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Octonion

In mathematics, the octonions are a normed division algebra over the real numbers, a kind of hypercomplex number system. The octonions are usually represented by the capital letter O, using boldface O or blackboard bold . Octonions have eight dimensions; twice the number of dimensions of the quaternions, of which they are an extension. They are noncommutative and nonassociative, but satisfy a weaker form of associativity; namely, they are alternative. They are also power associative.

Octonions
Symbol
TypeHypercomplex algebra
Unitse0, ..., e7
Multiplicative identitye0
Main properties
Common systems
Less common systems

Octonions () Sedenions ()

Octonions are not as well known as the quaternions and complex numbers, which are much more widely studied and used. Octonions are related to exceptional structures in mathematics, among them the exceptional Lie groups. Octonions have applications in fields such as string theory, special relativity and quantum logic. Applying the Cayley–Dickson construction to the octonions produces the sedenions.

History Edit

The octonions were discovered in 1843 by John T. Graves, inspired by his friend William Rowan Hamilton's discovery of quaternions. Graves called his discovery "octaves", and mentioned them in a letter to Hamilton dated 26 December 1843.[1] He first published his result slightly later than Arthur Cayley's article.[2] The octonions were discovered independently by Cayley[3] and are sometimes referred to as "Cayley numbers" or the "Cayley algebra". Hamilton described the early history of Graves's discovery.[4]

Definition Edit

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:

 

where e0 is the scalar or real element; it may be identified with the real number 1. That is, every octonion x can be written in the form

 

with real coefficients xi.

Addition and subtraction of octonions is done by adding and subtracting corresponding terms and hence their coefficients, like quaternions. Multiplication is more complex. Multiplication is distributive over addition, so the product of two octonions can be calculated by summing the products of all the terms, again like quaternions. The product of each pair of terms can be given by multiplication of the coefficients and a multiplication table of the unit octonions, like this one (due to Cayley, 1845, and Graves, 1843):[5]

   
               
                   
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 

Most off-diagonal elements of the table are antisymmetric, making it almost a skew-symmetric matrix except for the elements on the main diagonal, as well as the row and column for which e0 is an operand.

The table can be summarized as follows:[6]

 

where δij is the Kronecker delta (equal to 1 if and only if i = j), and εijk is a completely antisymmetric tensor with value 1 when ijk = 123, 145, 176, 246, 257, 347, 365.

The above definition is not unique, however; it is only one of 480 possible definitions for octonion multiplication with e0 = 1. The others can be obtained by permuting and changing the signs of the non-scalar basis elements {e1, e2, e3, e4, e5, e6, e7}. The 480 different algebras are isomorphic, and there is rarely a need to consider which particular multiplication rule is used.

Each of these 480 definitions is invariant up to signs under some 7-cycle of the points (1234567), and for each 7-cycle there are four definitions, differing by signs and reversal of order. A common choice is to use the definition invariant under the 7-cycle (1234567) with e1e2 = e4 by using the triangular multiplication diagram, or Fano plane below that also shows the sorted list of 124 based 7-cycle triads and its associated multiplication matrices in both en and IJKL format.

 

A variation of this sometimes used is to label the elements of the basis by the elements , 0, 1, 2, ..., 6, of the projective line over the finite field of order 7. The multiplication is then given by e = 1 and e1e2 = e4, and all expressions obtained from this by adding a constant (modulo 7) to all subscripts: in other words using the seven triples (124) (235) (346) (450) (561) (602) (013). These are the nonzero codewords of the quadratic residue code of length 7 over the Galois field of two elements, GF(2). There is a symmetry of order 7 given by adding a constant mod 7 to all subscripts, and also a symmetry of order 3 given by multiplying all subscripts by one of the quadratic residues 1, 2, 4 mod 7.[7][8]

The multiplication table for a geometric algebra of signature (−−−−) can be given in terms of the following 7 quaternionic triples (omitting the identity element):

(I, j, k), (i, J, k), (i, j, K), (I, J, K), (∗I, i, m), (∗J, j, m), (∗K, k, m)

in which the lowercase items are vectors and the uppercase ones are bivectors and ∗ = mijk (which is the Hodge star operator). If the is forced to be equal to the identity then the multiplication ceases to be associative, but the may be removed from the multiplication table resulting in an octonion multiplication table.

In keeping ∗ = mijk associative and thus not reducing the 4-dimensional geometric algebra to an octonion one, the whole multiplication table can be derived from the equation for . Consider the gamma matrices. The formula defining the fifth gamma matrix shows that it is the of a four-dimensional geometric algebra of the gamma matrices.

