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Classification of Clifford algebras

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In abstract algebra, in particular in the theory of nondegenerate quadratic forms on vector spaces, the finite-dimensional real and complex Clifford algebras for a nondegenerate quadratic form have been completely classified as rings. In each case, the Clifford algebra is algebra isomorphic to a full matrix ring over R, C, or H (the quaternions), or to a direct sum of two copies of such an algebra, though not in a canonical way. Below it is shown that distinct Clifford algebras may be algebra-isomorphic, as is the case of Cl1,1(R) and Cl2,0(R), which are both isomorphic as rings to the ring of two-by-two matrices over the real numbers.

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Transcription

Notation and conventions

The Clifford product is the manifest ring product for the Clifford algebra, and all algebra homomorphisms in this article are with respect to this ring product. Other products defined within Clifford algebras, such as the exterior product, and other structure, such as the distinguished subspace of generators V, are not used here. This article uses the (+) sign convention for Clifford multiplication so that

for all vectors v in the vector space of generators V, where Q is the quadratic form on the vector space V. We will denote the algebra of n × n matrices with entries in the division algebra K by Mn(K) or End(Kn). The direct sum of two such identical algebras will be denoted by Mn(K) ⊕ Mn(K), which is isomorphic to Mn(KK).

Bott periodicity

Clifford algebras exhibit a 2-fold periodicity over the complex numbers and an 8-fold periodicity over the real numbers, which is related to the same periodicities for homotopy groups of the stable unitary group and stable orthogonal group, and is called Bott periodicity. The connection is explained by the geometric model of loop spaces approach to Bott periodicity: their 2-fold/8-fold periodic embeddings of the classical groups in each other (corresponding to isomorphism groups of Clifford algebras), and their successive quotients are symmetric spaces which are homotopy equivalent to the loop spaces of the unitary/orthogonal group.

Complex case

The complex case is particularly simple: every nondegenerate quadratic form on a complex vector space is equivalent to the standard diagonal form

where n = dim(V), so there is essentially only one Clifford algebra for each dimension. This is because the complex numbers include i by which uk2 = +(iuk)2 and so positive or negative terms are equivalent. We will denote the Clifford algebra on Cn with the standard quadratic form by Cln(C).

There are two separate cases to consider, according to whether n is even or odd. When n is even, the algebra Cln(C) is central simple and so by the Artin–Wedderburn theorem is isomorphic to a matrix algebra over C.

When n is odd, the center includes not only the scalars but the pseudoscalars (degree n elements) as well. We can always find a normalized pseudoscalar ω such that ω2 = 1. Define the operators

These two operators form a complete set of orthogonal idempotents, and since they are central they give a decomposition of Cln(C) into a direct sum of two algebras

where

The algebras Cln±(C) are just the positive and negative eigenspaces of ω and the P± are just the projection operators. Since ω is odd, these algebras are mixed by α (the linear map on V defined by v ↦ −v):

and therefore isomorphic (since α is an automorphism). These two isomorphic algebras are each central simple and so, again, isomorphic to a matrix algebra over C. The sizes of the matrices can be determined from the fact that the dimension of Cln(C) is 2n. What we have then is the following table:

Classification of complex Clifford algebras
n Cln(C) Cl[0]
n
(C)
N
even End(CN) End(CN/2) ⊕ End(CN/2) 2n/2
odd End(CN) ⊕ End(CN) End(CN) 2(n−1)/2

The even subalgebra Cl[0]
n
(C) of Cln(C) is (non-canonically) isomorphic to Cln−1(C). When n is even, the even subalgebra can be identified with the block diagonal matrices (when partitioned into 2 × 2  block matrices). When n is odd, the even subalgebra consists of those elements of End(CN) ⊕ End(CN) for which the two pieces are identical. Picking either piece then gives an isomorphism with Cln(C) ≅ End(CN).

Complex spinors in even dimension

The classification allows Dirac spinors and Weyl spinors to be defined in even dimension.[1]

In even dimension n, the Clifford algebra Cln(C) is isomorphic to End(CN), which has its fundamental representation on Δn := CN. A complex Dirac spinor is an element of Δn. The term complex signifies that it is the element of a representation space of a complex Clifford algebra, rather than that is an element of a complex vector space.

The even subalgebra Cln0(C) is isomorphic to End(CN/2) ⊕ End(CN/2) and therefore decomposes to the direct sum of two irreducible representation spaces Δ+
n
⊕ Δ
n
, each isomorphic to CN/2. A left-handed (respectively right-handed) complex Weyl spinor is an element of Δ+
n
(respectively, Δ
n
).

Proof of the structure theorem for complex Clifford algebras

The structure theorem is simple to prove inductively. For base cases, Cl0(C) is simply C ≅ End(C), while Cl1(C) is given by the algebra CC ≅ End(C) ⊕ End(C) by defining the only gamma matrix as γ1 = (1, −1).

We will also need Cl2(C) ≅ End(C2). The Pauli matrices can be used to generate the Clifford algebra by setting γ1 = σ1, γ2 = σ2. The span of the generated algebra is End(C2).

The proof is completed by constructing an isomorphism Cln+2(C) ≅ Cln(C) ⊗ Cl2(C). Let γa generate Cln(C), and generate Cl2(C). Let ω = i be the chirality element satisfying ω2 = 1 and ω + ω = 0. These can be used to construct gamma matrices for Cln+2(C) by setting Γa = γaω for 1 ≤ an and Γa = 1 ⊗ for a = n + 1, n + 2. These can be shown to satisfy the required Clifford algebra and by the universal property of Clifford algebras, there is an isomorphism Cln(C) ⊗ Cl2(C) → Cln+2(C).

