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Search options not deleted user 4231
2 votes

Is the size of a conjugacy class in a finite classical group a polynomial?

I agree that the question needs a better formulation. In any case, an approach by Demetris Deriziotis might be useful because it's based on a different kind of analysis: see here (freely availab …
Jim Humphreys's user avatar
5 votes

unipotent class in classical lie algebra bala-carter

I don't understand why you refer here to Bala-Carter, since their method provides a different approach to the traditional Dynkin classification and is formulated for semisimple groups (over algebraica …
Jim Humphreys's user avatar
9 votes

Describing Levi factors and unipotent radicals of parabolic subgroups in classical groups

I'll assume here that $G$ is reductive (or even semisimple), since otherwise the description of unipotent radicals is more open-ended. There is actually quite a bit of literature over the years, ofte …
Jim Humphreys's user avatar
4 votes
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Hilbert's Finiteness Theorem for connected semisimple Lie groups in Weyl's "Classical Groups"

Your basic question about a reference does go back to Weyl's complete reducibility theorem (I'd have to check his book on classical groups, but it isn't just a result about classical Lie groups). F …
Jim Humphreys's user avatar
13 votes

Connectedness of the linear algebraic group SO_n

[EDIT: I've tightened my wording and added a couple of references which I went back to out of curiosity.] Will's answer has the elements needed for a concrete reply to the question, but the question …
Jim Humphreys's user avatar
2 votes

What is the subgroup generated by involutions?

Maybe I can comment on Question 2. To me the essential point is that this kind of result belongs to elementary linear algebra and basic group theory rather than to geometric algebra. Generation of s …
Jim Humphreys's user avatar