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arxiv: 2604.08108 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-09 · 🧮 math.GR

Elements of finite order in the normalizer of a maximal torus of a semisimple group

Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 17:48 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.GR
keywords semisimple algebraic groupsmaximal toriWeyl groupsnormalizersfinite order elementsirreducible varietiesconjugation orbits
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The pith

The set of elements of fixed finite order in each normalizer component of a maximal torus is a finite union of irreducible torus orbits with dimension given by the Weyl element's fixed space.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

This paper proves a structure result for torsion elements inside the normalizer of a maximal torus in semisimple algebraic groups. Specifically, in each component N_w corresponding to a Weyl group element w, the elements of order dividing a fixed n are either absent or form finitely many irreducible subvarieties that are precisely the orbits under the torus conjugation action, each of dimension equal to the fixed vector space dimension of w. This matters because it gives an explicit geometric and dimensional control over these elements, which appear in the study of group actions and finite subgroups. The proof uses the standard decomposition of the normalizer and properties of algebraic group varieties.

Core claim

We prove that the set of elements of a given finite order in the connected component N_w of the normalizer N_G(T) of a maximal torus T of a semisimple group G is either empty or a disjoint union of finitely many irreducible subvarieties C_i. The dimension of each C_i equals the dimension of the subspace of fixed vectors for the action of the element w of the Weyl group W corresponding to the component N_w. Moreover, each C_i is an orbit of the action of the torus T on the component N_w by conjugation.

What carries the argument

The connected components N_w of the normalizer N_G(T) parametrized by Weyl group elements w, and the orbits of the conjugation action by the torus T.

Load-bearing premise

The normalizer decomposes into components N_w that are irreducible varieties and that the torus acts by conjugation with orbit dimensions determined solely by the fixed subspace of w.

What would settle it

Observe whether in a concrete example, such as the group SL_n over the complex numbers with a specific permutation matrix corresponding to w, the elements of order 2 in N_w form orbits of the predicted dimension or not.

read the original abstract

We prove that the set of elements of a given finite order in the connected component $N_w$ of the normalizer $N_G(T)$ of a maximal torus $T$ of a semisimple group $G$ is either empty or a disjoint union of finitely many irreducible subvarieties $C_i$. The dimension of each $C_i$ equals the dimension of the subspace of fixed vectors for the action of the element $w$ of the Weyl group $W$ corresponding to the component $N_w$. Moreover, each $C_i$ is an orbit of the action of the torus $T$ on the component $N_w$ by conjugation.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 3 minor

Summary. The paper proves that for a semisimple algebraic group G over an algebraically closed field with maximal torus T, and for each connected component N_w of the normalizer N_G(T) parametrized by a Weyl group element w, the locus of elements of any fixed finite order m is either empty or a finite disjoint union of irreducible subvarieties C_i. Each such C_i is a single orbit under the conjugation action of T, and has dimension equal to the dimension of the subspace of vectors in the Lie algebra fixed by the linear action of w.

Significance. If the result holds, it gives a clean geometric and representation-theoretic description of torsion elements in normalizer components, directly linking their dimensions and orbit structure to the fixed-space dimensions of Weyl group elements. This refines standard facts about Bruhat decomposition and conjugation actions, and may be useful for studying centralizers, conjugacy classes, or arithmetic invariants in semisimple groups. The argument invokes only classical properties of root systems, algebraic group actions, and irreducible varieties, with no ad-hoc parameters or characteristic restrictions.

minor comments (3)
  1. The introduction would benefit from a brief comparison with known results on finite-order elements in G itself (e.g., via the work of Steinberg or Springer on regular semisimple elements) to clarify the novelty of the normalizer case.
  2. Notation for the components N_w and the finite-order condition should be introduced with an explicit reference to the standard identification N_w ≅ T ⋊ <w> (or the corresponding twisted torsor) early in §2, to make the orbit-stabilizer step fully transparent.
  3. A short remark on whether the result extends to non-algebraically-closed fields or to positive characteristic (where finite-order elements may behave differently) would strengthen the statement of the main theorem.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the positive assessment of our manuscript, including the accurate summary of the main result and the favorable evaluation of its significance. We note the recommendation for minor revision. Since the report contains no specific major comments, questions, or suggested changes, we have no individual points to address. We will perform a final proofreading pass to correct any typographical issues or minor expository clarifications before resubmission.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity detected

full rationale

The manuscript establishes a theorem on the finite-order locus in each connected component N_w of the normalizer by applying standard facts about algebraic group actions, Weyl group parametrization, conjugation by the torus T, and the geometry of fixed-point loci under finite-order conditions. The dimension formula is obtained directly from the fixed-space dimension of w via the adjoint representation and orbit-stabilizer, without any self-definitional loops, fitted parameters renamed as predictions, or load-bearing self-citations. All invoked properties (root systems, Bruhat decomposition, irreducibility of varieties) are external to the paper and do not reduce the claimed result to its own inputs by construction.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 3 axioms · 0 invented entities

Only the abstract is available, so the full list of background results invoked in the proof is unknown. The claim rests on standard facts about semisimple groups and algebraic varieties.

axioms (3)
  • domain assumption G is a semisimple algebraic group over an algebraically closed field with maximal torus T
    Stated in the abstract as the setup for the normalizer N_G(T)
  • domain assumption Connected components of N_G(T) are parametrized by elements w of the Weyl group W
    The components are labeled N_w corresponding to w in W
  • standard math Standard properties of conjugation actions, irreducible varieties, and fixed subspaces under linear actions hold
    Used to define dimensions and orbits in the statement

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5414 in / 1637 out tokens · 43190 ms · 2026-05-10T17:48:18.497547+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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