A nonassociative algebra obeyed by objects such as the Lie bracket and Poisson
 bracket. Elements ,
 
, and 
 of a Lie algebra satisfy
| 
(1)
 | 
| 
(2)
 | 
and
| 
(3)
 | 
(the Jacobi identity). The relation  implies
| 
(4)
 | 
For characteristic not equal to two, these two relations are equivalent.
The binary operation of a Lie algebra is the bracket
| 
(5)
 | 
An associative algebra  with associative product 
 can be made into a Lie algebra 
 by the Lie product
| 
(6)
 | 
Every Lie algebra 
 is isomorphic to a subalgebra of some 
 where the associative algebra 
 may be taken to be the linear operators over a vector
 space 
 (the Poincaré-Birkhoff-Witt
 theorem; Jacobson 1979, pp. 159-160). If 
 is finite dimensional, then 
 can be taken to be finite dimensional (Ado's
 theorem for characteristic 
; Iwasawa's theorem for
 characteristic 
).
The classification of finite dimensional simple Lie algebras over an algebraically closed field of characteristic 0 can be accomplished by (1) determining matrices called Cartan matrices corresponding to indecomposable simple systems of roots and (2) determining the simple algebras associated with these matrices (Jacobson 1979, p. 128). This is one of the major results in Lie algebra theory, and is frequently accomplished with the aid of diagrams called Dynkin diagrams.
 
         
	    
	
    