Cayley–Dickson construction Edit

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

 

where z* denotes the conjugate of the quaternion z. This definition is equivalent to the one given above when the eight unit octonions are identified with the pairs

(1, 0), (i, 0), (j, 0), (k, 0), (0, 1), (0, i), (0, j), (0, k)

Fano plane mnemonic Edit

 
A mnemonic for the products of the unit octonions[9]
 
A 3D mnemonic visualization showing the 7 triads as hyperplanes through the real (e0) vertex of the octonion example given above[9]

A convenient mnemonic for remembering the products of unit octonions is given by the diagram, which represents the multiplication table of Cayley and Graves.[5][10] This diagram with seven points and seven lines (the circle through 1, 2, and 3 is considered a line) is called the Fano plane. The lines are directional. The seven points correspond to the seven standard basis elements of Im(O) (see definition below). Each pair of distinct points lies on a unique line and each line runs through exactly three points.

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

together with cyclic permutations. These rules together with

  • 1 is the multiplicative identity,
  • e2
    i
    = −1
    for each point in the diagram

completely defines the multiplicative structure of the octonions. Each of the seven lines generates a subalgebra of O isomorphic to the quaternions H.

Conjugate, norm, and inverse Edit

The conjugate of an octonion

 

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 given by

 

and the imaginary part by

 

The set of all purely imaginary octonions spans a 7-dimensional subspace of O, denoted Im(O).

Conjugation of octonions satisfies the equation

 

The product of an octonion with its conjugate, x*x = xx*, is always a nonnegative real number:

 

Using this, the norm of an octonion can be defined as

 

This norm agrees with the standard 8-dimensional Euclidean norm on R8.

The existence of a norm on O implies the existence of inverses for every nonzero element of O. The inverse of x ≠ 0, which is the unique octonion x−1 satisfying xx−1 = x−1x = 1, is given by

 

Properties Edit

Octonionic multiplication is neither commutative:

eiej = −ejeiejei if i, j are distinct and non-zero,

nor associative:

(eiej)ek = −ei(ejek) ≠ ei(ejek) if i, j, k are distinct, non-zero and eiej ≠ ±ek.

The octonions do satisfy a weaker form of associativity: they are alternative. This means that the subalgebra generated by any two elements is associative. Actually, one can show that the subalgebra generated by any two elements of O is isomorphic to R, C, or H, all of which are associative. Because of their non-associativity, octonions cannot be represented by a subalgebra of a matrix ring over  , unlike the real numbers, complex numbers and quaternions.

The octonions do retain one important property shared by R, C, and H: the norm on O satisfies

 

This equation means that the octonions form a composition algebra. The higher-dimensional algebras defined by the Cayley–Dickson construction (starting with the sedenions) all fail to satisfy this property. They all have zero divisors.

Wider number systems exist which have a multiplicative modulus (for example, 16-dimensional conic sedenions). Their modulus is defined differently from their norm, and they also contain zero divisors.

As shown by Hurwitz, R, C, H, and O are the only normed division algebras over the real numbers. These four algebras also form the only alternative, finite-dimensional division algebras over the real numbers (up to isomorphism).

Not being associative, the nonzero elements of O do not form a group. They do, however, form a loop, specifically a Moufang loop.

Commutator and cross product Edit

The commutator of two octonions x and y is given by

 

This is antisymmetric and imaginary. If it is considered only as a product on the imaginary subspace Im(O) it defines a product on that space, the seven-dimensional cross product, given by

 

Like the cross product in three dimensions this is a vector orthogonal to x and y with magnitude

 

But like the octonion product it is not uniquely defined. Instead there are many different cross products, each one dependent on the choice of octonion product.[11]

Automorphisms Edit

An automorphism, A, of the octonions is an invertible linear transformation of O which satisfies

 

The set of all automorphisms of O forms a group called G2.[12] The group G2 is a simply connected, compact, real Lie group of dimension 14. This group is the smallest of the exceptional Lie groups and is isomorphic to the subgroup of Spin(7) that preserves any chosen particular vector in its 8-dimensional real spinor representation. The group Spin(7) is in turn a subgroup of the group of isotopies described below.

See also: PSL(2,7) – the automorphism group of the Fano plane.

Isotopies Edit

An isotopy of an algebra is a triple of bijective linear maps a, b, c such that if xy = z then a(x)b(y) = c(z). For a = b = c this is the same as an automorphism. The isotopy group of an algebra is the group of all isotopies, which contains the group of automorphisms as a subgroup.

The isotopy group of the octonions is the group Spin8(R), with a, b, c acting as the three 8-dimensional representations.[13] The subgroup of elements where c fixes the identity is the subgroup Spin7(R), and the subgroup where a, b, c all fix the identity is the automorphism group G2.

