In mathematics, Cartan's criterion gives conditions for a Lie algebra in characteristic 0 to be solvable, which implies a related criterion for the Lie algebra to be semisimple. It is based on the notion of the Killing form, a symmetric bilinear form on
ak{g}
B(u,v)=\operatorname{tr}(\operatorname{ad}(u)\operatorname{ad}(v)),
Cartan's criterion for solvability states:
A Lie subalgebra
ak{g}
\operatorname{tr}(ab)=0
a\inak{g},b\in[ak{g},ak{g}].
The fact that
\operatorname{tr}(ab)=0
akg
Applying Cartan's criterion to the adjoint representation gives:
A finite-dimensional Lie algebra
ak{g}
K(ak{g},[ak{g},ak{g}])=0
Cartan's criterion for semisimplicity states:
A finite-dimensional Lie algebra
ak{g}
gave a very short proof that if a finite-dimensional Lie algebra (in any characteristic) has a non-degenerate invariant bilinear form and no non-zero abelian ideals, and in particular if its Killing form is non-degenerate, then it is a sum of simple Lie algebras.
Conversely, it follows easily from Cartan's criterion for solvability that a semisimple algebra (in characteristic 0) has a non-degenerate Killing form.
Cartan's criteria fail in characteristic
p>0
\operatorname{SL}p(k)
(a,b)=\operatorname{tr}(ab)
an
n\in\Z/p\Z
p>2
If a finite-dimensional Lie algebra is nilpotent, then the Killing form is identically zero (and more generally the Killing form vanishes on any nilpotent ideal). The converse is false: there are non-nilpotent Lie algebras whose Killing form vanishes. An example is given by the semidirect product of an abelian Lie algebra V with a 1-dimensional Lie algebra acting on V as an endomorphism b such that b is not nilpotent and Tr(b2)=0.
In characteristic 0, every reductive Lie algebra (one that is a sum of abelian and simple Lie algebras) has a non-degenerate invariant symmetric bilinear form. However the converse is false: a Lie algebra with a non-degenerate invariant symmetric bilinear form need not be a sum of simple and abelian Lie algebras. A typical counterexample is G = L[''t'']/tnL[''t''] where n>1, L is a simple complex Lie algebra with a bilinear form, and the bilinear form on G is given by taking the coefficient of tn-1 of the C[''t'']-valued bilinear form on G induced by the form on L. The bilinear form is non-degenerate, but the Lie algebra is not a sum of simple and abelian Lie algebras.