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ε-quadratic form

In mathematics, specifically the theory of quadratic forms, an ε-quadratic form is a generalization of quadratic forms to skew-symmetric settings and to *-rings; ε = ±1, accordingly for symmetric or skew-symmetric. They are also called -quadratic forms, particularly in the context of surgery theory.

There is the related notion of ε-symmetric forms, which generalizes symmetric forms, skew-symmetric forms (= symplectic forms), Hermitian forms, and skew-Hermitian forms. More briefly, one may refer to quadratic, skew-quadratic, symmetric, and skew-symmetric forms, where "skew" means (−) and the * (involution) is implied.

The theory is 2-local: away from 2, ε-quadratic forms are equivalent to ε-symmetric forms: half the symmetrization map (below) gives an explicit isomorphism.

Definition edit

ε-symmetric forms and ε-quadratic forms are defined as follows.[1]

Given a module M over a *-ring R, let B(M) be the space of bilinear forms on M, and let T : B(M) → B(M) be the "conjugate transpose" involution B(u, v) ↦ B(v, u)*. Since multiplication by −1 is also an involution and commutes with linear maps, −T is also an involution. Thus we can write ε = ±1 and εT is an involution, either T or −T (ε can be more general than ±1; see below). Define the ε-symmetric forms as the invariants of εT, and the ε-quadratic forms are the coinvariants.

As an exact sequence,

 

As kernel and cokernel,

 
 

The notation Qε(M), Qε(M) follows the standard notation MG, MG for the invariants and coinvariants for a group action, here of the order 2 group (an involution).

Composition of the inclusion and quotient maps (but not 1 − εT) as   yields a map Qε(M) → Qε(M): every ε-symmetric form determines an ε-quadratic form.

Symmetrization edit

Conversely, one can define a reverse homomorphism "1 + εT": Qε(M) → Qε(M), called the symmetrization map (since it yields a symmetric form) by taking any lift of a quadratic form and multiplying it by 1 + εT. This is a symmetric form because (1 − εT)(1 + εT) = 1 − T2 = 0, so it is in the kernel. More precisely,  . The map is well-defined by the same equation: choosing a different lift corresponds to adding a multiple of (1 − εT), but this vanishes after multiplying by 1 + εT. Thus every ε-quadratic form determines an ε-symmetric form.

Composing these two maps either way: Qε(M) → Qε(M) → Qε(M) or Qε(M) → Qε(M) → Qε(M) yields multiplication by 2, and thus these maps are bijective if 2 is invertible in R, with the inverse given by multiplication with 1/2.

An ε-quadratic form ψQε(M) is called non-degenerate if the associated ε-symmetric form (1 + εT)(ψ) is non-degenerate.

Generalization from * edit

If the * is trivial, then ε = ±1, and "away from 2" means that 2 is invertible: 1/2 ∈ R.

More generally, one can take for εR any element such that ε*ε = 1. ε = ±1 always satisfy this, but so does any element of norm 1, such as complex numbers of unit norm.

Similarly, in the presence of a non-trivial *, ε-symmetric forms are equivalent to ε-quadratic forms if there is an element λR such that λ* + λ = 1. If * is trivial, this is equivalent to 2λ = 1 or λ = 1/2, while if * is non-trivial there can be multiple possible λ; for example, over the complex numbers any number with real part 1/2 is such a λ.

For instance, in the ring   (the integral lattice for the quadratic form 2x2 − 2x + 1), with complex conjugation,   are two such elements, though 1/2 ∉ R.

Intuition edit

In terms of matrices (we take V to be 2-dimensional), if * is trivial:

  • matrices   correspond to bilinear forms
  • the subspace of symmetric matrices   correspond to symmetric forms
  • the subspace of (−1)-symmetric matrices   correspond to symplectic forms
  • the bilinear form   yields the quadratic form
 ,
  • the map 1 + T from quadratic forms to symmetric forms maps  

to  , for example by lifting to   and then adding to transpose. Mapping back to quadratic forms yields double the original:  .

If   is complex conjugation, then

  • the subspace of symmetric matrices are the Hermitian matrices  
  • the subspace of skew-symmetric matrices are the skew-Hermitian matrices  

Refinements edit

An intuitive way to understand an ε-quadratic form is to think of it as a quadratic refinement of its associated ε-symmetric form.

