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In multilinear algebra, a multivector, sometimes called Clifford number, is an element of the exterior algebra of a
vector space In mathematics and physics, a vector space (also called a linear space) is a set whose elements, often called '' vectors'', may be added together and multiplied ("scaled") by numbers called ''scalars''. Scalars are often real numbers, but can ...
. This algebra is graded, associative and alternating, and consists of linear combinations of simple -vectors (also known as decomposable -vectors or -blades) of the form : v_1\wedge\cdots\wedge v_k, where v_1, \ldots, v_k are in . A -vector is such a linear combination that is ''homogeneous'' of degree (all terms are -blades for the same ). Depending on the authors, a "multivector" may be either a -vector or any element of the exterior algebra (any linear combination of -blades with potentially differing values of ). In
differential geometry Differential geometry is a mathematical discipline that studies the geometry of smooth shapes and smooth spaces, otherwise known as smooth manifolds. It uses the techniques of differential calculus, integral calculus, linear algebra and mult ...
, a -vector is a vector in the exterior algebra of the tangent vector space; that is, it is an antisymmetric
tensor In mathematics, a tensor is an algebraic object that describes a multilinear relationship between sets of algebraic objects related to a vector space. Tensors may map between different objects such as vectors, scalars, and even other tensor ...
obtained by taking linear combinations of the exterior product of tangent vectors, for some integer . A differential -form is a -vector in the exterior algebra of the dual of the tangent space, which is also the dual of the exterior algebra of the tangent space. For and , -vectors are often called respectively '' scalars'', '' vectors'', '' bivectors'' and ''trivectors''; they are respectively dual to 0-forms, 1-forms, 2-forms and 3-forms.


Exterior product

The exterior product (also called the wedge product) used to construct multivectors is multilinear (linear in each input), associative and alternating. This means for vectors u, v and w in a vector space ''V'' and for scalars ''α'', ''β'', the exterior product has the properties: * Linear in an input: \mathbf\wedge(\alpha\mathbf+\beta\mathbf)=\alpha\mathbf\wedge\mathbf+\beta\mathbf\wedge\mathbf; * Associative: (\mathbf\wedge\mathbf)\wedge\mathbf=\mathbf\wedge(\mathbf\wedge\mathbf); * Alternating: \mathbf\wedge\mathbf=0. The exterior product of ''k'' vectors or a sum of such products (for a single ''k'') is called a grade ''k'' multivector, or a ''k''-vector. The maximum grade of a multivector is the dimension of the vector space ''V''. Linearity in either input together with the alternating property implies linearity in the other input. The multilinearity of the exterior product allows a multivector to be expressed as a linear combination of exterior products of basis vectors of ''V''. The exterior product of ''k'' basis vectors of ''V'' is the standard way of constructing each basis element for the space of ''k''-vectors, which has dimension () in the exterior algebra of an ''n''-dimensional vector space.
Harley Flanders Harley M. Flanders (September 13, 1925 – July 26, 2013) was an American mathematician, known for several textbooks and contributions to his fields: algebra and algebraic number theory, linear algebra, electrical networks, scientific computing. ...
(1989) 963''Differential Forms with Applications to the Physical Sciences'', § 2.1 The Space of ''p''-Vectors, pages 5–7, Dover Books


Area and volume

The ''k''-vector obtained from the exterior product of ''k'' separate vectors in an ''n''-dimensional space has components that define the projected -volumes of the ''k''- parallelotope spanned by the vectors. The square root of the sum of the squares of these components defines the volume of the ''k''-parallelotope. The following examples show that a bivector in two dimensions measures the area of a parallelogram, and the magnitude of a bivector in three dimensions also measures the area of a parallelogram. Similarly, a three-vector in three dimensions measures the volume of a parallelepiped. It is easy to check that the magnitude of a three-vector in four dimensions measures the volume of the parallelepiped spanned by these vectors.