Applications Edit

The octonions play a significant role in the classification and construction of other mathematical entities. For example, the exceptional Lie group G2 is the automorphism group of the octonions, and the other exceptional Lie groups F4, E6, E7 and E8 can be understood as the isometries of certain projective planes defined using the octonions.[14] The set of self-adjoint 3 × 3 octonionic matrices, equipped with a symmetrized matrix product, defines the Albert algebra. In discrete mathematics, the octonions provide an elementary derivation of the Leech lattice, and thus they are closely related to the sporadic simple groups.[15][16]

Applications of the octonions to physics have largely been conjectural. For example, in the 1970s, attempts were made to understand quarks by way of an octonionic Hilbert space.[17] It is known that the octonions, and the fact that only four normed division algebras can exist, relates to the spacetime dimensions in which supersymmetric quantum field theories can be constructed.[18][19] Also, attempts have been made to obtain the Standard Model of elementary particle physics from octonionic constructions, for example using the "Dixon algebra" CHO.[20][21]

Octonions have also arisen in the study of black hole entropy, quantum information science,[22][23] and string theory.[24]

Octonions have been used in solutions to the hand eye calibration problem in robotics.[25]

Deep octonion networks provide a means of efficient and compact expression in machine learning applications.[26]

Integral octonions Edit

There are several natural ways to choose an integral form of the octonions. The simplest is just to take the octonions whose coordinates are integers. This gives a nonassociative algebra over the integers called the Gravesian octonions. However it is not a maximal order (in the sense of ring theory); there are exactly seven maximal orders containing it. These seven maximal orders are all equivalent under automorphisms. The phrase "integral octonions" usually refers to a fixed choice of one of these seven orders.

These maximal orders were constructed by Kirmse (1925), Dickson and Bruck as follows. Label the eight basis vectors by the points of the projective line over the field with seven elements. First form the "Kirmse integers" : these consist of octonions whose coordinates are integers or half integers, and that are half integers (that is, halves of odd integers) on one of the 16 sets

∅ (∞124) (∞235) (∞346) (∞450) (∞561) (∞602) (∞013) (∞0123456) (0356) (1460) (2501) (3612) (4023) (5134) (6245)

of the extended quadratic residue code of length 8 over the field of two elements, given by , (∞124) and its images under adding a constant modulo 7, and the complements of these eight sets. Then switch infinity and any one other coordinate; this operation creates a bijection of the Kirmse integers onto a different set, which is a maximal order. There are seven ways to do this, giving seven maximal orders, which are all equivalent under cyclic permutations of the seven coordinates 0123456. (Kirmse incorrectly claimed that the Kirmse integers also form a maximal order, so he thought there were eight maximal orders rather than seven, but as Coxeter (1946) pointed out they are not closed under multiplication; this mistake occurs in several published papers.)

The Kirmse integers and the seven maximal orders are all isometric to the E8 lattice rescaled by a factor of 12. In particular there are 240 elements of minimum nonzero norm 1 in each of these orders, forming a Moufang loop of order 240.

The integral octonions have a "division with remainder" property: given integral octonions a and b ≠ 0, we can find q and r with a = qb + r, where the remainder r has norm less than that of b.

In the integral octonions, all left ideals and right ideals are 2-sided ideals, and the only 2-sided ideals are the principal ideals nO where n is a non-negative integer.

The integral octonions have a version of factorization into primes, though it is not straightforward to state because the octonions are not associative so the product of octonions depends on the order in which one does the products. The irreducible integral octonions are exactly those of prime norm, and every integral octonion can be written as a product of irreducible octonions. More precisely an integral octonion of norm mn can be written as a product of integral octonions of norms m and n.

