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arxiv: 2605.19512 · v1 · pith:CC45RRWInew · submitted 2026-05-19 · 🧮 math.RA · math.GR

Images of Lie Polynomials on simple Lie algebras

Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 02:06 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.RA math.GR
keywords Lie polynomialsimages of mapssimple Lie algebrasChevalley algebrasfinite fieldsautomorphismsconjugacy classes
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The pith

For simple Chevalley algebras over finite fields of very good characteristic, any automorphism-closed subset containing zero arises as the image of a Lie polynomial.

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

The paper establishes a classification for the possible images of Lie polynomials evaluated on simple Chevalley Lie algebras defined over finite fields in very good characteristic. It shows that the only conditions needed to guarantee a subset is such an image are that the subset is invariant under all automorphisms of the algebra and contains the zero element. This mirrors earlier results on word maps for finite simple groups and provides a complete description of attainable image sets without first constructing explicit polynomials. The authors also give concrete Lie polynomials realizing each conjugacy class union zero inside the special linear Lie algebra of rank one over odd finite fields.

Core claim

We prove that for a simple Chevalley algebra over a finite field of very good characteristic, these two properties are enough to classify all possible subsets that can be the image of a Lie polynomial.

What carries the argument

The pair of conditions (automorphism invariance and containment of zero) that together characterize every attainable image set of a Lie polynomial.

If this is right

  • Every GL_2(q)-conjugacy class together with zero arises as the image of an explicit Lie polynomial when the algebra is sl_2(q) for q odd.
  • The classification applies uniformly to all simple Chevalley algebras meeting the characteristic and finiteness hypotheses.
  • Finding explicit Lie polynomials for a prescribed admissible subset becomes the remaining constructive task after the classification is settled.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The result indicates that the finite-field setting permits a coarser description of images than the algebraically closed case, where additional restrictions appear.
  • Computational checks for small-rank algebras and small fields could verify the classification by enumerating all possible Lie polynomials of low degree.
  • The parallel with Lubotzky's theorem on word maps suggests that similar image problems for other non-associative structures over finite fields may admit analogous two-condition classifications.

Load-bearing premise

The Lie algebra must be a simple Chevalley algebra over a finite field of very good characteristic.

What would settle it

A concrete subset of such an algebra that is closed under all automorphisms and contains zero yet cannot be obtained as the image of any Lie polynomial, or an image that fails one of the two properties.

read the original abstract

A Lie polynomial is an element of a free Lie algebra $\mathcal F_k$ on $k$-generators, which defines a Lie map on a given Lie algebra $L$, by substituting $k$-elements of $L$. Similar to word maps on groups and polynomial maps on algebras, one studies here questions analogous to Waring-like problems, the L'vov-Kaplansky conjecture, etc. In this article, we would like to address a problem for Lie algebras parallel to the one Lubotzky solved (Images of word maps in finite simple groups, Glasg. Math. J., 56, no. 2, 465-469, 2014) for finite simple groups. It is easy to verify that the image of a Lie map is (a) closed under automorphism, and (b) contains $0$. In this article, we prove that for a simple Chevalley algebra over a finite field of ``very good'' characteristic, these two properties are enough to classify all possible subsets that can be the image of a Lie polynomial. The next question is to find such Lie polynomials for a given subset satisfying the two properties. Contrary to the results over an algebraically closed field, we find Lie polynomials in the case of Lie algebra $\mathfrak{sl}_2(q)$, for $q$ odd, which give each $\rm{GL}_2(q)$ conjugacy class together with zero as an image.

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

1 major / 0 minor

Summary. The manuscript proves that for a simple Chevalley Lie algebra L over a finite field of very good characteristic, the images of Lie polynomials are precisely the subsets of L that are invariant under Aut(L) and contain 0. The 'only if' direction follows directly from the definitions; the converse is established by showing existence, with explicit constructions provided for the case of sl_2(q) (q odd) realizing each GL_2(q)-conjugacy class union {0}.

Significance. If the result holds, this gives a complete classification of images of Lie polynomials on these algebras, directly paralleling Lubotzky's theorem on word maps in finite simple groups and advancing the study of Waring-type and L'vov-Kaplansky problems in the Lie-algebra setting. The explicit constructions for sl_2(q) are a concrete strength, as they realize images not known to exist over algebraically closed fields.

major comments (1)
  1. [Abstract (paragraph beginning 'In this article, we prove that...')] Abstract, paragraph beginning 'In this article, we prove that...': the central classification claim requires proving existence of a Lie polynomial for every Aut(L)-invariant subset containing 0. Explicit constructions are supplied only for sl_2(q) with q odd; the argument for higher-rank and exceptional types appears to rest on an unstated reduction or non-constructive step whose details are not verified in the manuscript, which is load-bearing for the general statement.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading of the manuscript and for identifying the need for additional clarity on the existence direction of the classification. We address the concern point by point below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: Abstract, paragraph beginning 'In this article, we prove that...': the central classification claim requires proving existence of a Lie polynomial for every Aut(L)-invariant subset containing 0. Explicit constructions are supplied only for sl_2(q) with q odd; the argument for higher-rank and exceptional types appears to rest on an unstated reduction or non-constructive step whose details are not verified in the manuscript, which is load-bearing for the general statement.

    Authors: We agree that the current exposition does not sufficiently detail the reduction used to establish existence in higher-rank and exceptional cases. The 'only if' direction is immediate from the definitions. For the converse, the argument proceeds by reducing to the sl_2(q) case via the existence of suitable sl_2-subalgebras whose Aut(L)-orbits generate the desired invariant sets, combined with an extension of the explicit sl_2 polynomials; however, this reduction is only sketched and not verified in full for all types. We will add a new subsection that makes the reduction explicit, states the necessary embedding lemmas, and confirms applicability to exceptional types. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: classification follows from definitions plus explicit constructions

full rationale

The paper states that images of Lie polynomials are always Aut-invariant and contain 0 (immediate from the definition of Lie maps and the action of automorphisms). The converse—that every such subset arises as an image—is asserted as a theorem for simple Chevalley algebras over finite fields of very good characteristic, with explicit Lie polynomials constructed for each GL_2(q)-conjugacy class union {0} when L = sl_2(q), q odd. No equations, fitted parameters, or self-citations are shown to reduce the existence claim to a tautology or to prior work by the same authors; the derivation therefore remains non-circular and self-contained.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The result rests on the domain assumption that the Lie algebra is simple Chevalley of very good characteristic; no free parameters or invented entities are mentioned.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption The Lie algebra is a simple Chevalley algebra over a finite field of very good characteristic.
    Explicitly required in the statement of the classification theorem.

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