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Quadratic algebra

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mathematics, a quadratic algebra is an algebra over a ring for which the algebra extends the ring by a new element that satisfies a quadratic polynomial with coefficients in the ring.

There are free and graded quadratic algebras.

Free quadratic algebras

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Given a commutative ring R, and the ring of polynomials R[X], a free quadratic algebra may be defined as quotient ring by a polynomial ideal: "An R-algebra of the form R[X]/(X2a X − b) where X2a X − b is a monic quadratic polynomial in R[X] and (X2a X − b) Is the ideal it generates, is a free quadratic algebra over R."[1]

Alternatively, a free quadratic extension of R is S = RRx with xx = ax + b for some a and b in R.[2] Denote it S = (R, a, b). Then (R, a, b) ≅ (R, c, d) iff there is a unit α and an element β of R such that[2]

c = α(a − 2 β ) and
d = α2a + b −β2).

If R is taken as the field of real numbers, then there are three isomorphism classes of :[1]: 8 

Filtered quadratic algebras

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A quadratic algebra may be a filtered algebra generated by degree one elements, with defining relations of degree 2. It was pointed out by Yuri Manin that such algebras play an important role in the theory of quantum groups. The most important class of graded quadratic algebras is Koszul algebras.

Graded quadratic algebras

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A graded quadratic algebra A is determined by a vector space of generators V = A1 and a subspace of homogeneous quadratic relations SVV.[3] Thus

and inherits its grading from the tensor algebra T(V).

If the subspace of relations is instead allowed to also contain inhomogeneous degree 2 elements, i.e. SkV ⊕ (VV), this construction results in a filtered quadratic algebra.

A graded quadratic algebra A as above admits a quadratic dual: the quadratic algebra generated by V* and with quadratic relations forming the orthogonal complement of S in V*V*.

Examples

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References

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  1. ^ a b Alexander J. Hahn (1994) Quadratic algebras, Clifford algebras, and Arithmetic Witt Groups, page 5, Universitext, Springer, ISBN 0-387-94110-X
  2. ^ a b K. Kitamura (1973) Osaka Journal of Mathematics 10: 15 to 20, available via Project Euclid
  3. ^ Polishchuk, Alexander; Positselski, Leonid (2005). Quadratic algebras. University Lecture Series. Vol. 37. Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-8218-3834-1. MR 2177131.

Further reading

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