The automorphism group of the integral octonions is the group G2(F2) of order 12,096, which has a simple subgroup of index 2 isomorphic to the unitary group 2A2(32). The isotopy group of the integral octonions is the perfect double cover of the group of rotations of the E8 lattice.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Sabadini, Irene, et al. “p 168.” Hypercomplex Analysis, Birkhäuser, Basel, 2009, https://books.google.com/books?id=H-5v6pPpyb4C&dq=december%2026%2C%201843%20octonion&pg=PA168
  2. ^ (Graves 1845)
  3. ^ Cayley, Arthur (1845), "On Jacobi's elliptic functions, in reply to the Rev.; and on quaternions", Philosophical Magazine, 26: 208–211, doi:10.1080/14786444508645107. Appendix reprinted in The Collected Mathematical Papers, Johnson Reprint Co., New York, 1963, p. 127
  4. ^ Hamilton (1848), "Note, by Sir W. R. Hamilton, respecting the researches of John T. Graves, Esq.", Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy, 21: 338–341
  5. ^ a b G Gentili; C Stoppato; DC Struppa; F Vlacci (2009), "Recent developments for regular functions of a hypercomplex variable", in Irene Sabadini; M Shapiro; F Sommen (eds.), Hypercomplex analysis, Birkhäuser, p. 168, ISBN 978-3-7643-9892-7
  6. ^ L. V. Sabinin; L. Sbitneva; I. P. Shestakov (2006), "§17.2 Octonion algebra and its regular bimodule representation", Non-associative algebra and its applications, CRC Press, p. 235, ISBN 0-8247-2669-3
  7. ^ Rafał Abłamowicz; Pertti Lounesto; Josep M. Parra (1996), "§ Four ocotonionic basis numberings", Clifford algebras with numeric and symbolic computations, Birkhäuser, p. 202, ISBN 0-8176-3907-1
  8. ^ Jörg Schray; Corinne A. Manogue (January 1996), "Octonionic representations of Clifford algebras and triality", Foundations of Physics, 26 (1): 17–70, arXiv:hep-th/9407179, Bibcode:1996FoPh...26...17S, doi:10.1007/BF02058887, S2CID 119604596. Available as ArXive preprint Figure 1 is located here.
  9. ^ a b (Baez 2002, p. 6)
  10. ^ Tevian Dray & Corinne A Manogue (2004), "Chapter 29: Using octonions to describe fundamental particles", in Rafał Abłamowicz (ed.), Clifford algebras: applications to mathematics, physics, and engineering, Birkhäuser, p. 452, ISBN 0-8176-3525-4 Figure 29.1: Representation of multiplication table on projective plane.
  11. ^ (Baez 2002, pp. 37–38)
  12. ^ (Conway & Smith 2003, Chapter 8.6)
  13. ^ (Conway & Smith 2003, Chapter 8)
  14. ^ Baez (2002), section 4.
  15. ^ Wilson, Robert A. (2009-09-15). "Octonions and the Leech lattice" (PDF). Journal of Algebra. 322 (6): 2186–2190. doi:10.1016/j.jalgebra.2009.03.021.
  16. ^ Wilson, Robert A. (2010-08-13). "Conway's group and octonions" (PDF). Journal of Group Theory. 14: 1–8. doi:10.1515/jgt.2010.038. S2CID 16590883.
  17. ^ Günaydin, M.; Gürsey, F. (1973). "Quark structure and octonions". Journal of Mathematical Physics. 14 (11): 1651–1667. Bibcode:1973JMP....14.1651G. doi:10.1063/1.1666240.
    Günaydin, M.; Gürsey, F. (1974). "Quark statistics and octonions". Physical Review D. 9 (12): 3387–3391. Bibcode:1974PhRvD...9.3387G. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.9.3387.
  18. ^ Kugo, Taichiro; Townsend, Paul (1983-07-11). "Supersymmetry and the division algebras". Nuclear Physics B. 221 (2): 357–380. Bibcode:1983NuPhB.221..357K. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(83)90584-9.
  19. ^ Baez, John C.; Huerta, John (2010). "Division Algebras and Supersymmetry I". In Doran, R.; Friedman, G.; Rosenberg, J. (eds.). Superstrings, Geometry, Topology, and C*-algebras. American Mathematical Society. arXiv:0909.0551.
  20. ^ Wolchover, Natalie (2018-07-20). "The Peculiar Math That Could Underlie the Laws of Nature". Quanta Magazine. Retrieved 2018-10-30.
  21. ^ Furey, Cohl (2012-07-20). "Unified theory of ideals". Physical Review D. 86 (2): 025024. arXiv:1002.1497. Bibcode:2012PhRvD..86b5024F. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.86.025024. S2CID 118458623.
    Furey, Cohl (2018-10-10). "Three generations, two unbroken gauge symmetries, and one eight-dimensional algebra". Physics Letters B. 785: 84–89. arXiv:1910.08395. Bibcode:2018PhLB..785...84F. doi:10.1016/j.physletb.2018.08.032. S2CID 126205768.
    Stoica, O. C. (2018). "Leptons, quarks, and gauge from the complex Clifford algebra  6". Advances in Applied Clifford Algebras. 28: 52. arXiv:1702.04336. doi:10.1007/s00006-018-0869-4. S2CID 125913482.
    Gresnigt, Niels G. (2017-11-21). Quantum groups and braid groups as fundamental symmetries. European Physical Society conference on High Energy Physics, 5–12 July 2017, Venice, Italy. arXiv:1711.09011.
    Dixon, Geoffrey M. (1994). Division Algebras: Octonions, Quaternions, Complex Numbers and the Algebraic Design of Physics. Springer-Verlag. doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-2315-1. ISBN 978-0-7923-2890-2. OCLC 30399883.
    Baez, John C. (2011-01-29). "The Three-Fold Way (Part 4)". The n-Category Café. Retrieved 2018-11-02.
  22. ^ Borsten, Leron; Dahanayake, Duminda; Duff, Michael J.; Ebrahim, Hajar; Rubens, Williams (2009). "Black holes, qubits and octonions". Physics Reports. 471 (3–4): 113–219. arXiv:0809.4685. Bibcode:2009PhR...471..113B. doi:10.1016/j.physrep.2008.11.002. S2CID 118488578.
  23. ^ Stacey, Blake C. (2017). "Sporadic SICs and the Normed Division Algebras". Foundations of Physics. 47 (8): 1060–1064. arXiv:1605.01426. Bibcode:2017FoPh...47.1060S. doi:10.1007/s10701-017-0087-2. S2CID 118438232.
  24. ^ "Beyond space and time: 8D – Surfer's paradise". New Scientist.
  25. ^ Wu, J.; Sun, Y.; Wang and, M.; Liu, M. (June 2020). "Hand-Eye Calibration: 4-D Procrustes Analysis Approach". IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement. 69 (6): 2966–81. Bibcode:2020ITIM...69.2966W. doi:10.1109/TIM.2019.2930710. S2CID 201245901.
  26. ^ Wu, J.; Xu, L.; Wu, F.; Kong, Y.; Senhadji, L.; Shu, H. (2020). "Deep octonion networks". Neurocomputing. 397: 179–191. doi:10.1016/j.neucom.2020.02.053. S2CID 84186686. hal-02865295.

