Octonion Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In mathematics, the octonions are a nonassociative extension of the quaternions. They form an 8-dimensional normed division algebra over the real numbers. The octonion algebra is often denoted O.Lacking the desirable property of associativity, the octonions receive far less attention then the quaternions. Despite this, the octonions retain importance for being related to a number of exceptional structures in mathematics, among them the exceptional Lie groups.
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2 Definition 3 Properties 4 Related topics |
The octonions were discovered in 1843 by John T. Graves, a friend of William Hamilton, who called them octaves. They were discovered independently by Arthur Cayley, who published the first paper on them in 1845. They are sometimes referred to as Cayley numbers or the Cayley algebra.
The octonions can be thought of as octets (or 8-tuples) of real numbers. Every octonion is a real linear combination of the unit octonions {1, i, j, k, l, li, lj, lk}. That is, every octonion x can be written in the form
Addition of octonions is accomplished by adding corresponding coefficients, as with the complex numbers and quaternions. By linearity, multiplication of octonions is completely determined by the multiplication table for the unit octonions given below.
History
Definition
with real coefficients xa.
| 1 | i | j | k | l | li | lj | lk |
| i | −1 | k | −j | −li | l | −lk | lj |
| j | −k | −1 | i | −lj | lk | l | −li |
| k | j | −i | −1 | −lk | −lj | li | l |
| l | li | lj | lk | −1 | −i | −j | −k |
| li | −l | −lk | lj | i | −1 | −k | j |
| lj | lk | −l | −li | j | k | −1 | −i |
| lk | −lj | li | −l | k | −j | i | −1 |
(Note that the basis for the octonions given here is not nearly as universal as the standard basis for the quaternions, however, nearly all other choices differ from this one only in order and sign.)
Cayley-Dickson construction
A more systematic way of defining the octonions is via the Cayley-Dickson construction. Just as quaternions can be defined as pairs of complex numbers, the octonions can be defined as pairs of quaternions. Addition is defined pairwise. The product of two pairs of quaternions (a, b) and (c, d) is defined by
- (a, b)(c, d) = (ac − db*)(a*d + cb)
- (1,0), (i,0), (j,0), (k,0), (0,1), (0,i), (0,j), (0,k)
Fano plane mnemonic
A convenient mnemonic for remembering the products of unit octonions is given by the following diagram:
Let (a, b, c) be an ordered triple of points lying on a given line with the order specified by the direction of the arrow. Then multiplication is given by
- ab = c and ba = −c
- 1 is the multiplicative identity,
- e2 = −1 for each point in the diagram
The conjugate of an octonion
Conjugate, norm, and inverse
is given by
Conjugation is an involution of O and satisfies (xy)* = y*x* (note the change in order).
The real part of x is defined as ½(x + x*) = x0 and the imaginary part as ½(x - x*). The set of all purely imaginary octonions span a 7 dimension subspace of O, denoted Im(O).
The norm of the octonion x is defined as
The existence of a norm on O implies the existence of inverses for every nonzero element of O. The inverse of x ≠ 0 is given by
Octonionic multiplication is neither commutative:
Properties
nor associative:
- (ij)l = − i(jl)
The octonions do retain one important property shared by R, C, and H: the norm on O satisfies
It turns out that the only normed division algebras over the reals are R, C, H, and O. These four algebras also form the only alternative, finite-dimensional division algebra over the reals (up to isomorphism).
Not being associative, the nonzero elements of O do not form a group. They do, however, form a quasigroup, indeed a Moufang loop.
Automorphisms
An automorphism, A, of the octonions is an invertible linear transformation of O which satisfies
- A(xy) = A(x)A(y).
See also: PSL(2,7) - the automorphism group of the Fano plane.
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