For instance, in defining a Clifford algebra over a general field or ring, one quotients the tensor algebra by relations coming from the symmetric form and the quadratic form: vw + wv = 2B(v, w) and  . If 2 is invertible, this second relation follows from the first (as the quadratic form can be recovered from the associated bilinear form), but at 2 this additional refinement is necessary.

Examples edit

An easy example for an ε-quadratic form is the standard hyperbolic ε-quadratic form  . (Here, R* := HomR(R, R) denotes the dual of the R-module R.) It is given by the bilinear form  . The standard hyperbolic ε-quadratic form is needed for the definition of L-theory.

For the field of two elements R = F2 there is no difference between (+1)-quadratic and (−1)-quadratic forms, which are just called quadratic forms. The Arf invariant of a nonsingular quadratic form over F2 is an F2-valued invariant with important applications in both algebra and topology, and plays a role similar to that played by the discriminant of a quadratic form in characteristic not equal to two.

Manifolds edit

The free part of the middle homology group (with integer coefficients) of an oriented even-dimensional manifold has an ε-symmetric form, via Poincaré duality, the intersection form. In the case of singly even dimension 4k + 2, this is skew-symmetric, while for doubly even dimension 4k, this is symmetric. Geometrically this corresponds to intersection, where two n/2-dimensional submanifolds in an n-dimensional manifold generically intersect in a 0-dimensional submanifold (a set of points), by adding codimension. For singly even dimension the order switches sign, while for doubly even dimension order does not change sign, hence the ε-symmetry. The simplest cases are for the product of spheres, where the product S2k × S2k and S2k+1 × S2k+1 respectively give the symmetric form   and skew-symmetric form   In dimension two, this yields a torus, and taking the connected sum of g tori yields the surface of genus g, whose middle homology has the standard hyperbolic form.

With additional structure, this ε-symmetric form can be refined to an ε-quadratic form. For doubly even dimension this is integer valued, while for singly even dimension this is only defined up to parity, and takes values in Z/2. For example, given a framed manifold, one can produce such a refinement. For singly even dimension, the Arf invariant of this skew-quadratic form is the Kervaire invariant.

Given an oriented surface Σ embedded in R3, the middle homology group H1(Σ) carries not only a skew-symmetric form (via intersection), but also a skew-quadratic form, which can be seen as a quadratic refinement, via self-linking. The skew-symmetric form is an invariant of the surface Σ, whereas the skew-quadratic form is an invariant of the embedding Σ ⊂ R3, e.g. for the Seifert surface of a knot. The Arf invariant of the skew-quadratic form is a framed cobordism invariant generating the first stable homotopy group  .

 
In the standard embedding of the torus, a (1, 1) curve self-links, thus Q(1, 1) = 1.

For the standard embedded torus, the skew-symmetric form is given by   (with respect to the standard symplectic basis), and the skew-quadratic refinement is given by xy with respect to this basis: Q(1, 0) = Q(0, 1) = 0: the basis curves don't self-link; and Q(1, 1) = 1: a (1, 1) self-links, as in the Hopf fibration. (This form has Arf invariant 0, and thus this embedded torus has Kervaire invariant 0.)

Applications edit

A key application is in algebraic surgery theory, where even L-groups are defined as Witt groups of ε-quadratic forms, by C.T.C.Wall

References edit

  1. ^ Ranicki, Andrew (2001). "Foundations of algebraic surgery". arXiv:math/0111315.

