality of the given irreducible representation to the identity representation.
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| ===Direct implications===
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| The [[trace (linear algebra)|trace]] of a matrix is a sum of diagonal matrix elements,
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| :<math>\operatorname{Tr}\big(\Gamma(R)\big) = \sum_{m=1}^{l} \Gamma(R)_{mm}.</math>
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| The collection of traces is the ''character'' <math>\chi \equiv \{\operatorname{Tr}\big(\Gamma(R)\big)\;|\; R \in G\}</math> of a representation. Often one writes for
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| the trace of a matrix in an irreducible representation with character <math>\chi^{(\lambda)}</math>
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| :<math>\chi^{(\lambda)} (R)\equiv \operatorname{Tr}\left(\Gamma^{(\lambda)}(R)\right).</math>
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| In this notation we can write several character formulas:
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| :<math>\sum_{R\in G}^{|G|} \chi^{(\lambda)}(R)^* \, \chi^{(\mu)}(R)= \delta_{\lambda\mu} |G|,</math>
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| which allows us to check whether or not a representation is irreducible. (The formula means that the lines in any character table have to be orthogonal vectors.)
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| And
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| :<math>\sum_{R\in G}^{|G|} \chi^{(\lambda)}(R)^* \, \chi(R) = n^{(\lambda)} |G|,</math>
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| which helps us to determine how often the irreducible representation <math>\Gamma^{(\lambda)}</math> is contained within the reducible representation <math>\Gamma \,</math> with character <math>\chi(R)</math>.
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| For instance, if
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|
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| :<math>n^{(\lambda)}\, |G| = 96</math>
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| and the order of the group is
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| :<math>|G| = 24\,</math>
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| then the number of times that <math>\Gamma^{(\lambda)}\,</math> is contained within the given
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| ''reducible'' representation <math>\Gamma \,</math> is
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| :<math>n^{(\lambda)} = 4\, .</math>
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| ''See [[Character theory]] for more about group characters.''
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| <!---
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| I don't understand the meaning of the following lines [P.wormer]
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| or
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| :<math>n_j = 1^2 1^2 1^2 1^2. \,</math> | |
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| And lastly,
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| :<math>\sum_{\hat R}^N {\begin{vmatrix}{\Chi_i(\hat R)} \end{vmatrix}}^2 = h \sum_{j}^N n_j^2</math>
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| -->
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| ==Compact Groups==
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| The generalization of the orthogonality relations from finite groups to compact groups (which include compact Lie groups such as SO(3)) is basically simple: ''Replace the summation over the group by an integration over the group.''.
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| Every compact group <math>G</math> has unique bi-invariant [[Haar measure]], so that the volume of the group is 1. Denote this measure by <math>dg</math>. Let <math>( \pi^\alpha )</math> be a complete set of irreducible representations of <math>G</math>, and let <math>\phi^\alpha_{v,w}(g)=\langle v,\pi^\alpha(g)w\rangle </math> be a [[matrix coefficient]] of the representation <math>\pi^\alpha</math>. The orthogonality relations can the be stated in two parts:
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| 1) If <math>\pi^\alpha \ncong \pi^\beta </math> then
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| :<math>
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| \int_G \phi^\alpha_{v,w}(g)\phi^\beta_{v',w'}(g)dg=0
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| </math>
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| 2) If <math>\{e_i\}</math> is an [[orthonormal basis]] of the representation space <math>\pi^\alpha</math> then
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| :<math>
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| d^\alpha\int_G \phi^\alpha_{e_i,e_j}(g)\overline{\phi^\alpha_{e_m,e_n}(g)}dg=\delta_{i,m}\delta_{j,n}
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| </math>
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| where <math>d^\alpha</math> is the dimension of <math>\pi^\alpha</math>. These orthogonality relations and the fact that all of the representations have finite dimensions are consequences of the [[Peter-Weyl theorem]]
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| ===An Example SO(3)===
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| An example of an r = 3 parameter group is the matrix group SO(3) consisting of all 3 x 3 orthogonal matrices with unit determinant. A possible parametrization of this group is in terms of Euler angles: <math>\mathbf{x} = (\alpha, \beta, \gamma)</math> (see e.g., this article for the explicit form of an element of SO(3) in terms of Euler angles). The bounds are <math>0 \le\alpha, \gamma \le 2\pi</math> and <math>0 \le \beta \le\pi</math>.
