In
abstract algebra
In mathematics, more specifically algebra, abstract algebra or modern algebra is the study of algebraic structures, which are set (mathematics), sets with specific operation (mathematics), operations acting on their elements. Algebraic structur ...
and
multilinear algebra, a multilinear form on a
vector space over a
field is a
map
:
that is separately
-
linear in each of its
arguments. More generally, one can define multilinear forms on a
module over a
commutative ring. The rest of this article, however, will only consider multilinear forms on
finite-dimensional vector spaces.
A multilinear
-form on
over
is called a (covariant)
-tensor, and the vector space of such forms is usually denoted
or
.
Tensor product
Given a
-tensor
and an
-tensor
, a product
, known as the tensor product, can be defined by the property
:
for all
. The
tensor product of multilinear forms is not commutative; however it is bilinear and associative:
:
,
and
:
If
forms a basis for an
-dimensional vector space
and
is the corresponding
dual basis for the
dual space , then the products
, with
form a basis for
. Consequently,
has dimension
.
Examples
Bilinear forms
If
,
is referred to as a bilinear form. A familiar and important example of a (symmetric) bilinear form is the
standard inner product (dot product) of vectors.
Alternating multilinear forms
An important class of multilinear forms are the alternating multilinear forms, which have the additional property that
:
where
is a
permutation and
denotes its
sign (+1 if even, –1 if odd). As a consequence,
alternating multilinear forms are antisymmetric with respect to swapping of any two arguments (i.e.,
and
):
:
With the additional hypothesis that the
characteristic of the field is not 2, setting
implies as a corollary that
; that is, the form has a value of 0 whenever two of its arguments are equal. Note, however, that some authors use this last condition as the defining property of alternating forms. This definition implies the property given at the beginning of the section, but as noted above, the converse implication holds only when
.
An alternating multilinear
-form on
over
is called a multicovector of degree
or
-covector, and the vector space of such alternating forms, a subspace of
, is generally denoted
, or, using the notation for the isomorphic ''k''th
exterior power of
(the
dual space of
),
. Note that
linear functionals (multilinear 1-forms over
) are trivially alternating, so that
, while, by convention, 0-forms are defined to be scalars:
.
The
determinant
In mathematics, the determinant is a Scalar (mathematics), scalar-valued function (mathematics), function of the entries of a square matrix. The determinant of a matrix is commonly denoted , , or . Its value characterizes some properties of the ...
on
matrices, viewed as an
argument function of the column vectors, is an important example of an alternating multilinear form.
Exterior product
The tensor product of alternating multilinear forms is, in general, no longer alternating. However, by summing over all permutations of the tensor product, taking into account the parity of each term, the ''
exterior product'' (
, also known as the ''wedge product'') of multicovectors can be defined, so that if
and
, then
:
:
where the sum is taken over the set of all permutations over
elements,
. The exterior product is bilinear, associative, and graded-alternating: if
and
then
.
Given a basis
for
and dual basis
for
, the exterior products
, with