quadratic, form, mathematics, specifically, theory, quadratic, forms, generalization, quadratic, forms, skew, symmetric, settings, rings, accordingly, symmetric, skew, symmetric, they, also, called, displaystyle, quadratic, forms, particularly, context, surger. In mathematics specifically the theory of quadratic forms an e quadratic form is a generalization of quadratic forms to skew symmetric settings and to rings e 1 accordingly for symmetric or skew symmetric They are also called n displaystyle n quadratic forms particularly in the context of surgery theory There is the related notion of e symmetric forms which generalizes symmetric forms skew symmetric forms symplectic forms Hermitian forms and skew Hermitian forms More briefly one may refer to quadratic skew quadratic symmetric and skew symmetric forms where skew means and the involution is implied The theory is 2 local away from 2 e quadratic forms are equivalent to e symmetric forms half the symmetrization map below gives an explicit isomorphism Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Symmetrization 1 2 Generalization from 2 Intuition 2 1 Refinements 3 Examples 3 1 Manifolds 4 Applications 5 ReferencesDefinition edite symmetric forms and e quadratic forms are defined as follows 1 Given a module M over a ring R let B M be the space of bilinear forms on M and let T B M B M be the conjugate transpose involution B u v B v u Since multiplication by 1 is also an involution and commutes with linear maps T is also an involution Thus we can write e 1 and eT is an involution either T or T e can be more general than 1 see below Define the e symmetric forms as the invariants of eT and the e quadratic forms are the coinvariants As an exact sequence 0 Qe M B M 1 eTB M Qe M 0 displaystyle 0 to Q varepsilon M to B M stackrel 1 varepsilon T longrightarrow B M to Q varepsilon M to 0 nbsp As kernel and cokernel Qe M ker 1 eT displaystyle Q varepsilon M mbox ker 1 varepsilon T nbsp Qe M coker 1 eT displaystyle Q varepsilon M mbox coker 1 varepsilon T nbsp The notation Qe M Qe M follows the standard notation MG MG for the invariants and coinvariants for a group action here of the order 2 group an involution Composition of the inclusion and quotient maps but not 1 eT as Qe M B M Qe M displaystyle Q varepsilon M to B M to Q varepsilon M nbsp yields a map Qe M Qe M every e symmetric form determines an e quadratic form Symmetrization edit Conversely one can define a reverse homomorphism 1 eT Qe M Qe M called the symmetrization map since it yields a symmetric form by taking any lift of a quadratic form and multiplying it by 1 eT This is a symmetric form because 1 eT 1 eT 1 T2 0 so it is in the kernel More precisely 1 eT B M lt Qe M displaystyle 1 varepsilon T B M lt Q varepsilon M nbsp The map is well defined by the same equation choosing a different lift corresponds to adding a multiple of 1 eT but this vanishes after multiplying by 1 eT Thus every e quadratic form determines an e symmetric form Composing these two maps either way Qe M Qe M Qe M or Qe M Qe M Qe M yields multiplication by 2 and thus these maps are bijective if 2 is invertible in R with the inverse given by multiplication with 1 2 An e quadratic form ps Qe M is called non degenerate if the associated e symmetric form 1 eT ps is non degenerate Generalization from edit If the is trivial then e 1 and away from 2 means that 2 is invertible 1 2 R More generally one can take for e R any element such that e e 1 e 1 always satisfy this but so does any element of norm 1 such as complex numbers of unit norm Similarly in the presence of a non trivial e symmetric forms are equivalent to e quadratic forms if there is an element l R such that l l 1 If is trivial this is equivalent to 2l 1 or l 1 2 while if is non trivial there can be multiple possible l for example over the complex numbers any number with real part 1 2 is such a l For instance in the ring R Z 1 i2 displaystyle R mathbf Z left textstyle frac 1 i 2 right nbsp the integral lattice for the quadratic form 2x2 2x 1 with complex conjugation l 1 i2 displaystyle lambda textstyle frac 1 pm i 2 nbsp are two such elements though 1 2 R Intuition editIn terms of matrices we take V to be 2 dimensional if is trivial matrices abcd displaystyle begin pmatrix a amp b c amp d end pmatrix nbsp correspond to bilinear forms the subspace of symmetric matrices abbc displaystyle begin pmatrix a amp b b amp c end pmatrix nbsp correspond to symmetric forms the subspace of 1 symmetric matrices 0b b0 displaystyle begin pmatrix 0 amp b b amp 0 end pmatrix nbsp correspond to symplectic forms the bilinear form abcd displaystyle begin pmatrix a amp b c amp d end pmatrix nbsp yields the quadratic formax2 bxy cyx dy2 ax2 b c xy dy2 displaystyle ax 2 bxy cyx dy 2 ax 2 b c xy dy 2 nbsp dd the map 1 T from quadratic forms to symmetric forms maps ex2 fxy gy2 displaystyle ex 2 fxy gy 2 nbsp to 2eff2g displaystyle begin pmatrix 2e amp f f amp 2g end pmatrix nbsp for example by lifting to ef0g displaystyle begin