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Clifford algebras are a type of associative algebra in mathematics. They can be thought of as generalizations of the complex numbers and quaternions. The theory of Clifford algebras is intimately connected with the theory of quadratic forms and orthogonal transformations. Clifford algebras have important applications in a variety of fields including geometry and theoretical physics. They are named for the English geometer William Clifford.
Some familiarity with the basics of multilinear algebra will be useful in reading this article.

Specifically, a Clifford algebra is a unital associative algebra which contains and is generated by a vector space V equipped with a quadratic form Q. The Clifford algebra Cℓ(V,Q) is the "freest" algebra generated by V subject to the condition 1

for all

If the characteristic of the ground field is not 2, then one can rewrite this fundamental identity in the form

for all

where <·,·> is the symmetric bilinear form associated to Q. This idea of "freest" or "most general" algebra subject to this identity can be formally expressed through the notion of a universal propertyIn category theory, abstract algebra and other fields of mathematics, frequently constructions are defined or characterised by an abstract property which requires the existence of a unique morphism under certain conditions. These properties are called uni (see below).

Clifford algebras are closely related to exterior algebraIn mathematics, the exterior algebra (also known as the Grassmann algebra of a given vector space V is a certain unital associative algebra which contains V as a subspace. It is denoted by Λ V or Λ• V and its multiplication, known as the weds. In fact, if Q = 0 then the Clifford algebra Cℓ(V,Q) is just the exterior algebra Λ(V). For nonzero Q there exists a canonical linear isomorphism between Λ(V) and Cℓ(V,Q). That is they are naturally isomorphic as vector spaces but with different multiplications. Clifford multiplication is strictly richer than the exterior product since it makes use of the extra information provided by Q.

1 Universal property and construction

Let V be a vector space over a field K, and let Q : VK be a quadratic form on V. We will assume for simplicity that the characteristic of K is not two. 2 In most cases of interest the field K is either R or C (which have characteristic 0).

The Clifford algebra Cℓ(V,Q) is a unital associative algebra over K together with a linear map i : VCℓ(V,Q) defined by the following universal property: Given any associative algebra A over K and any linear map j : VA such that

j(v)2 = −Q(v)1 for all vV

(where 1 denotes the multiplicative identity of A), there is a unique algebra homomorphism f : Cℓ(V,Q) → A such that the following diagram commutes (i.e. such that f O i = j):


Working with a symmetric bilinear form <·,·> instead of Q, the requirment on j is

j(v)j(w) + j(w)j(v) = −2<v,w> for all v,wV

The Clifford algebra described above always exists and can be constructed as follows: start with the most general algebra that contains V, namely the tensor algebra T(V), and then enforce the fundamental identity by taking a suitable quotient. In our case we want to take the two-sided ideal IQ in T(V) generated by all elements of the form

for all

and define Cℓ(V,Q) as the quotient

Cℓ(V,Q) = T(V)/IQ

It is then straightforward to show that Cℓ(V,Q) contains V and satisfies the above universal property. It follows from this construction that i is injective. One usually drops the i and considers V as a linear subspace of Cℓ(V,Q).

The universal characterization of the Clifford algebra shows that the construction of Cℓ(V,Q) is functorial in nature. Namely, Cℓ can be considered as a functor from the category of vector spaces with quadratic forms (whose morphisms are linear maps preserving the quadratic form) to the category of associative algebras. The universal property guarentees that linear maps between vector spaces (preserving the quadratic form) extend uniquely to algebra homomorphisms between the associated Clifford algebras.



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