Multivectors in R2

Properties of multivectors can be seen by considering the two dimensional vector space . Let the basis vectors be e1 and e2, so u and v are given by : \mathbf=u_1\mathbf_1+u_2\mathbf_2,\quad \mathbf=v_1\mathbf_1+v_2\mathbf_2, and the multivector , also called a bivector, is computed to be : \mathbf \wedge \mathbf \ =\ \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_2 & v_2\end\ ( \mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2). The vertical bars denote the determinant of the matrix, which is the area of the parallelogram spanned by the vectors u and v. The magnitude of is the area of this parallelogram. Notice that because ''V'' has dimension two the basis bivector is the only multivector in Λ''V''. The relationship between the magnitude of a multivector and the area or volume spanned by the vectors is an important feature in all dimensions. Furthermore, the linear functional version of a multivector that computes this volume is known as a differential form.


Multivectors in R3

More features of multivectors can be seen by considering the three dimensional vector space . In this case, let the basis vectors be e1, e2, and e3, so u, v and w are given by :\begin \mathbf &= u_1\mathbf_1 + u_2\mathbf_2 + u_3\mathbf_3, & \mathbf &= v_1\mathbf_1 + v_2\mathbf_2 + v_3\mathbf_3, & \mathbf &= w_1\mathbf_1 + w_2\mathbf_2 + w_3\mathbf_3, \end and the bivector is computed to be : \mathbf \wedge \mathbf \ =\ \begin u_2 & v_2 \\ u_3 & v_3\end \left(\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3\right) + \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_3 & v_3\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_3\right) + \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_2 & v_2\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\right). The components of this bivector are the same as the components of the cross product. The magnitude of this bivector is the square root of the sum of the squares of its components. This shows that the magnitude of the bivector is the area of the parallelogram spanned by the vectors u and v as it lies in the three-dimensional space ''V''. The components of the bivector are the projected areas of the parallelogram on each of the three coordinate planes. Notice that because ''V'' has dimension three, there is one basis three-vector in Λ''V''. Compute the three-vector : \mathbf\wedge\mathbf\wedge\mathbf\ =\ \begin u_1 & v_1 & w_1\\ u_2 & v_2 & w_2\\ u_3 & v_3 & w_3\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3\right). \begin &\mathbf\wedge\mathbf\wedge\mathbf = (\mathbf\wedge\mathbf)\wedge\mathbf \\ = &\left(\begin u_2 & v_2 \\ u_3 & v_3\end \left(\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3\right) + \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_3 & v_3\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_3\right) + \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_2 & v_2\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\right) \right) \wedge \left(w_1\mathbf_1 + w_2\mathbf_2 + w_3\mathbf_3\right) \\ = &\begin u_2 & v_2 \\ u_3 & v_3\end \left(\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3\right) \wedge \left(w_1\mathbf_1 + w_2\mathbf_2 + w_3\mathbf_3\right) \\ &+ \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_3 & v_3\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_3\right) \wedge \left(w_1\mathbf_1 + w_2\mathbf_2 + w_3\mathbf_3\right) \\ &+ \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_2 & v_2\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\right) \wedge \left(w_1\mathbf_1 + w_2\mathbf_2 + w_3\mathbf_3\right) \\ = & \begin u_2 & v_2 \\ u_3 & v_3\end \left(\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3\right) \wedge w_1\mathbf_1 + \cancel + \cancel & &\mathbf_2 \wedge \mathbf_2 = 0; \mathbf_3 \wedge \mathbf_3 = 0 \\ &+ \cancel + \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_3 & v_3\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_3\right) \wedge w_2\mathbf_2 + \cancel & &\mathbf_1 \wedge \mathbf_1 = 0; \mathbf_3 \wedge \mathbf_3 = 0 \\ &+ \cancel + \cancel + \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_2 & v_2\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\right) \wedge w_3\mathbf_3 & &\mathbf_1 \wedge \mathbf_1 = 0; \mathbf_2 \wedge \mathbf_2 = 0 \\ = &\begin u_2 & v_2 \\ u_3 & v_3\end \left(\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3\right) \wedge w_1\mathbf_1 + \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_3 & v_3\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_3\right) \wedge w_2\mathbf_2 + \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_2 & v_2\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\right) \wedge w_3\mathbf_3 \\ = &-w_1 \begin u_2 & v_2 \\ u_3 & v_3\end \left(\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_3\right) - w_2 \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_3 & v_3\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3\right) + w_3 \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_2 & v_2\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3\right) \\ = &w_1 \begin u_2 & v_2 \\ u_3 & v_3\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3\right) - w_2 \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_3 & v_3\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3\right) + w_3 \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_2 & v_2\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3\right) \\ = &\left(w_1 \begin u_2 & v_2 \\ u_3 & v_3\end - w_2 \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_3 & v_3\end + w_3 \begin u_1 & v_1 \\ u_2 & v_2\end \right) \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3\right) \\ = &\begin u_1 & v_1 & w_1\\ u_2 & v_2 & w_2\\ u_3 & v_3 & w_3\end \left(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3\right) \\ \end This shows that the magnitude of the three-vector is the volume of the parallelepiped spanned by the three vectors u, v and w. In higher-dimensional spaces, the component three-vectors are projections of the volume of a parallelepiped onto the coordinate three-spaces, and the magnitude of the three-vector is the volume of the parallelepiped as it sits in the higher-dimensional space.


