Definition of Cartan subalgebra in Erdmann-Wildon

lie-algebrassemisimple-lie-algebras

Sorry in advance if this is too basic but I am just beginning to learn about lie algebras. I am reading Introdution to Lie Algebras by Karin Erdmann and Mark J. Wildon and I don't understand the definition of Cartan subalgebras (p. 94):

Definition 10.2: A Lie subalgebra $H$ of a Lie algebra $L$ is said to be a Cartan subalgebra (or CSA) if $H$ is abelian and every element $h\in H$ is semisimple, and moreover $H$ is maximal with these properties.

I understand what a "$h\in H$ is semisimple" means when $H$ is a semisimple Lie algebra ($n=0$ where $h=d+n$ is the Abstract Jordan decomposition, p. 87). However in our case $H$ isn't semisimple if $\dim H>0$, so I don't understand why this makes sense. I thought maybe it meant that $h$, seen as an element of $L$, is semisimple, but the authors emphasis after the definition that "we do not assume $L$ is semisimple in this definition".

What is the meaning of "$h\in H$ is semisimple"?

I'm thinking that this could mean $\mathsf{ad}(h)\in \mathsf{gl}(V)$ is diagonalisable (I'm just interested in the complex case), but I'm sure the authors would have stated explicitely that we can extend the definition to the non-semisimple case (or maybe I missed it).

Thanks in advance for your help.

Best Answer

Semisimple elements are also defined for non-semisimple Lie algebras.

Definition: A semi-simple element of an abstract Lie algebra $L$ is an element $x\in L$ for which the adjoint linear transformation $\operatorname{ad}(x)$ is a semi-simple endomorphism of the vector space $L$".

Reference: See here.

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