Paravector

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The name paravector is used for the combination of a scalar and a vector in any Clifford algebra, known as geometric algebra among physicists.

This name was given by J. G. Maks in a doctoral dissertation at Technische Universiteit Delft, Netherlands, in 1989.

The complete algebra of paravectors along with corresponding higher grade generalizations, all in the context of the Euclidean space of three dimensions, is an alternative approach to the spacetime algebra (STA) introduced by David Hestenes. This alternative algebra is called algebra of physical space (APS).

Fundamental axiom

For Euclidean spaces, the fundamental axiom indicates that the product of a vector with itself is the scalar value of the length squared (positive)

๐ฏ๐ฏ=๐ฏ๐ฏ

Writing

๐ฏ=๐ฎ+๐ฐ,

and introducing this into the expression of the fundamental axiom

(๐ฎ+๐ฐ)2=๐ฎ๐ฎ+๐ฎ๐ฐ+๐ฐ๐ฎ+๐ฐ๐ฐ,

we get the following expression after appealing to the fundamental axiom again

๐ฎ๐ฎ+2๐ฎ๐ฐ+๐ฐ๐ฐ=๐ฎ๐ฎ+๐ฎ๐ฐ+๐ฐ๐ฎ+๐ฐ๐ฐ,

which allows to identify the scalar product of two vectors as

๐ฎ๐ฐ=12(๐ฎ๐ฐ+๐ฐ๐ฎ).

As an important consequence we conclude that two orthogonal vectors (with zero scalar product) anticommute

๐ฎ๐ฐ+๐ฐ๐ฎ=0

The three-dimensional Euclidean space

The following list represents an instance of a complete basis for the C3space,

{1,{๐ž1,๐ž2,๐ž3},{๐ž23,๐ž31,๐ž12},๐ž123},

which forms an eight-dimensional space, where the multiple indices indicate the product of the respective basis vectors, for example

๐ž23=๐ž2๐ž3.

The grade of a basis element is defined in terms of the vector multiplicity, such that

Grade Type Basis element/s
0 Unitary real scalar 1
1 Vector {๐ž1,๐ž2,๐ž3}
2 Bivector {๐ž23,๐ž31,๐ž12}
3 Trivector volume element ๐ž123

According to the fundamental axiom, two different basis vectors anticommute,

๐ži๐žj+๐žj๐ži=2δij

or in other words,

๐ži๐žj=๐žj๐ži;ij

This means that the volume element ๐ž123 squares to 1

๐ž1232=๐ž1๐ž2๐ž3๐ž1๐ž2๐ž3=๐ž2๐ž3๐ž2๐ž3=๐ž3๐ž3=1.

Moreover, the volume element ๐ž123 commutes with any other element of the C(3) algebra, so that it can be identified with the complex number i, whenever there is no danger of confusion. In fact, the volume element ๐ž123 along with the real scalar forms an algebra isomorphic to the standard complex algebra. The volume element can be used to rewrite an equivalent form of the basis as

Grade Type Basis element/s
0 Unitary real scalar 1
1 Vector {๐ž1,๐ž2,๐ž3}
2 Bivector

{i๐ž1,i๐ž2,i๐ž3}

3 Trivector volume element

i

Paravectors

The corresponding paravector basis that combines a real scalar and vectors is

{1,๐ž1,๐ž2,๐ž3},

which forms a four-dimensional linear space. The paravector space in the three-dimensional Euclidean space C3 can be used to represent the space-time of special relativity as expressed in the algebra of physical space (APS).

It is convenient to write the unit scalar as 1=๐ž0, so that the complete basis can be written in a compact form as

{๐žμ},

where the Greek indices such as μ run from 0 to 3.

Antiautomorphism

Reversion conjugation

The Reversion antiautomorphism is denoted by . The action of this conjugation is to reverse the order of the geometric product (product between Clifford numbers in general).

(AB)=BA,

where vectors and real scalar numbers are invariant under reversion conjugation and are said to be real, for example:

๐š=๐š
1=1

On the other hand, the trivector and bivectors change sign under reversion conjugation and are said to be purely imaginary. The reversion conjugation applied to each basis element is given below

Element Reversion conjugation
1 1
๐ž1 ๐ž1
๐ž2 ๐ž2
๐ž3 ๐ž3
๐ž12 ๐ž12
๐ž23 ๐ž23
๐ž31 ๐ž31
๐ž123 ๐ž123

Clifford conjugation

The Clifford Conjugation is denoted by a bar over the object ยฏ. This conjugation is also called bar conjugation.

