Spacetime Split
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In mathematical physics, spacetime algebra (STA) is a name for the
Clifford algebra In mathematics, a Clifford algebra is an algebra generated by a vector space with a quadratic form, and is a unital associative algebra. As -algebras, they generalize the real numbers, complex numbers, quaternions and several other hyperc ...
Cl1,3(R), or equivalently the
geometric algebra In mathematics, a geometric algebra (also known as a real Clifford algebra) is an extension of elementary algebra to work with geometrical objects such as vectors. Geometric algebra is built out of two fundamental operations, addition and the ge ...
. According to David Hestenes, spacetime algebra can be particularly closely associated with the geometry of special relativity and relativistic spacetime. It is a vector space that allows not only vectors, but also bivectors (directed quantities associated with particular planes, such as areas, or rotations) or blades (quantities associated with particular hyper-volumes) to be combined, as well as rotated,
reflected Reflection or reflexion may refer to: Science and technology * Reflection (physics), a common wave phenomenon ** Specular reflection, reflection from a smooth surface *** Mirror image, a reflection in a mirror or in water ** Signal reflection, in ...
, or Lorentz boosted. It is also the natural parent algebra of spinors in special relativity. These properties allow many of the most important equations in physics to be expressed in particularly simple forms, and can be very helpful towards a more geometric understanding of their meanings.


Structure

The spacetime algebra may be built up from an orthogonal basis of one time-like vector \gamma_0 and three space-like vectors, \, with the multiplication rule : \gamma_\mu \gamma_\nu + \gamma_\nu \gamma_\mu = 2 \eta_ where \eta_ is the Minkowski metric with signature . Thus, \gamma_0^2 = , \gamma_1^2 = \gamma_2^2 = \gamma_3^2 = , otherwise \gamma_\mu \gamma_\nu = - \gamma_\nu \gamma_\mu. The basis vectors \gamma_k share these properties with the Dirac matrices, but no explicit matrix representation need be used in STA. This generates a basis of one
scalar Scalar may refer to: *Scalar (mathematics), an element of a field, which is used to define a vector space, usually the field of real numbers * Scalar (physics), a physical quantity that can be described by a single element of a number field such ...
\, four vectors \, six bivectors \, four
pseudovector In physics and mathematics, a pseudovector (or axial vector) is a quantity that is defined as a function of some vectors or other geometric shapes, that resembles a vector, and behaves like a vector in many situations, but is changed into its o ...
s \ and one pseudoscalar \, where i=\gamma_0 \gamma_1 \gamma_2 \gamma_3.


Reciprocal frame

Associated with the orthogonal basis \ is the reciprocal basis \ for \mu = 0, \dots, 3, satisfying the relation :\gamma_\mu \cdot \gamma^\nu = ^\nu . These reciprocal frame vectors differ only by a sign, with \gamma^0 = \gamma_0, and \gamma^k = -\gamma_k for k = 1, \dots, 3. A vector may be represented in either upper or lower index coordinates a = a^\mu \gamma_\mu = a_\mu \gamma^\mu with summation over \mu = 0, \dots, 3, according to the
Einstein notation In mathematics, especially the usage of linear algebra in Mathematical physics, Einstein notation (also known as the Einstein summation convention or Einstein summation notation) is a notational convention that implies summation over a set of ...
, where the coordinates may be extracted by taking dot products with the basis vectors or their reciprocals. :\begina \cdot \gamma^\nu &= a^\nu \\ a \cdot \gamma_\nu &= a_\nu .\end


Spacetime gradient

The spacetime gradient, like the gradient in a Euclidean space, is defined such that the directional derivative relationship is satisfied: :a \cdot \nabla F(x)= \lim_ \frac . This requires the definition of the gradient to be : \nabla = \gamma^\mu \frac = \gamma^\mu \partial_\mu . Written out explicitly with x = ct \gamma_0 + x^k \gamma_k, these partials are : \partial_0 = \frac \frac, \quad \partial_k = \frac


Spacetime split

In spacetime algebra, a spacetime split is a projection from four-dimensional space into (3+1)-dimensional space with a chosen reference frame by means of the following two operations: * a collapse of the chosen time axis, yielding a 3D space spanned by bivectors, and * a projection of the 4D space onto the chosen time axis, yielding a 1D space of scalars. This is achieved by pre- or post-multiplication by the timelike basis vector \gamma_0, which serves to split a four vector into a scalar timelike and a bivector spacelike component. With x = x^\mu \gamma_\mu we have : \beginx \gamma_0 &= x^0 + x^k \gamma_k \gamma_0 \\ \gamma_0 x &= x^0 - x^k \gamma_k \gamma_0 \end As these bivectors \gamma_k \gamma_0 square to unity, they serve as a spatial basis. Utilizing the Pauli matrix notation, these are written \sigma_k = \gamma_k \gamma_0. Spatial vectors in STA are denoted in boldface; then with \mathbf = x^k \sigma_k the \gamma_0-spacetime split x \gamma_0 and its reverse \gamma_0 x are: : \beginx \gamma_0 &= x^0 + x^k \sigma_k = x^0 + \mathbf \\ \gamma_0 x &= x^0 - x^k \sigma_k = x^0 - \mathbf \end


Multivector division

The spacetime algebra is not a division algebra, because it contains idempotent elements \tfrac(1 \pm \gamma_0\gamma_i) and nonzero zero divisors: (1 + \gamma_0\gamma_i)(1 - \gamma_0\gamma_i) = 0. These can be interpreted as projectors onto the light-cone and orthogonality relations for such projectors, respectively. But in some cases it ''is'' possible to divide one multivector quantity by another, and make sense of the result: so, for example, a directed area divided by a vector in the same plane gives another vector, orthogonal to the first.