Finally, in the even case this means by the induction hypothesis Cln+2(C) ≅ End(CN) ⊗ End(C2) ≅ End(CN+1). The odd case follows similarly as the tensor product distributes over direct sums.

Real case

The real case is significantly more complicated, exhibiting a periodicity of 8 rather than 2, and there is a 2-parameter family of Clifford algebras.

Classification of quadratic forms

Firstly, there are non-isomorphic quadratic forms of a given degree, classified by signature.

Every nondegenerate quadratic form on a real vector space is equivalent to the standard diagonal form:

where n = p + q is the dimension of the vector space. The pair of integers (p, q) is called the signature of the quadratic form. The real vector space with this quadratic form is often denoted Rp,q. The Clifford algebra on Rp,q is denoted Clp,q(R).

A standard orthonormal basis {ei} for Rp,q consists of n = p + q mutually orthogonal vectors, p of which have norm +1 and q of which have norm −1.

Unit pseudoscalar

Given a standard basis {ei} as defined in the previous subsection, the unit pseudoscalar in Clp,q(R) is defined as

This is both a Coxeter element of sorts (product of reflections) and a longest element of a Coxeter group in the Bruhat order; this is an analogy. It corresponds to and generalizes a volume form (in the exterior algebra; for the trivial quadratic form, the unit pseudoscalar is a volume form), and lifts reflection through the origin (meaning that the image of the unit pseudoscalar is reflection through the origin, in the orthogonal group).

To compute the square ω2 = (e1e2⋅⋅⋅en)(e1e2⋅⋅⋅en), one can either reverse the order of the second group, yielding sgn(σ)e1e2⋅⋅⋅enen⋅⋅⋅e2e1, or apply a perfect shuffle, yielding sgn(σ)e1e1e2e2⋅⋅⋅enen. These both have sign (−1)n/2⌋ = (−1)n(n−1)/2, which is 4-periodic (proof), and combined with eiei = ±1, this shows that the square of ω is given by

Note that, unlike the complex case, it is not in general possible to find a pseudoscalar that squares to +1.

Center

If n (equivalently, pq) is even, the algebra Clp,q(R) is central simple and so isomorphic to a matrix algebra over R or H by the Artin–Wedderburn theorem.

If n (equivalently, pq) is odd then the algebra is no longer central simple but rather has a center which includes the pseudoscalars as well as the scalars. If n is odd and ω2 = +1 (equivalently, if pq ≡ 1 (mod 4)) then, just as in the complex case, the algebra Clp,q(R) decomposes into a direct sum of isomorphic algebras

each of which is central simple and so isomorphic to matrix algebra over R or H.

If n is odd and ω2 = −1 (equivalently, if pq ≡ −1 (mod 4)) then the center of Clp,q(R) is isomorphic to C and can be considered as a complex algebra. As a complex algebra, it is central simple and so isomorphic to a matrix algebra over C.

Classification

All told there are three properties which determine the class of the algebra Clp,q(R):

  • signature mod 2: n is even/odd: central simple or not
  • signature mod 4: ω2 = ±1: if not central simple, center is RR or C
  • signature mod 8: the Brauer class of the algebra (n even) or even subalgebra (n odd) is R or H

Each of these properties depends only on the signature pq modulo 8. The complete classification table is given below. The size of the matrices is determined by the requirement that Clp,q(R) have dimension 2p+q.

pq mod 8 ω2 Clp,q(R)
(N = 2(p+q)/2)
pq mod 8 ω2 Clp,q(R)
(N = 2(p+q−1)/2)
0 + MN(R) 1 + MN(R) ⊕ MN(R)
2 MN(R) 3 MN(C)
4 + MN/2(H) 5 + MN/2(H) ⊕ MN/2(H)
6 MN/2(H) 7 MN(C)

It may be seen that of all matrix ring types mentioned, there is only one type shared by complex and real algebras: the type M2m(C). For example, Cl2(C) and Cl3,0(R) are both determined to be M2(C). It is important to note that there is a difference in the classifying isomorphisms used. Since the Cl2(C) is algebra isomorphic via a C-linear map (which is necessarily R-linear), and Cl3,0(R) is algebra isomorphic via an R-linear map, Cl2(C) and Cl3,0(R) are R-algebra isomorphic.

A table of this classification for p + q ≤ 8 follows. Here p + q runs vertically and pq runs horizontally (e.g. the algebra Cl1,3(R) ≅ M2(H) is found in row 4, column −2).

8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 −1 −2 −3 −4 −5 −6 −7 −8
0 R
1 R2 C
2 M2(R) M2(R) H
3 M2(C) M2
2
(R)
M2(C) H2
4 M2(H) M4(R) M4(R) M2(H) M2(H)
5 M2
2
(H)
M4(C) M2
4
(R)
M4(C) M2
2
(H)
M4(C)
6 M4(H) M4(H) M8(R) M8(R) M4(H) M4(H) M8(R)
7 M8(C) M2
4
(H)
M8(C) M2
8
(R)
M8(C) M2
4
(H)
M8(C) M2
8
(R)
8 M16(R) M8(H) M8(H) M16(R) M16(R) M8(H) M8(H) M16(R) M16(R)
 
ω2 + + + + + + + + +

Symmetries

There is a tangled web of symmetries and relationships in the above table.

Going over 4 spots in any row yields an identical algebra.

From these Bott periodicity follows:

If the signature satisfies pq ≡ 1 (mod 4) then

(The table is symmetric about columns with signature ..., −7, −3, 1, 5, ...)

Thus if the signature satisfies pq ≡ 1 (mod 4),

See also

References

  1. ^ Hamilton, Mark J. D. (2017). Mathematical gauge theory : with applications to the standard model of particle physics. Cham, Switzerland. pp. 346–347. ISBN 9783319684383.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

Sources

This page was last edited on 10 April 2024, at 01:43
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