If $G$ is a connected reductive group over a perfect field $k$, why is the radical of $G$ equal to the connected component of the center? Borel's book (Linear Algebraic Groups) has a proof if $k$ is algebraically closed -- one can characterize the center of $G$ as the intersection of the Borels. But I don't know if that generalizes in some way over an arbitary field.
Why is the radical of a reductive group equal to the connected component of the center?
Not a grad student
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