References Edit

  • Baez, John C. (2002). "The Octonions". Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. 39 (2): 145–205. arXiv:math/0105155. doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-01-00934-X. ISSN 0273-0979. MR 1886087. S2CID 586512.
  • Baez, John C. (2005). "Errata for The Octonions" (PDF). Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. 42 (2): 213–214. doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-05-01052-9.
  • Conway, John Horton; Smith, Derek A. (2003), On Quaternions and Octonions: Their Geometry, Arithmetic, and Symmetry, A. K. Peters, Ltd., ISBN 1-56881-134-9, Zbl 1098.17001. (Review).
  • Coxeter, H. S. M. (1946), "Integral Cayley numbers.", Duke Math. J., 13 (4): 561–578, doi:10.1215/s0012-7094-46-01347-6, MR 0019111
  • Dixon, Geoffrey M. (1994), Division Algebras: Octonions, Quaternions, Complex Numbers and the Algebraic Design of Physics, Kluvwer Academic Publishers, ISBN 0-7923-2890-6
  • Freudenthal, Hans (1985) [1951], "Oktaven, Ausnahmegruppen und Oktavengeometrie", Geom. Dedicata, 19 (1): 7–63, doi:10.1007/BF00233101, MR 0797151, S2CID 121496094
  • Graves (1845), "On a Connection between the General Theory of Normal Couples and the Theory of Complete Quadratic Functions of Two Variables", Phil. Mag., 26: 315–320, doi:10.1080/14786444508645136
  • Kirmse (1924), "Über die Darstellbarkeit natürlicher ganzer Zahlen als Summen von acht Quadraten und über ein mit diesem Problem zusammenhängendes nichtkommutatives und nichtassoziatives Zahlensystem", Ber. Verh. Sächs. Akad. Wiss. Leipzig. Math. Phys. Kl., 76: 63–82
  • Lahti, Usko (2015), Prof. Corvus Adamas: Luvut ja todistusmenetelmät. Johdanto matematiikan perusteisiin innokkaiden opiskelijoiden seurassa., Helsinki: Books on Demand, ISBN 978-952-318-558-6
  • Salzmann, Helmut; Betten, Dieter; Grundhöfer, Theo; Hähl, Hermann; Löwen, Rainer; Stroppel, Markus (1995), Compact Projective Planes, With an Introduction to Octonion Geometry, De Gruyter Expositions in Mathematics, Walter de Gruyter, ISBN 3-11-011480-1, ISSN 0938-6572, OCLC 748698685
  • van der Blij, F. (1961), "History of the octaves.", Simon Stevin, 34: 106–125, MR 0130283

External links Edit

  • Koutsoukou-Argyraki, Angeliki. Octonions (Formal proof development in Isabelle/HOL, Archive of Formal Proofs)
  • "Cayley numbers", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]
  • Wilson, R. A. (2008), Octonions (PDF), Pure Mathematics Seminar notes

