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Coquaternion

In abstract algebra, a coquaternion is an idea put forward by James Cockle in 1849. Like the 1843 quaternions of Hamilton, they form a four dimensional real vector space equipped with a multiplicative operation. Unlike the quaternion algebra, coquaternions may be zero divisors or nilpotent.

The set { 1, i, j, k } forms a basis. The coquaternion products of these elements are

ij = k = -ji, j k = - i = - k j, k i = j = - i k
i2 = - 1, j2 = + 1, k2 = + 1 .

With these products the set {1, i, j, k, -1, -i, -j, -k} is isomorphic to the dihedral group of a square.

A coquaternion

q = w + x i + y j + z k

has conjugate

q* = w - x i - y j - z k and modulus
q q* = w2 + x2 - y2 - z2.

When the modulus is non-zero, then q has a multiplicative inverse.

U = {q : q q* ≠ 0 }

is the set of units. The set P of all coquaternions forms a ring (P, +, •) with group of units (U, •).

Let

q = w + x i + y j + z k, u = w + x i, v = y + z i

where u and v are ordinary complex numbers. Then the complex matrix

\begin{pmatrix}u & v \\v* & u* \end{pmatrix},

where u* = w - x i and v* = y - z i (complex conjugates of u and v), represents q in the ring of matrices in the sense that multiplication of coquaternions behaves the same way as the matrix multiplication. For example, the determinant of this matrix u u* - v v* = q q* ; the appearance of this minus sign where there is a plus in H leads to the alternative name split-quaternion for a coquaternion. Historically coquaternions preceded Cayley's matrix algebra; coquaternions (along with quaternions and tessarines) evoked the broader linear algebra.

Profile

Let

r(θ) = j cos θ + k sin θ (here θ is as fundamental as azimuth)
p(a,r) = i sinh a + r cosh a
v(a,r) = i cosh a + r sinh a
E = { r ∈ P : r = r(θ), 0 ≤ θ < 2 π }
J = {p(a,r) ∈ P : a ∈ R, r ∈ E } hyperboloid of one sheet
I = {v(a,r) ∈ P : a ∈ R, r ∈ E } hyperboloid of two sheets

Now it is easy to verify that

{q ∈ P : q2 = + 1 } = J ∪ {1,-1}

and that

{q ∈ P : q2 = -1 } = I .

These set equalities mean that when p ∈ J then the plane

{ x + yp : x,y ∈ R } = Dp

is a subring of P that is isomorphic to the plane of split-complex numbers just as when v is in I then

{x + y v : x,y ∈ R } = Cv

is a planar subring of P that is isomorphic to the ordinary complex plane C.

Note that for every r ∈ E, (r + i)2 = 0 = (r - i)2 so that r + i and r - i are nilpotents. The plane N = {x + y(r + i) : x,y ∈ R} is a subring of P that is isomorphic to the dual numbers. Since every coquaternion must lie in a Dp, a Cv, or an N plane, these planes profile P. For example, the unit sphere

SU(1,1) = { q ∈ P : q q* = 1 }

consists of the "unit circles" in the constituent planes of P. In Dp this is an hyperbola, in N the unit circle is a pair of parallel lines, while in Cv it is indeed a circle (though it appears elliptical due to v-stretching).

Pan-orthogonality

When coquaternion q = w + xi + yj + zk, then the real part of q is w.
Definition: For non-zero coquaternions q and t we write q ⊥ t when the real part of the product qt* is zero.

  • For every v ∈ I, if q,t ∈ Cv, then q ⊥ t means the rays from 0 to q and t are perpendicular.
  • For every p ∈ J, if q,t ∈ Dp, then q ⊥ t means these two points are hyperbolic-orthogonal.
  • For every r ∈ E and every a ∈ R, p = p(a,r) and v = v(a,r) satisfy p ⊥ v .
  • If u is a unit in the coquaternion ring, then q ⊥ t implies qu ⊥ tu.
    • proof: (qu)(tu)* = (uu*)qt* follows from (tu)* = u*t*, a fact based on anti-commutativity of vectors.

Historical Notes and References

The coquaternions were initially identified and named in the London-Edinburgh-Dublin Philosophical Magazine, series 3, volume 35, pp.434,5 in 1849 by James Cockle under the title "On Systems of Algebra involving more than one Imaginary". At the 1900 Paris meeting of the International Congress of Mathematicians Alexander MacFarlane called the algebra the exspherical quaternion system as he described its profile. MacFarlane examined a differential element of the submanifold {q ∈ P : q q* = - 1 } (the counter-sphere). The sphere itself was considered in German by Hans Beck in 1910 (Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, v.28; e.g. the dihedral group appears on page 419.)In 1942 and 1947 there were two brief mentions of the coquaternion structure in the Annals of Mathematics:

  • A.A. Albert "Quadratic Forms permitting Composition" 43:161-177
  • V. Bargmann "Representations of the Lorentz Group" 48:568-640 .
01-04-2007 01:16:19
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