Grassmann coordinates

In this section, we consider multivectors on a projective space ''P''''n'', which provide a convenient set of coordinates for lines, planes and hyperplanes that have properties similar to the homogeneous coordinates of points, called Grassmann coordinates. Points in a real projective space ''P''''n'' are defined to be lines through the origin of the vector space R''n''+1. For example, the projective plane ''P''2 is the set of lines through the origin of R3. Thus, multivectors defined on R''n''+1 can be viewed as multivectors on ''P''''n''. A convenient way to view a multivector on ''P''''n'' is to examine it in an affine component of ''P''''n'', which is the intersection of the lines through the origin of R''n''+1 with a selected hyperplane, such as . Lines through the origin of R3 intersect the plane to define an affine version of the projective plane that only lacks the points for which , called the points at infinity.


Multivectors on ''P''2

Points in the affine component of the projective plane have coordinates . A linear combination of two points and defines a plane in R3 that intersects E in the line joining p and q. The multivector defines a parallelogram in R3 given by : \mathbf \wedge \mathbf \ =\ (p_2 - q_2)(\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3) + (p_1- q_1) (\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_3) +(p_1 q_2- q_1 p_2)(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2). Notice that substitution of for p multiplies this multivector by a constant. Therefore, the components of are homogeneous coordinates for the plane through the origin of R3. The set of points on the line through p and q is the intersection of the plane defined by with the plane . These points satisfy , that is, : \mathbf\wedge\mathbf \wedge \mathbf \ =\ (x\mathbf_1+y\mathbf_2+\mathbf_3)\wedge \big( (p_2 - q_2)(\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3) + (p_1- q_1) (\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_3) +(p_1 q_2- q_1 p_2)(\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2)\big)=0, which simplifies to the equation of a line : \lambda: x(p_2 - q_2) + y(p_1- q_1)+ (p_1 q_2- q_1 p_2)=0. This equation is satisfied by points for real values of α and β. The three components of that define the line ''λ'' are called the Grassmann coordinates of the line. Because three homogeneous coordinates define both a point and a line, the geometry of points is said to be dual to the geometry of lines in the projective plane. This is called the principle of duality.


