The Schrodinger model for the minimal representation of the indefinite orthogonal group O(p, q)
Abstract
We introduce the `Fourier transform' FC on the isotropic cone C associated to an indefinite quadratic form of signature (n1,n2) on Rn (n=n1+n2: even). This transform is in some sense the unique and natural unitary operator on L2(C), as is the case with the Euclidean Fourier transform. Inspired by recent developments of algebraic representation theory of reductive groups, we shed new light on classical analysis on the one hand, and give the global formulas for the L2-model of the minimal representation of the simple Lie group G=O(n1+1,n2+1) on the other hand. The transform FC expands functions on C into joint eigenfunctions of the n commuting, self-adjoint, second order differential operators. We decompose FC into the singular Radon transform and the Mellin--Barnes integral, find its distribution kernel, and establish the inversion and the Plancherel formula. FC reduces to the Hankel transform if G is O(n,2) or O(3,3). The unitary operator FC together with the simple action of the conformal transformation group generates the minimal representation of the indefinite orthogonal group G. Various different models of the same representation have been constructed by Kazhdan, Kostant, Binegar-Zierau, Gross-Wallach, Zhu-Huang, Torasso, Brylinski, and Kobayashi-Orsted, and others. Among them, our model built on L2(C) generalizes the classic Schrodinger model of the Weil representation. Yet another motif is special functions. Large group symmetries in the minimal representation yield functional equations of various special functions. We find explicit K-finite vectors on L2(C), and give a new proof of the Plancherel formula for Meijer's G-transforms.
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