pmatrix e amp f 0 amp g end pmatrix nbsp and then adding to transpose Mapping back to quadratic forms yields double the original 2ex2 2fxy 2gy2 2 ex2 fxy gy2 displaystyle 2ex 2 2fxy 2gy 2 2 ex 2 fxy gy 2 nbsp If displaystyle bar cdot nbsp is complex conjugation then the subspace of symmetric matrices are the Hermitian matrices azz c displaystyle begin pmatrix a amp z bar z amp c end pmatrix nbsp the subspace of skew symmetric matrices are the skew Hermitian matrices biz z di displaystyle begin pmatrix bi amp z bar z amp di end pmatrix nbsp Refinements edit An intuitive way to understand an e quadratic form is to think of it as a quadratic refinement of its associated e symmetric form For instance in defining a Clifford algebra over a general field or ring one quotients the tensor algebra by relations coming from the symmetric form and the quadratic form vw wv 2B v w and v2 Q v displaystyle v 2 Q v nbsp If 2 is invertible this second relation follows from the first as the quadratic form can be recovered from the associated bilinear form but at 2 this additional refinement is necessary Examples editAn easy example for an e quadratic form is the standard hyperbolic e quadratic form He R Qe R R displaystyle H varepsilon R in Q varepsilon R oplus R nbsp Here R HomR R R denotes the dual of the R module R It is given by the bilinear form v1 f1 v2 f2 f2 v1 displaystyle v 1 f 1 v 2 f 2 mapsto f 2 v 1 nbsp The standard hyperbolic e quadratic form is needed for the definition of L theory For the field of two elements R F2 there is no difference between 1 quadratic and 1 quadratic forms which are just called quadratic forms The Arf invariant of a nonsingular quadratic form over F2 is an F2 valued invariant with important applications in both algebra and topology and plays a role similar to that played by the discriminant of a quadratic form in characteristic not equal to two Manifolds edit Further information Intersection product The free part of the middle homology group with integer coefficients of an oriented even dimensional manifold has an e symmetric form via Poincare duality the intersection form In the case of singly even dimension 4k 2 this is skew symmetric while for doubly even dimension 4k this is symmetric Geometrically this corresponds to intersection where two n 2 dimensional submanifolds in an n dimensional manifold generically intersect in a 0 dimensional submanifold a set of points by adding codimension For singly even dimension the order switches sign while for doubly even dimension order does not change sign hence the e symmetry The simplest cases are for the product of spheres where the product S2k S2k and S2k 1 S2k 1 respectively give the symmetric form 0110 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 0 amp 1 1 amp 0 end smallmatrix right nbsp and skew symmetric form 01 10 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 0 amp 1 1 amp 0 end smallmatrix right nbsp In dimension two this yields a torus and taking the connected sum of g tori yields the surface of genus g whose middle homology has the standard hyperbolic form With additional structure this e symmetric form can be refined to an e quadratic form For doubly even dimension this is integer valued while for singly even dimension this is only defined up to parity and takes values in Z 2 For example given a framed manifold one can produce such a refinement For singly even dimension the Arf invariant of this skew quadratic form is the Kervaire invariant Given an oriented surface S embedded in R3 the middle homology group H1 S carries not only a skew symmetric form via intersection but also a skew quadratic form which can be seen as a quadratic refinement via self linking The skew symmetric form is an invariant of the surface S whereas the skew quadratic form is an invariant of the embedding S R3 e g for the Seifert surface of a knot The Arf invariant of the skew quadratic form is a framed cobordism invariant generating the first stable homotopy group p1s displaystyle pi 1 s nbsp nbsp In the standard embedding of the torus a 1 1 curve self links thus Q 1 1 1 For the standard embedded torus the skew symmetric form is given by 01 10 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 0 amp 1 1 amp 0 end smallmatrix right nbsp with respect to the standard symplectic basis and the skew quadratic refinement is given by xy with respect to this basis Q 1 0 Q 0 1 0 the basis curves don t self link and Q 1 1 1 a 1 1 self links as in the Hopf fibration This form has Arf invariant 0 and thus this embedded torus has Kervaire invariant 0 Applications editA key application is in algebraic surgery theory where even L groups are defined as Witt groups of e quadratic forms by C T C WallReferences edit Ranicki Andrew 2001 Foundations of algebraic surgery arXiv math 0111315 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title E quadratic form amp oldid 1156094123, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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