This question is somewhat related to this one. Loosely speaking, when should I expect a GOE/GUE distribution? The angle of my approach to this is not through statements such as "there is a natural inverse-distance repulsion between particles." Rather, I'm interested in how to characterize GOE/GUE through their projections, symmetries and invariances.
For a random symmetric matrix of size $n\times n$, with entries drawn from a Gaussian Ensemble, the joint probability of eigenvalues can be written as:
$$\rho_{\beta,n}(x_1,\ldots,x_n)=C_{\beta,n}\prod_{1\leq i<j\leq N}|x_j-x_i|^\beta\prod_{i=1}^ne^{-\beta x_i^2/2}, \ \beta=1,2,3,4\ldots$$
where $\beta$ depends on the specific type of ensemble ($\beta=1$ for GOE, $\beta=2$ for GUE, etc.).
Now, suppose that $X_i$ $(i=1,2,\ldots,n)$ is a sequence of i.i.d. random variables such that the joint distribution of the vector $(X_1,\ldots,X_n)$ is invariant under rotations. Then the vector must be Gaussian.
Here's another characterization of Gaussians: If $Z$ is Gaussian and $X,Y$ are independent r.v. such that $Z=X+Y$, then $X,Y$ must be Gaussian. This is also known as Cramer's theorem.
There are many more characterizations of Gaussians.
Question: Are there some nice characterizations of the $\rho_{\beta,n}$ distributions? I would be particularly interested in the case of GOE ($\beta=1$). Moreover, I would love to see characterizations relying on symmetries, invariance or projections. If these properties exist, have there been usage of these techniques in the literature to show a certain distribution is from a Gaussian Ensemble?
Edit: I should add here that the characterizations I'm looking for should preferably not be related to characterizations of the random matrix ensemble involved. For example the GOE has a distribution that's invariant under orthogonal similarity transformations. I say this because in some problems, a connection to random matrix theory is nonobvious but numerically one sees the statistics are the same.
Here is an example. Take $n$ Brownian bridges starting at $0$ at $t=0$ and ending at $0$ at $t=2$. Now condition them to not intersect. Then the distribution of particle locations at $t=1$ is exactly the same as the GUE eigenvalue distribution. Now, of course there are well known ways of connecting these bridges directly to random matrix theory through the notion of determinental proceeses. However, suppose I didn't know of an immediate connection. Could I somehow convince myself that the GUE distribution is a good guess for this process?