octonion, mathematics, octonions, normed, division, algebra, over, real, numbers, kind, hypercomplex, number, system, octonions, usually, represented, capital, letter, using, boldface, blackboard, bold, displaystyle, mathbb, have, eight, dimensions, twice, num. In mathematics the octonions are a normed division algebra over the real numbers a kind of hypercomplex number system The octonions are usually represented by the capital letter O using boldface O or blackboard bold O displaystyle mathbb O Octonions have eight dimensions twice the number of dimensions of the quaternions of which they are an extension They are noncommutative and nonassociative but satisfy a weaker form of associativity namely they are alternative They are also power associative OctonionsSymbolO displaystyle mathbb O TypeHypercomplex algebraUnitse0 e7Multiplicative identitye0Main propertiesNon commutativeNon associativeCommon systemsN displaystyle mathbb N Natural numbersZ displaystyle mathbb Z IntegersQ displaystyle mathbb Q Rational numbersR displaystyle mathbb R Real numbersC displaystyle mathbb C Complex numbersH displaystyle mathbb H Quaternions Less common systemsOctonions O displaystyle mathbb O Sedenions S displaystyle mathbb S Octonions are not as well known as the quaternions and complex numbers which are much more widely studied and used Octonions are related to exceptional structures in mathematics among them the exceptional Lie groups Octonions have applications in fields such as string theory special relativity and quantum logic Applying the Cayley Dickson construction to the octonions produces the sedenions Contents 1 History 2 Definition 2 1 Cayley Dickson construction 2 2 Fano plane mnemonic 2 3 Conjugate norm and inverse 3 Properties 3 1 Commutator and cross product 3 2 Automorphisms 3 3 Isotopies 4 Applications 5 Integral octonions 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditThe octonions were discovered in 1843 by John T Graves inspired by his friend William Rowan Hamilton s discovery of quaternions Graves called his discovery octaves and mentioned them in a letter to Hamilton dated 26 December 1843 1 He first published his result slightly later than Arthur Cayley s article 2 The octonions were discovered independently by Cayley 3 and are sometimes referred to as Cayley numbers or the Cayley algebra Hamilton described the early history of Graves s discovery 4 Definition EditThe octonions can be thought of as octets or 8 tuples of real numbers Every octonion is a real linear combination of the unit octonions e 0 e 1 e 2 e 3 e 4 e 5 e 6 e 7 displaystyle e 0 e 1 e 2 e 3 e 4 e 5 e 6 e 7 nbsp where e0 is the scalar or real element it may be identified with the real number 1 That is every octonion x can be written in the form x x 0 e 0 x 1 e 1 x 2 e 2 x 3 e 3 x 4 e 4 x 5 e 5 x 6 e 6 x 7 e 7 displaystyle x x 0 e 0 x 1 e 1 x 2 e 2 x 3 e 3 x 4 e 4 x 5 e 5 x 6 e 6 x 7 e 7 nbsp with real coefficients xi Addition and subtraction of octonions is done by adding and subtracting corresponding terms and hence their coefficients like quaternions Multiplication is more complex Multiplication is distributive over addition so the product of two octonions can be calculated by summing the products of all the terms again like quaternions The product of each pair of terms can be given by multiplication of the coefficients and a multiplication table of the unit octonions like this one due to Cayley 1845 and Graves 1843 5 e i e j displaystyle e i e j nbsp e j displaystyle e j nbsp e 0 displaystyle e 0 nbsp e 1 displaystyle e 1 nbsp e 2 displaystyle e 2 nbsp e 3 displaystyle e 3 nbsp e 4 displaystyle e 4 nbsp e 5 displaystyle e 5 nbsp e 6 displaystyle e 6 nbsp e 7 displaystyle e 7 nbsp e i displaystyle e i nbsp e 0 displaystyle e 0 nbsp e 0 displaystyle e 0 nbsp e 1 displaystyle e 1 nbsp e 2 displaystyle e 2 nbsp e 3 displaystyle e 3 nbsp e 4 displaystyle e 4 nbsp e 5 displaystyle e 5 nbsp e 6 displaystyle e 6 nbsp e 7 displaystyle e 7 nbsp e 1 displaystyle e 1 nbsp e 1 displaystyle e 1 nbsp e 0 displaystyle e 0 nbsp e 3 displaystyle e 3 nbsp e 2 displaystyle e 2 nbsp e 5 displaystyle e 5 nbsp e 4 displaystyle e 4 nbsp e 7 displaystyle e 7 nbsp e 6 displaystyle e 6 nbsp e 2 displaystyle e 2 nbsp e 2 displaystyle e 2 nbsp e 3 displaystyle e 3 nbsp e 0 displaystyle e 0 nbsp e 1 displaystyle e 1 nbsp e 6 displaystyle e 6 nbsp e 7 displaystyle e 7 nbsp e 4 displaystyle e 4 nbsp e 5 displaystyle e 5 nbsp e 3 displaystyle e 3 nbsp e 3 displaystyle e 3 nbsp e 2 displaystyle e 2 nbsp e 1 displaystyle e 1 nbsp e 0 displaystyle e 0 nbsp e 7 displaystyle e 7 nbsp e 6 displaystyle e 6 nbsp e 5 displaystyle e 5 nbsp e 4 displaystyle e 4 nbsp e 4 displaystyle e 4 nbsp e 4 displaystyle e 4 nbsp e 5 displaystyle e 5 nbsp e 6 displaystyle e 6 nbsp e 7 displaystyle e 7 nbsp e 0 displaystyle e 0 nbsp e 1 displaystyle e 1 nbsp e 2 displaystyle e 2 nbsp e 3 displaystyle e 3 nbsp e 5 displaystyle e 5 nbsp e 5 displaystyle e 5 nbsp e 4 displaystyle e 4 nbsp e 7 displaystyle e 7 nbsp e 6 displaystyle e 6 nbsp e 1 