Why is the string group not a Lie group?

The result is that a compact, connected simple Lie group $G$ has $\pi_3(G) = \mathbb{Z}$. Simple covering space or subgroups arguments should get you to $SO(n)$ which is all that matters. For that matter start with the 1-connected $Spin(n)$.

[OK, a short train ride later, now I'm home from work. To continue...]

The fibre of the 3-connected cover is a 2-type, and in the case of $Spin(n)$ this is a $K(\mathbb{Z},2)$, so at the very least, $String(n)$ can't be finite-dimensional. If one could construct a primitive[1] $PU(\mathcal{H})$-bundle on $Spin(n)$ whose Dixmier-Douady classs was the generator $\langle -,[-,]\rangle \in H^3(Spin(n))$, then you would have an infinite-dimensional Lie group model for $String(G)$ (here $\mathcal{H}$ is a infinite-dimensional separable Hilbert space, $PU(\mathcal{H})$ is then a smooth model for $K(\mathbb{Z},2)$).

([1] Primitive in the sense that for the group operations $G\times G\to G$ and $(-)^{-1}:G\to G$ there are bundle maps covering them.)

I don't know if this is possible or not, but I'm sure this idea has occurred to someone before, and since we haven't seen it, there might be a reason (well, I haven't seen it and everyone goes on about $String$ only being a topological group).


As David Roberts is saying it's conceivable the string group could be represented by an infinite dimension manifold. I'm totally agnostic on that, but as I interpret the question it's asking why it's not equivalent(as an H-space?) to a non-compact finite dimensional Lie group(David Robert also explains that for a compact simply connected Lie group we always have $\pi_3$ non vanishing). I think though the underlying space has cohomology in infinitely many dimensions. Let me illustrate this in the case of String(3). So we have a Serre spectral sequence for the fibration $K(Z,2)\mapsto String(3) \mapsto S^3$. Now thinking of Z[x] as the cohomology ring of K(Z,2), the differential has to be $d:x \mapsto e$, the generator for the cohomology of $S^3$. So using the Leibnitz rule, $x^2\mapsto 2x\otimes e$, $x^3 \mapsto 3x^2\otimes e$... etc. This means that $H^5(String(3)= Z/2Z$, H^7(String(3))=Z/3Z... etc


To follow up, there is now an infinite-dimensional Lie group model of String: A Smooth Model for the String Group by Thomas Nikolaus, Christoph Sachse, Christoph Wockel, Int. Math. Res. Not. IMRN 16 (2013) 3678-3721, https://arxiv.org/abs/1104.4288