Multivectors on ''P''3

Three dimensional projective space, ''P''3 consists of all lines through the origin of R4. Let the three dimensional hyperplane, , be the affine component of projective space defined by the points . The multivector defines a parallelepiped in R4 given by :\mathbf\wedge\mathbf\wedge\mathbf=\begin p_2 & q_2 &r_2\\ p_3 & q_3& r_3\\1&1&1\end\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3\wedge\mathbf_4 + \begin p_1 & q_1 &r_1\\ p_3 & q_3& r_3\\1&1&1\end\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_3\wedge\mathbf_4 + \begin p_1 & q_1 &r_1\\ p_2 & q_2& r_2\\1&1&1\end\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_4 + \begin p_1 & q_1 &r_1\\ p_2 & q_2& r_2\\ p_3 & q_3& r_3\end \mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3. Notice that substitution of for p multiplies this multivector by a constant. Therefore, the components of are homogeneous coordinates for the 3-space through the origin of R4. A plane in the affine component is the set of points in the intersection of H with the 3-space defined by . These points satisfy , that is, : \mathbf\wedge\mathbf \wedge \mathbf\wedge\mathbf = (x\mathbf_1+y\mathbf_2+z\mathbf_3 +\mathbf_4)\wedge \mathbf\wedge\mathbf\wedge\mathbf = 0 , which simplifies to the equation of a plane : \lambda: x\begin p_2 & q_2 &r_2\\ p_3 & q_3& r_3\\1&1&1\end + y \begin p_1 & q_1 &r_1\\ p_3 & q_3& r_3\\1&1&1\end+ z\begin p_1 & q_1 &r_1\\ p_2 & q_2& r_2\\1&1&1\end+ \begin p_1 & q_1 &r_1\\ p_2 & q_2& r_2\\ p_3 & q_3& r_3\end =0. This equation is satisfied by points for real values of ''α'', ''β'' and ''γ''. The four components of that define the plane ''λ'' are called the Grassmann coordinates of the plane. Because four homogeneous coordinates define both a point and a plane in projective space, the geometry of points is dual to the geometry of planes. A line as the join of two points: In projective space the line ''λ'' through two points p and q can be viewed as the intersection of the affine space with the plane in R4. The multivector provides homogeneous coordinates for the line :\begin \lambda: \mathbf \wedge \mathbf &= (p_1\mathbf_1+p_2\mathbf_2+p_3\mathbf_3 +\mathbf_4)\wedge (q_1\mathbf_1+q_2\mathbf_2+q_3\mathbf_3 +\mathbf_4),\\ & =\begin p_1 & q_1\\ 1 & 1 \end\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_4 + \begin p_2 & q_2\\ 1 & 1 \end\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_4 + \begin p_3 & q_3\\ 1 & 1 \end\mathbf_3\wedge\mathbf_4+ \begin p_2 & q_2\\ p_3 & q_3 \end\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3+\begin p_3 & q_3\\ p_1 & q_1 \end\mathbf_3\wedge\mathbf_1+\begin p_1 & q_1\\ p_2 & q_2\end\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2.\end These are known as the Plücker coordinates of the line, though they are also an example of Grassmann coordinates. A line as the intersection of two planes: A line ''μ'' in projective space can also be defined as the set of points x that form the intersection of two planes ''π'' and ''ρ'' defined by grade three multivectors, so the points x are the solutions to the linear equations : \mu: \mathbf\wedge \pi = 0, \mathbf\wedge \rho = 0. In order to obtain the Plucker coordinates of the line ''μ'', map the multivectors ''π'' and ''ρ'' to their dual point coordinates using the Hodge star operator, : \mathbf_1 = (\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3 \wedge\mathbf_4), -\mathbf_2 = (\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_3 \wedge\mathbf_4), \mathbf_3 = (\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2 \wedge\mathbf_4), -\mathbf_4 = (\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2 \wedge\mathbf_3), then : \pi = \pi_1\mathbf_1 + \pi_2\mathbf_2 + \pi_3\mathbf_3 + \pi_4\mathbf_4, \quad \rho = \rho_1\mathbf_1 + \rho_2\mathbf_2 + \rho_3\mathbf_3 + \rho_4\mathbf_4 . So, the Plücker coordinates of the line ''μ'' are given by : \mu: (\pi)\wedge(\rho) =\begin \pi_1 & \rho_1\\ \pi_4 & \rho_4 \end\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_4 + \begin \pi_2 & \rho_2\\ \pi_4 & \rho_4 \end\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_4 + \begin \pi_3 & \rho_3\\ \pi_4 & \rho_4\end\mathbf_3\wedge\mathbf_4+ \begin \pi_2 & \rho_2\\ \pi_3 & \rho_3\end\mathbf_2\wedge\mathbf_3+\begin \pi_3 & \rho_3\\ \pi_1 & \rho_1\end\mathbf_3\wedge\mathbf_1+\begin \pi_1 & \rho_1\\ \pi_2 & \rho_2\end\mathbf_1\wedge\mathbf_2. Because the six homogeneous coordinates of a line can be obtained from the join of two points or the intersection of two planes, the line is said to be self dual in projective space.


