I am self studying quantum field theories and as many of you know this can not be properly done without at least some knowledge of Lie groups and the corresponding algebra.
I am reading the QFT text by Michele Maggiore “A modern introduction to quantum field theory”. In his chapter on Lie groups (I know, a single chapter is far from enough) he defines a representation of the Lie group as an operation that assigns a linear operator to each element within the Lie group.
My question is, does all Lie groups has such a (linear) representation? Or is Michele Maggiore restricting his discussion on Lie groups to that of matrix Lie groups without explicitly stating so?
This might be trivial question, but I am new to Lie groups and is just seeking some clarification on the topic.
For any Lie group $G$ and any vector space $V$, there is a representation of $G$ which sends every element of $G$ to the identity operator on $V$. So, every Lie group has a representation.
In any case, though, I think you are kind of missing the point. We aren't interested in "groups which have a representation". Rather, we are interested in studying the many different representations which a single group may have. So even though a matrix Lie group "comes with" a canonical representation (since every element already is a matrix), we are still interested in other representations of such a group.