displaystyle e 1 nbsp e 0 displaystyle e 0 nbsp e 3 displaystyle e 3 nbsp e 2 displaystyle e 2 nbsp e 6 displaystyle e 6 nbsp e 6 displaystyle e 6 nbsp e 7 displaystyle e 7 nbsp e 4 displaystyle e 4 nbsp e 5 displaystyle e 5 nbsp e 2 displaystyle e 2 nbsp e 3 displaystyle e 3 nbsp e 0 displaystyle e 0 nbsp e 1 displaystyle e 1 nbsp e 7 displaystyle e 7 nbsp e 7 displaystyle e 7 nbsp e 6 displaystyle e 6 nbsp e 5 displaystyle e 5 nbsp e 4 displaystyle e 4 nbsp e 3 displaystyle e 3 nbsp e 2 displaystyle e 2 nbsp e 1 displaystyle e 1 nbsp e 0 displaystyle e 0 nbsp Most off diagonal elements of the table are antisymmetric making it almost a skew symmetric matrix except for the elements on the main diagonal as well as the row and column for which e0 is an operand The table can be summarized as follows 6 e i e j e j if i 0 e i if j 0 d i j e 0 e i j k e k otherwise displaystyle e i e j begin cases e j amp text if i 0 e i amp text if j 0 delta ij e 0 varepsilon ijk e k amp text otherwise end cases nbsp where dij is the Kronecker delta equal to 1 if and only if i j and eijk is a completely antisymmetric tensor with value 1 when ijk 123 145 176 246 257 347 365 The above definition is not unique however it is only one of 480 possible definitions for octonion multiplication with e0 1 The others can be obtained by permuting and changing the signs of the non scalar basis elements e1 e2 e3 e4 e5 e6 e7 The 480 different algebras are isomorphic and there is rarely a need to consider which particular multiplication rule is used Each of these 480 definitions is invariant up to signs under some 7 cycle of the points 1234567 and for each 7 cycle there are four definitions differing by signs and reversal of order A common choice is to use the definition invariant under the 7 cycle 1234567 with e1e2 e4 by using the triangular multiplication diagram or Fano plane below that also shows the sorted list of 124 based 7 cycle triads and its associated multiplication matrices in both en and IJKL format nbsp A variation of this sometimes used is to label the elements of the basis by the elements 0 1 2 6 of the projective line over the finite field of order 7 The multiplication is then given by e 1 and e1e2 e4 and all expressions obtained from this by adding a constant modulo 7 to all subscripts in other words using the seven triples 124 235 346 450 561 602 013 These are the nonzero codewords of the quadratic residue code of length 7 over the Galois field of two elements GF 2 There is a symmetry of order 7 given by adding a constant mod 7 to all subscripts and also a symmetry of order 3 given by multiplying all subscripts by one of the quadratic residues 1 2 4 mod 7 7 8 The multiplication table for a geometric algebra of signature can be given in terms of the following 7 quaternionic triples omitting the identity element I j k i J k i j K I J K I i m J j m K k m in which the lowercase items are vectors and the uppercase ones are bivectors and mijk which is the Hodge star operator If the is forced to be equal to the identity then the multiplication ceases to be associative but the may be removed from the multiplication table resulting in an octonion multiplication table In keeping mijk associative and thus not reducing the 4 dimensional geometric algebra to an octonion one the whole multiplication table can be derived from the equation for Consider the gamma matrices The formula defining the fifth gamma matrix shows that it is the of a four dimensional geometric algebra of the gamma matrices Cayley Dickson construction Edit Main article 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 a c d b d a b c displaystyle a b c d ac d b da bc nbsp where z denotes the conjugate of the quaternion z This definition is equivalent to the one given above when the eight unit octonions are identified with the pairs 1 0 i 0 j 0 k 0 0 1 0 i 0 j 0 k Fano plane mnemonic Edit nbsp A mnemonic for the products of the unit octonions 9 nbsp A 3D mnemonic visualization showing the 7 triads as hyperplanes through the real e0 vertex of the octonion example given above 9 A convenient mnemonic for remembering the products of unit octonions is given by the diagram which represents the multiplication table of Cayley and Graves 5 10 This diagram with seven points and seven lines the circle through 1 2 and 3 is considered a line is called the Fano plane The lines are directional The seven points correspond to the seven standard basis elements of Im O see definition below Each pair of distinct points lies on a unique line and each line runs through exactly three points 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 ctogether with cyclic permutations These rules together with 1 is the multiplicative identity e2i 1 for each point in the diagramcompletely defines the multiplicative structure of the octonions Each of the seven lines generates a subalgebra of O isomorphic to the quaternions H Conjugate norm and inverse Edit The conjugate of an octonion x x 0 e 0 x 1 e 1 x 2 e 2 x 3 e 3 x 4 e 4 x 5 e 5 x 6 e 6 x 7 e 7 displaystyle x x 