This entry is about calculational aspects of the exponential map for Lie groups. For more general exponential map via connections in Riemannian geometry see Lab:exponential map. Related entries in Lab: invariant vector field, adjoint action, Hausdorff series, Hadamard's formula. I used the standard facts from the introductory chapters on differential geometry and Lie groups in Sigurdur Helgason, Differential geometry, Lie groups and symmetric spaces, most notably the formula for the differential of the exponential map below. We use the Einstein summation convention, skipping the sum in the notation, when summing over repeating indices, one lower and one upper, whenever not said otherwise.
Throughout, is a Lie group with tangent Lie algebra .
Given , there is a unique 1-parametric subgroup through such that , and in particular .
If and , then the corresponding left invariant vector field satisfies
and, likewise, .
If is an analytic function on , for fixed and , the Taylor expansion for a function of parameter gives (Helgason formulas (6) and (11) in Sec. II.1)
The formula for the differential of the exponential map is
where on the right hand side is in fact the corresponding element in the tangent space at a vector in Lie algebra, which is itself identified with Lie algebra. Similarly we can write in terms of and :
Thus, if is the basis of with commutators and are the corresponding vector fields in and let . Denote (this sum is just a number!). Then and . Then . On the other hand, at point by the definition of left invariant fields. Thus and, likewise, and finally the comparison of the two gives .
We will call by the matrix and it will play a role in the construction of a Hopf algebroid. In fact, one can consider other coordinates on a neighborhood of in , not only the chart given by the exponential map; will then be a matrix of formal functions, while is how it looks in the chart given by the exponential map.
The following formula, quadratic in , holds:
In the chart given by the exponential map, and the identity boils down to the sequence of identities for
which are proved by induction on , using antisymmetry and the Jacobi identity
as well as the Pascal triangle identity
Denote by a neighborhood of such that the exponential map is diffeo from a neighborhood of zero in and . The entries of are identified with certain functions on . The above quadratic formula for is precisely the condition that the map given on the basis
extends (uniquely) to a homomorphism of associative algebras . For this one first defines such a map on free generators of the tensor algebra , instead of , and then checks that the ideal generated by relations gives zero, what boils down to our quadratic relation.