Clifford product

W. K. Clifford William Kingdon Clifford (4 May 18453 March 1879) was an English mathematician and philosopher. Building on the work of Hermann Grassmann, he introduced what is now termed geometric algebra, a special case of the Clifford algebra named in his ...
combined multivectors with the
inner product In mathematics, an inner product space (or, rarely, a Hausdorff pre-Hilbert space) is a real vector space or a complex vector space with an operation called an inner product. The inner product of two vectors in the space is a scalar, often ...
defined on the vector space, in order to obtain a general construction for hypercomplex numbers that includes the usual complex numbers and Hamilton's
quaternion In mathematics, the quaternion number system extends the complex numbers. Quaternions were first described by the Irish mathematician William Rowan Hamilton in 1843 and applied to mechanics in three-dimensional space. Hamilton defined a quater ...
s. The Clifford product between two vectors u and v is bilinear and associative like the exterior product, and has the additional property that the multivector uv is coupled to the inner product by Clifford's relation, : \mathbf\mathbf + \mathbf\mathbf = 2\mathbf\cdot\mathbf. Clifford's relation retains the anticommuting property for vectors that are perpendicular. This can be seen from the mutually orthogonal unit vectors in R''n'': Clifford's relation yields : \mathbf_i\mathbf_j + \mathbf_j\mathbf_i = 2\mathbf_i\cdot\mathbf_j = \delta_ , which shows that the basis vectors mutually anticommute, : \mathbf_i\mathbf_j = - \mathbf_j\mathbf_i, \quad i\neq j = 1, \ldots, n. In contrast to the exterior product, the Clifford product of a vector with itself is not zero. To see this, compute the product : \mathbf_i\mathbf_i + \mathbf_i\mathbf_i = 2 \mathbf_i\cdot\mathbf_i = 2, which yields : \mathbf_i\mathbf_i = 1,\quad i=1,\ldots, n. The set of multivectors constructed using Clifford's product yields an associative algebra known as a Clifford algebra. Inner products with different properties can be used to construct different Clifford algebras.


Geometric algebra

The term ''k-blade'' was used in ''Clifford Algebra to Geometric Calculus'' (1984) Multivectors play a central role in the mathematical formulation of physics known as geometric algebra. According to David Hestenes, : on-scalar''k''-vectors are sometimes called ''k-blades'' or, merely ''blades'', to emphasize the fact that, in contrast to 0-vectors (scalars), they have "directional properties". In 2003 the term ''blade'' for a multivector that can be written as the exterior product of scalar anda set of vectors was used by C. Doran and A. Lasenby. Here, by the statement "Any multivector can be expressed as the sum of blades", scalars are implicitly defined as 0-blades.C. Doran and A. Lasenby (2003) ''Geometric Algebra for Physicists'', page 87,
Cambridge University Press Cambridge University Press is the university press of the University of Cambridge. Granted letters patent by King Henry VIII in 1534, it is the oldest university press in the world. It is also the King's Printer. Cambridge University Pr ...
In geometric algebra, a multivector is defined to be the sum of different-grade ''k''-blades, such as the summation of a scalar, a vector, and a 2-vector. A sum of only ''k''-grade components is called a ''k''-vector, or a ''homogeneous'' multivector. The highest grade element in a space is called a '' pseudoscalar''. If a given element is homogeneous of a grade ''k'', then it is a ''k''-vector, but not necessarily a ''k''-blade. Such an element is a ''k''-blade when it can be expressed as the exterior product of ''k'' vectors. A geometric algebra generated by a 4-dimensional vector space illustrates the point with an example: The sum of any two blades with one taken from the XY-plane and the other taken from the ZW-plane will form a 2-vector that is not a 2-blade. In a geometric algebra generated by a vector space of dimension 2 or 3, all sums of 2-blades may be written as a single 2-blade.