Clifford conjugation is the combined action of grade involution and reversion.

The action of the Clifford conjugation on a paravector is to reverse the sign of the vectors, maintaining the sign of the real scalar numbers, for example

๐šยฏ=๐š
1ยฏ=1

This is due to both scalars and vectors being invariant to reversion ( it is impossible to reverse the order of one or no things ) and scalars are of zero order and so are of even grade whilst vectors are of odd grade and so undergo a sign change under grade involution.

As antiautomorphism, the Clifford conjugation is distributed as

AB=BA

The bar conjugation applied to each basis element is given below

Element Bar conjugation
1 1
๐ž1 ๐ž1
๐ž2 ๐ž2
๐ž3 ๐ž3
๐ž12 ๐ž12
๐ž23 ๐ž23
๐ž31 ๐ž31
๐ž123 ๐ž123
  • Note.- The volume element is invariant under the bar conjugation.

Grade automorphism

The grade automorphism

AB=AB

is defined as the inversion of the sign of odd-grade multivectors, while maintaining the even-grade multivectors invariant:

Element Grade involution
1 1
๐ž1 ๐ž1
๐ž2 ๐ž2
๐ž3 ๐ž3
๐ž12 ๐ž12
๐ž23 ๐ž23
๐ž31 ๐ž31
๐ž123 ๐ž123

Invariant subspaces according to the conjugations

Four special subspaces can be defined in the C3 space based on their symmetries under the reversion and Clifford conjugation

  • Scalar subspace: Invariant under Clifford conjugation.
  • Vector subspace: Reverses sign under Clifford conjugation.
  • Real subspace: Invariant under reversion conjugation.
  • Imaginary subspace: Reverses sign under reversion conjugation.

Given p as a general Clifford number, the complementary scalar and vector parts of p are given by symmetric and antisymmetric combinations with the Clifford conjugation

pS=12(p+p),
pV=12(pp).

In similar way, the complementary Real and Imaginary parts of p are given by symmetric and antisymmetric combinations with the Reversion conjugation

pR=12(p+p),
pI=12(pp).

It is possible to define four intersections, listed below

pRS=pSRpRS
pRV=pVRpRV
pIV=pVIpIV
pIS=pSIpIS

The following table summarizes the grades of the respective subspaces, where for example, the grade 0 can be seen as the intersection of the Real and Scalar subspaces

Real Imaginary
Scalar 0 3
Vector 1 2
  • Remark: The term "Imaginary" is used in the context of the C3 algebra and does not imply the introduction of the standard complex numbers in any form.

Closed subspaces with respect to the product

There are two subspaces that are closed with respect to the product. They are the scalar space and the even space that are isomorphic with the well known algebras of complex numbers and quaternions.

  • The scalar space made of grades 0 and 3 is isomorphic with the standard algebra of complex numbers with the identification of
    ๐ž123=i.
  • The even space, made of elements of grades 0 and 2, is isomorphic with the algebra of quaternions with the identification of
    ๐ž23=i
    ๐ž31=j
    ๐ž12=k.

Scalar product

Given two paravectors u and v, the generalization of the scalar product is

uvยฏS.

The magnitude square of a paravector u is

uuยฏS,

which is not a definite bilinear form and can be equal to zero even if the paravector is not equal to zero.

It is very suggestive that the paravector space automatically obeys the metric of the Minkowski space because

ημν=๐žμ๐žยฏνS

and in particular:

η00=๐ž0๐žยฏ0=1(1)S=1,
η11=๐ž1๐žยฏ1=๐ž1(๐ž1)S=1,
η01=๐ž0๐žยฏ1=1(๐ž1)S=0.

Biparavectors

Given two paravectors u and v, the biparavector B is defined as:

B=uvยฏV.

The biparavector basis can be written as

{๐žμ๐žยฏνV},

which contains six independent elements, including real and imaginary terms. Three real elements (vectors) as

๐ž0๐žยฏkV=๐žk,

and three imaginary elements (bivectors) as

๐žj๐žยฏkV=๐žjk

where j,k run from 1 to 3.

In the Algebra of physical space, the electromagnetic field is expressed as a biparavector as

F=๐„+i๐,

where both the electric and magnetic fields are real vectors

๐„=๐„
๐=๐

and i represents the pseudoscalar volume element.

Another example of biparavector is the representation of the space-time rotation rate that can be expressed as

W=iθj๐žj+ηj๐žj,

with three ordinary rotation angle variables θj and three rapidities ηj.

