Special unitary group
In abstract algebra, the special unitary group of degree n is the group of n by n unitary matrices with determinant 1 and entries from the field C of complex numbers, with the group operation that of matrix multiplication. It is written as SU(n). This is a subgroup of the unitary group U(n), itself a subgroup of the general linear group Gl(n,C).
The special unitary group SU(n) is a Lie group of dimension n2-1.
The corresponding Lie algebra is denoted by su(n). su(n) is spanned by the traceless antihermitian nxn compex matrices. For example, the following matrices form a basis for su(2) over R:
Note that the product of any two different generators is another generator, and that the generators anticommute. Together with the identity matrix (times i),
note: make clearer the fact that under matrix multiplication (which is anticommutative in this case), we generate the Clifford algebra Cl_3, whereas you generate the Lie algebra u(2) with commutator brackets instead.