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| Not only the recipe for the computation of the volume element <math> \omega(\mathbf{x})\, dx_1 dx_2\cdots dx_r </math> depends on the chosen parameters, but also the final result, i.e., the analytic form of the weight function (measure) <math>\omega(\mathbf{x})</math>.
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| For instance, the Euler angle parametrization of SO(3) gives the weight <math>\omega(\alpha,\beta,\gamma) = \sin\! \beta \,,</math> while the n, ψ parametrization gives the weight <math>\omega(\psi,\theta,\phi) = 2(1-\cos\psi)\sin\!\theta\, </math>
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| with <math>0\le \psi \le \pi, \;\; 0 \le\phi\le 2\pi,\;\; 0 \le \theta \le \pi.</math>
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| It can be shown that the irreducible matrix representations of compact Lie groups are finite-dimensional and can be chosen to be unitary:
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| :<math>
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| \Gamma^{(\lambda)}(R^{-1}) =\Gamma^{(\lambda)}(R)^{-1}=\Gamma^{(\lambda)}(R)^\dagger\quad \hbox{with}\quad \Gamma^{(\lambda)}(R)^\dagger_{mn} \equiv \Gamma^{(\lambda)}(R)^*_{nm}.
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| </math>
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| With the shorthand notation
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| :<math>
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| \Gamma^{(\lambda)}(\mathbf{x})= \Gamma^{(\lambda)}\Big(R(\mathbf{x})\Big)
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| </math>
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| the orthogonality relations take the form
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| :<math>
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| \int_{x_1^0}^{x_1^1} \cdots \int_{x_r^0}^{x_r^1}\; \Gamma^{(\lambda)}(\mathbf{x})^*_{nm} \Gamma^{(\mu)}(\mathbf{x})_{n'm'}\; \omega(\mathbf{x}) dx_1\cdots dx_r \; = \delta_{\lambda \mu} \delta_{n n'} \delta_{m m'} \frac{|G|}{l_\lambda},
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| </math>
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| with the volume of the group:
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| :<math>
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| |G| = \int_{x_1^0}^{x_1^1} \cdots \int_{x_r^0}^{x_r^1} \omega(\mathbf{x}) dx_1\cdots dx_r .
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| </math>
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| As an example we note that the irreducible representations of SO(3) are Wigner D-matrices <math>D^\ell(\alpha \beta \gamma)</math>, which are of dimension <math>2\ell+1 </math>. Since
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| :<math>
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| |SO(3)| = \int_{0}^{2\pi} d\alpha \int_{0}^{\pi} \sin\!\beta\, d\beta \int_{0}^{2\pi} d\gamma = 8\pi^2,
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| </math>
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| they satisfy
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| :<math>
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| \int_{0}^{2\pi} \int_{0}^{\pi} \int_{0}^{2\pi} D^{\ell}(\alpha \beta\gamma)^*_{nm} \; D^{\ell'}(\alpha \beta\gamma)_{n'm'}\; \sin\!\beta\, d\alpha\, d\beta\, d\gamma = \delta_{\ell\ell'}\delta_{nn'}\delta_{mm'} \frac{8\pi^2}{2\ell+1}.
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| </math>
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| ==Notes==
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| {{reflist}}
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| ==References ==
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| Any physically or chemically oriented book on group theory mentions the orthogonality relations. The following more advanced books give the proofs:
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| * M. Hamermesh, ''Group Theory and its Applications to Physical Problems'', Addison-Wesley, Reading (1962). (Reprinted by Dover).
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| * W. Miller, Jr., ''Symmetry Groups and their Applications'', Academic Press, New York (1972).
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| * J. F. Cornwell, ''Group Theory in Physics,'' (Three volumes), Volume 1, Academic Press, New York (1997).
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| [[Category:Representation theory of groups]]
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