Triparavectors

Given three paravectors u, v and w, the triparavector T is defined as:

T=uvยฏwI.

The triparavector basis can be written as

{๐žμ๐žยฏν๐žλI},

but there are only four independent triparavectors, so it can be reduced to

{i๐žρ}.

Pseudoscalar

The pseudoscalar basis is

{๐žμ๐žยฏν๐žλ๐žยฏρIS},

but a calculation reveals that it contains only a single term. This term is the volume element i=๐ž1๐ž2๐ž3.

The four grades, taken in combination of pairs generate the paravector, biparavector and triparavector spaces as shown in the next table, where for example, we see that the paravector is made of grades 0 and 1

1 3
0 Paravector Scalar/Pseudoscalar
2 Biparavector Triparavector

Paragradient

The paragradient operator is the generalization of the gradient operator in the paravector space. The paragradient in the standard paravector basis is

=๐ž00๐ž11๐ž22๐ž33,

which allows one to write the d'Alembert operator as

=ยฏS=ยฏS

The standard gradient operator can be defined naturally as

=๐ž11+๐ž22+๐ž33,

so that the paragradient can be written as

=0,

where ๐ž0=1.

The application of the paragradient operator must be done carefully, always respecting its non-commutative nature. For example, a widely used derivative is

ef(x)๐ž3=(f(x))ef(x)๐ž3๐ž3,

where f(x) is a scalar function of the coordinates.

The paragradient is an operator that always acts from the left if the function is a scalar function. However, if the function is not scalar, the paragradient can act from the right as well. For example, the following expression is expanded as

(L)=๐ž00L+(1L)๐ž1+(2L)๐ž2+(3L)๐ž3

Null paravectors as projectors

Null paravectors are elements that are not necessarily zero but have magnitude identical to zero. For a null paravector p, this property necessarily implies the following identity

ppยฏ=0.

In the context of Special Relativity they are also called lightlike paravectors.

Projectors are null paravectors of the form

P๐ค=12(1+๐ค^),

where ๐ค^ is a unit vector.

A projector P๐ค of this form has a complementary projector Pยฏ๐ค

Pยฏ๐ค=12(1๐ค^),

such that

P๐ค+Pยฏ๐ค=1

As projectors, they are idempotent

P๐ค=P๐คP๐ค=P๐คP๐คP๐ค=...

and the projection of one on the other is zero because they are null paravectors

P๐คPยฏ๐ค=0.

The associated unit vector of the projector can be extracted as

๐ค^=P๐คPยฏ๐ค,

this means that ๐ค^ is an operator with eigenfunctions P๐ค and Pยฏ๐ค, with respective eigenvalues 1 and 1.

From the previous result, the following identity is valid assuming that f(๐ค^) is analytic around zero

f(๐ค^)=f(1)P๐ค+f(1)Pยฏ๐ค.

This gives origin to the pacwoman property, such that the following identities are satisfied

f(๐ค^)P๐ค=f(1)P๐ค,
f(๐ค^)Pยฏ๐ค=f(1)Pยฏ๐ค.

Null basis for the paravector space

A basis of elements, each one of them null, can be constructed for the complete C3 space. The basis of interest is the following

{Pยฏ3,P3๐ž1,P3,๐ž1P3}

so that an arbitrary paravector

p=p0๐ž0+p1๐ž1+p2๐ž2+p3๐ž3

can be written as

p=(p0+p3)P3+(p0p3)Pยฏ3+(p1+ip2)๐ž1P3+(p1ip2)P3๐ž1

This representation is useful for some systems that are naturally expressed in terms of the light cone variables that are the coefficients of P3 and Pยฏ3 respectively.

Every expression in the paravector space can be written in terms of the null basis. A paravector p is in general parametrized by two real scalars numbers {u,v} and a general scalar number w (including scalar and pseudoscalar numbers)

p=uPยฏ3+vP3+w๐ž1P3+wP3๐ž1

the paragradient in the null basis is

=2P3u+2Pยฏ3v2๐ž1P3w2P3๐ž1w

Higher dimensions

An n-dimensional Euclidean space allows the existence of multivectors of grade n (n-vectors). The dimension of the vector space is evidently equal to n and a simple combinatorial analysis shows that the dimension of the bivector space is (n2). In general, the dimension of the multivector space of grade m is (nm) and the dimension of the whole Clifford algebra C(n) is 2n.