Spacetime algebra description of non-relativistic physics


Non-relativistic quantum mechanics

Spacetime algebra allows the description of the Pauli particle in terms of a real theory in place of a matrix theory. The matrix theory description of the Pauli particle is:See eqs. (75) and (81) in: :i \hbar \, \partial_t \Psi = H_S \Psi - \frac \, \hat\sigma \cdot \mathbf \Psi , where \Psi is a spinor, i is the imaginary unit with no geometric interpretation, \hat\sigma_i are the Pauli matrices (with the 'hat' notation indicating that \hat\sigma is a matrix operator and not an element in the geometric algebra), and H_S is the Schrödinger Hamiltonian. In the spacetime algebra the Pauli particle is described by the ''real Pauli–Schrödinger equation:'' :\partial_t \psi \, i \sigma_3 \, \hbar = H_S \psi - \frac \, \mathbf \psi \sigma_3 , where now i is the unit pseudoscalar i = \sigma_1 \sigma_2 \sigma_3, and \psi and \sigma_3 are elements of the geometric algebra, with \psi an even multi-vector; H_S is again the Schrödinger Hamiltonian. Hestenes refers to this as the ''real Pauli–Schrödinger theory'' to emphasize that this theory reduces to the Schrödinger theory if the term that includes the magnetic field is dropped.


Spacetime algebra description of relativistic physics


Relativistic quantum mechanics

The relativistic quantum wavefunction is sometimes expressed as a spinor field, i.e. : \psi = e^ , where \phi is a bivector, andSee eq. (3.1) and similarly eq. (4.1), and subsequent pages, in:
PDF
: \psi = R (\rho e^)^\frac , where, according to its derivation by David Hestenes, \psi = \psi(x) is an even multivector-valued function on spacetime, R = R(x) is a unimodular spinor (or “rotor”See eq. (205) in ), and \rho = \rho(x) and \beta = \beta(x) are scalar-valued functions. This equation is interpreted as connecting spin with the imaginary pseudoscalar. R is viewed as a Lorentz rotation which a frame of vectors \gamma_\mu into another frame of vectors e_\mu by the operation e_\mu = R \gamma_\mu \tilde, where the tilde symbol indicates the ''reverse'' (the reverse is often also denoted by the dagger symbol, see also Rotations in geometric algebra). This has been extended to provide a framework for locally varying vector- and scalar-valued observables and support for the Zitterbewegung interpretation of quantum mechanics originally proposed by Schrödinger. Hestenes has compared his expression for \psi with Feynman's expression for it in the path integral formulation: : \psi = e^ , where \Phi_\lambda is the classical action along the \lambda-path. Spacetime algebra enables a description of the Dirac particle in terms of a real theory in place of a matrix theory. The matrix theory description of the Dirac particle is:See eqs. (3.43) and (3.44) in: :\hat \gamma^\mu (\mathbf \partial_\mu - e \mathbf_\mu) , \psi\rangle = m , \psi\rangle , where \hat\gamma are the Dirac matrices. In the spacetime algebra the Dirac particle is described by the equation: :\nabla \psi \, i \sigma_3 - \mathbf \psi = m \psi \gamma_0 Here, \psi and \sigma_3 are elements of the geometric algebra, and \nabla = \gamma^\mu \partial_\mu is the spacetime vector derivative.


A new formulation of general relativity

Lasenby, Doran, and Gull of Cambridge University have proposed a new formulation of gravity, termed
gauge theory gravity Gauge theory gravity (GTG) is a theory of gravitation cast in the mathematical language of geometric algebra. To those familiar with general relativity, it is highly reminiscent of the tetrad formalism although there are significant conceptual d ...
(GTG), wherein spacetime algebra is used to induce curvature on Minkowski space while admitting a
gauge symmetry In physics, a gauge theory is a type of field theory in which the Lagrangian (and hence the dynamics of the system itself) does not change (is invariant) under local transformations according to certain smooth families of operations (Lie groups) ...
under "arbitrary smooth remapping of events onto spacetime" (Lasenby, et al.); a nontrivial derivation then leads to the geodesic equation, : \frac R = \frac (\Omega - \omega) R and the covariant derivative : D_\tau = \partial_\tau + \frac \omega , where \omega is the connection associated with the gravitational potential, and \Omega is an external interaction such as an electromagnetic field. The theory shows some promise for the treatment of black holes, as its form of the Schwarzschild solution does not break down at singularities; most of the results of general relativity have been mathematically reproduced, and the relativistic formulation of classical electrodynamics has been extended to quantum mechanics and the Dirac equation.


See also

*
Geometric algebra In mathematics, a geometric algebra (also known as a real Clifford algebra) is an extension of elementary algebra to work with geometrical objects such as vectors. Geometric algebra is built out of two fundamental operations, addition and the ge ...
*
Dirac algebra In mathematical physics, the Dirac algebra is the Clifford algebra \text_(\mathbb). This was introduced by the mathematical physicist P. A. M. Dirac in 1928 in developing the Dirac equation for spin-½ particles with a matrix representation of t ...
* Dirac equation * General relativity


References

* * * * * *


External links


Imaginary numbers are not real – the geometric algebra of spacetime
a tutorial introduction to the ideas of geometric algebra, by S. Gull, A. Lasenby, C. Doran
Physical Applications of Geometric Algebra
course-notes, see especially part 2.
Cambridge University Geometric Algebra group

Geometric Calculus research and development
{{Industrial and applied mathematics Geometric algebra Clifford algebras Minkowski spacetime Mathematical physics