Alternating multilinear map
Appearance
In mathematics, more specifically in multilinear algebra, an alternating multilinear map is a multilinear map with all arguments belonging to the same space (e.g., a bilinear form or a multilinear form) that is zero whenever any two adjacent arguments are equal.
The notion of alternatization (or alternatisation in British English) is used to derive an alternating multilinear map from any multilinear map with all arguments belonging to the same space.
Definition
An -multilinear map of the form is said to be alternating if whenever there exists such that [1][2]
Example
- In a Lie algebra, the multiplication is an alternating bilinear map called the Lie bracket.
Properties
- If any distinct pair of components are equal, an alternating multilinear map on them is zero.[3][4] More generally, if the components are linearly dependent, such a map is zero.
- If any component vi is replaced by vi + cvj for any j ≠ i and c in the base ring R, the value of an alternating multilinear map is not changed.[5]
- Every alternating multilinear map is antisymmetric.[6]
- If n! is a unit in the base ring R, then every antisymmetric n-multilinear form is alternating.
Alternatization
Given an -multilinear map of the form , the alternating multilinear map defined by is said to be the alternatization of .
Properties
- The alternatization of an n-multilinear alternating map is n! times itself.
- The alternatization of a symmetric map is zero.
- The alternatization of a bilinear map is bilinear. Most notably, the alternatization of any cocycle is bilinear. This fact plays a crucial role in identifying the second cohomology group of a lattice with the group of alternating bilinear forms on a lattice.
See also
- Alternating algebra
- Bilinear map
- Map (mathematics)
- Multilinear algebra
- Multilinear map
- Symmetrization
Notes
- ^ Lang (2002), p. 511
- ^ Bourbaki (1989), p. 511
- ^ Dummit & Foote (2004), p. 436
- ^ Lang (2005) p. 512
- ^ Dummit & Foote (2004), p. 436
- ^ Rotman (1995), p. 235
References
- Cohn, P.M. (2003). Basic Algebra: Groups, Rings and Fields. Springer. ISBN 1-85233-587-4. OCLC 248833275.
- Lang, Serge (2002). Algebra. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 211 (revised 3rd ed.). Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-95385-4. OCLC 48176673.
- Rotman, Joseph J. (1995). An Introduction to the Theory of Groups. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 148 (4th ed.). Springer. ISBN 0-387-94285-8. OCLC 30028913.