Examples

* 0-vectors are scalars; * 1-vectors are vectors; * 2-vectors are bivectors; * (''n'' − 1)-vectors are
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 ...
s; * ''n''-vectors are pseudoscalars. In the presence of a
volume form In mathematics, a volume form or top-dimensional form is a differential form of degree equal to the differentiable manifold dimension. Thus on a manifold M of dimension n, a volume form is an n-form. It is an element of the space of sections of th ...
(such as given an
inner product In mathematics, an inner product space (or, rarely, a Hausdorff pre-Hilbert space) is a real vector space or a complex vector space with an operation called an inner product. The inner product of two vectors in the space is a scalar, often ...
and an orientation), pseudovectors and pseudoscalars can be identified with vectors and scalars, which is routine in vector calculus, but without a volume form this cannot be done without making an arbitrary choice. In the algebra of physical space (the geometric algebra of Euclidean 3-space, used as a model of (3+1)-spacetime), a sum of a scalar and a vector is called a paravector, and represents a point in spacetime (the vector the space, the scalar the time).


Bivectors

A bivector is an element of the antisymmetric
tensor product In mathematics, the tensor product V \otimes W of two vector spaces and (over the same field) is a vector space to which is associated a bilinear map V\times W \to V\otimes W that maps a pair (v,w),\ v\in V, w\in W to an element of V \otime ...
of a tangent space with itself. In geometric algebra, also, a bivector is a grade 2 element (a 2-vector) resulting from the wedge product of two vectors, and so it is geometrically an ''oriented area'', in the same way a ''vector'' is an oriented line segment. If a and b are two vectors, the bivector has * a norm which is its area, given by *:\left\, \mathbf a \wedge \mathbf b \right\, = \left\, \mathbf \right\, \, \left\, \mathbf \right\, \, \sin(\phi_) * a direction: the plane where that area lies on, i.e., the plane determined by a and b, as long as they are linearly independent; * an orientation (out of two), determined by the order in which the originating vectors are multiplied. Bivectors are connected to
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 ...
s, and are used to represent rotations in geometric algebra. As bivectors are elements of a vector space Λ2''V'' (where ''V'' is a finite-dimensional vector space with ), it makes sense to define an
inner product In mathematics, an inner product space (or, rarely, a Hausdorff pre-Hilbert space) is a real vector space or a complex vector space with an operation called an inner product. The inner product of two vectors in the space is a scalar, often ...
on this vector space as follows. First, write any element in terms of a basis as : F = F^ \mathbf_a \wedge \mathbf_b \quad (1 \le a < b \le n) , where the
Einstein summation convention 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 ...
is being used. Now define a map by insisting that : G(F, H) := G_F^H^ , where G_ are a set of numbers.


Applications

Bivectors play many important roles in physics, for example, in the
classification of electromagnetic fields In differential geometry and theoretical physics, the classification of electromagnetic fields is a pointwise classification of bivectors at each point of a Lorentzian manifold. It is used in the study of solutions of Maxwell's equations and has app ...
.


See also

* Blade (geometry) * Paravector


References

{{tensors Multilinear algebra Tensors Differential geometry Geometric algebra