Encyclopedia > Geometric algebra

  Article Content

Geometric algebra

David Hestenes[?]' geometric algebra is a mathematical formalism that mixes quantities of different dimensionalities in a single value. This leads to apparently more natural treatments of several areas of physics without the use of complex numbers.

We start from a vectorial space Vn with an outer product "∧" (also called wedge product) defined on it, such that a graded algebraVn is generated. Then, we define a geometric product " " with the following properties, for all multivectors[?] A, B, C in the graded algebra ∧Vn:

  1. Closure
  2. Distributivity over the addition of multivectors: A (B + C) = A B + A C
  3. Associativity
  4. Unit element: there is a scalar 1 such that 1 A = A
  5. Commutativity with the product with a scalar a: a A = A a
  6. Contractive rule: for any vector a in Vn, a a is a scalar Q(a)

Properties (1) and (2) converts the vector space Vn into an algebra. From (3) and (4) the algebra becomes an associative unitary algebra. We call this algebra a geometric algebra Gn.

The contractive rule makes the difference with other associative algebras. In general, Q(x) is a quadratic form

Q(x) = ∑aij xi xj = xA x,
where x is a vector, xT its transposed vector, and A is a matrix. In this way, the contraction rule takes the form of a inner product. Usually the contraction rule is chosen so that Q(x) = ε ||x||2, with ε = +1, -1, 0. ε is called the signature of the vector x. Given a vector space of dimension n, we can define a vector base such that p of the vector in the base have positive signature, q have negative signature and r have null signature (obviously, p + q + r = n). We call (p, q, r) the signature of the vector space, and write Vp,q,r, and by extension, of the geometric algebra generated from this.

When a metric is defined, the geometric algebra is called a Clifford algebra, otherwise is called exterior or Grassmann algebra.

The geometric product is not commutative, but the following epression is, for any vector a, b:

a b + b a = (a + b)(a + b) - a a - b b = Q(a + b) - Q(a) - Q(b)
It is also a scalar, which allow us to redefine the inner product "·" (also dot product or scalar product) in terms of the geometric product:
a·b = 1/2 (a b + b a)
This leaves the asymmetric part of the geometric product as
ab = 1/2 (a b - b a)
As a consequence, the geometric product can be redefined as
a b = ab + a·b
Note that some authors define as the difference of outer and inner product instead.


External links:



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Museums in England

... Vehicle Museum[?], Leyland[?] London British Museum Imperial War Museum -- see also Manchester The London Institute Madame Tussaud's Museum of Movin ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 41.9 ms