A given multivector with homogeneous grade is either invariant or changes sign under the action of the reversion conjugation . The elements that remain invariant are defined as Hermitian and those that change sign are defined as anti-Hermitian. Grades can thus be classified as follows:

Grade Classification
0 Hermitian
1 Hermitian
2 Anti-Hermitian
3 Anti-Hermitian
4 Hermitian
5 Hermitian
6 Anti-Hermitian
7 Anti-Hermitian

Matrix representation

The algebra of the C(3) space is isomorphic to the Pauli matrix algebra such that

Matrix representation 3D Explicit matrix
๐ž0 σ0

(1001)

๐ž1 σ1

(0110)

๐ž2 σ2

(0ii0)

๐ž3 σ3

(1001)

from which the null basis elements become

P3=(1000);Pยฏ3=(0001);P3๐ž1=(0100);๐ž1P3=(0010).

A general Clifford number in 3D can be written as

Ψ=ψ11P3ψ12P3๐ž1+ψ21๐ž1P3+ψ22Pยฏ3,

where the coefficients ψjk are scalar elements (including pseudoscalars). The indexes were chosen such that the representation of this Clifford number in terms of the Pauli matrices is

Ψ(ψ11ψ12ψ21ψ22)

Conjugations

The reversion conjugation is translated into the Hermitian conjugation and the bar conjugation is translated into the following matrix:

Ψยฏ(ψ22ψ12ψ21ψ11),

such that the scalar part is translated as

ΨSψ11+ψ222(1001)=Tr[ψ]2๐Ÿ2×2

The rest of the subspaces are translated as

ΨV(0ψ12ψ210)
ΨR12(ψ11+ψ11*ψ12+ψ21*ψ21+ψ12*ψ22+ψ22*)
ΨI12(ψ11ψ11*ψ12ψ21*ψ21ψ12*ψ22ψ22*)

Higher dimensions

The matrix representation of a Euclidean space in higher dimensions can be constructed in terms of the Kronecker product of the Pauli matrices, resulting in complex matrices of dimension 2n. The 4D representation could be taken as

Matrix representation 4D
๐ž1

σ3σ1

๐ž2

σ3σ2

๐ž3

σ3σ3

๐ž4

σ2σ0

The 7D representation could be taken as

Matrix representation 7D
๐ž1

σ0σ3σ1

๐ž2

σ0σ3σ2

๐ž3

σ0σ3σ3

๐ž4

σ0σ2σ0

๐ž5

σ3σ1σ0

๐ž6

σ1σ1σ0

๐ž7

σ2σ1σ0

Lie algebras

Clifford algebras can be used to represent any classical Lie algebra. In general it is possible to identify Lie algebras of compact groups by using anti-Hermitian elements, which can be extended to non-compact groups by adding Hermitian elements.

The bivectors of an n-dimensional Euclidean space are Hermitian elements and can be used to represent the spin(n) Lie algebra.

The bivectors of the three-dimensional Euclidean space form the spin(3) Lie algebra, which is isomorphic to the su(2) Lie algebra. This accidental isomorphism allows to picture a geometric interpretation of the states of the two dimensional Hilbert space by using the Bloch sphere. One of those systems is the spin 1/2 particle.

The spin(3) Lie algebra can be extended by adding the three unitary vectors to form a Lie algebra isomorphic to the SL(2,C) Lie algebra, which is the double cover of the Lorentz group SO(3,1). This isomorphism allows the possibility to develop a formalism of special relativity based on SL(2,C), which is carried out in the form of the algebra of physical space.

There is only one additional accidental isomorphism between a spin Lie algebra and a su(N) Lie algebra. This is the isomorphism between spin(6) and su(4).

Another interesting isomorphism exists between spin(5) and sp(4). So, the sp(4) Lie algebra can be used to generate the USp(4) group. Despite that this group is smaller than the SU(4) group, it is seen to be enough to span the four-dimensional Hilbert space.

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Textbooks

  • Baylis, William (2002). Electrodynamics: A Modern Geometric Approach (2nd ed.). Birkhรคuser. Template:ISBN
  • Baylis, William, Clifford (Geometric) Algebras With Applications in Physics, Mathematics, and Engineering, Birkhauser (1999)
  • [H1999] David Hestenes: New Foundations for Classical Mechanics (Second Edition). Template:ISBN, Kluwer Academic Publishers (1999)
  • Chris Doran and Antony Lasenby, Geometric Algebra for Physicists, Cambridge, 2003

Articles

Template:Algebra of Physical Space