0 e 0 x 1 e 1 x 2 e 2 x 3 e 3 x 4 e 4 x 5 e 5 x 6 e 6 x 7 e 7 nbsp is given by x x 0 e 0 x 1 e 1 x 2 e 2 x 3 e 3 x 4 e 4 x 5 e 5 x 6 e 6 x 7 e 7 displaystyle x x 0 e 0 x 1 e 1 x 2 e 2 x 3 e 3 x 4 e 4 x 5 e 5 x 6 e 6 x 7 e 7 nbsp Conjugation is an involution of O and satisfies xy y x note the change in order The real part of x is given by x x 2 x 0 e 0 displaystyle frac x x 2 x 0 e 0 nbsp and the imaginary part by x x 2 x 1 e 1 x 2 e 2 x 3 e 3 x 4 e 4 x 5 e 5 x 6 e 6 x 7 e 7 displaystyle frac x x 2 x 1 e 1 x 2 e 2 x 3 e 3 x 4 e 4 x 5 e 5 x 6 e 6 x 7 e 7 nbsp The set of all purely imaginary octonions spans a 7 dimensional subspace of O denoted Im O Conjugation of octonions satisfies the equation 6 x x e 1 x e 1 e 2 x e 2 e 3 x e 3 e 4 x e 4 e 5 x e 5 e 6 x e 6 e 7 x e 7 displaystyle 6x x e 1 x e 1 e 2 x e 2 e 3 x e 3 e 4 x e 4 e 5 x e 5 e 6 x e 6 e 7 x e 7 nbsp The product of an octonion with its conjugate x x xx is always a nonnegative real number x x x 0 2 x 1 2 x 2 2 x 3 2 x 4 2 x 5 2 x 6 2 x 7 2 displaystyle x x x 0 2 x 1 2 x 2 2 x 3 2 x 4 2 x 5 2 x 6 2 x 7 2 nbsp Using this the norm of an octonion can be defined as x x x displaystyle x sqrt x x nbsp This norm agrees with the standard 8 dimensional Euclidean norm on R8 The existence of a norm on O implies the existence of inverses for every nonzero element of O The inverse of x 0 which is the unique octonion x 1 satisfying xx 1 x 1x 1 is given by x 1 x x 2 displaystyle x 1 frac x x 2 nbsp Properties EditOctonionic multiplication is neither commutative eiej ejei ejei if i j are distinct and non zero nor associative eiej ek ei ejek ei ejek if i j k are distinct non zero and eiej ek The octonions do satisfy a weaker form of associativity they are alternative This means that the subalgebra generated by any two elements is associative Actually one can show that the subalgebra generated by any two elements of O is isomorphic to R C or H all of which are associative Because of their non associativity octonions cannot be represented by a subalgebra of a matrix ring over R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp unlike the real numbers complex numbers and quaternions The octonions do retain one important property shared by R C and H the norm on O satisfies x y x y displaystyle xy x y nbsp This equation means that the octonions form a composition algebra The higher dimensional algebras defined by the Cayley Dickson construction starting with the sedenions all fail to satisfy this property They all have zero divisors Wider number systems exist which have a multiplicative modulus for example 16 dimensional conic sedenions Their modulus is defined differently from their norm and they also contain zero divisors As shown by Hurwitz R C H and O are the only normed division algebras over the real numbers These four algebras also form the only alternative finite dimensional division algebras over the real numbers up to isomorphism Not being associative the nonzero elements of O do not form a group They do however form a loop specifically a Moufang loop Commutator and cross product Edit The commutator of two octonions x and y is given by x y x y y x displaystyle x y xy yx nbsp This is antisymmetric and imaginary If it is considered only as a product on the imaginary subspace Im O it defines a product on that space the seven dimensional cross product given by x y 1 2 x y y x displaystyle x times y tfrac 1 2 xy yx nbsp Like the cross product in three dimensions this is a vector orthogonal to x and y with magnitude x y x y sin 8 displaystyle x times y x y sin theta nbsp But like the octonion product it is not uniquely defined Instead there are many different cross products each one dependent on the choice of octonion product 11 Automorphisms Edit An automorphism A of the octonions is an invertible linear transformation of O which satisfies A x y A x A y displaystyle A xy A x A y nbsp The set of all automorphisms of O forms a group called G2 12 The group G2 is a simply connected compact real Lie group of dimension 14 This group is the smallest of the exceptional Lie groups and is isomorphic to the subgroup of Spin 7 that preserves any chosen particular vector in its 8 dimensional real spinor representation The group Spin 7 is in turn a subgroup of the group of isotopies described below See also PSL 2 7 the automorphism group of the Fano plane Isotopies Edit An isotopy of an algebra is a triple of bijective linear maps a b c such that if xy z then a x b y c z For a b c this is the same as an automorphism The isotopy group of an algebra is the group of all isotopies which contains the group of automorphisms as a subgroup The isotopy group of the octonions is the group Spin8 R with a b c acting as the three 8 dimensional representations 13 The subgroup of elements where c fixes the identity is the subgroup Spin7 R and the subgroup where a b c all fix the identity is the automorphism group G2 Applications EditThe octonions play a significant role in the classification and construction of other mathematical entities For example the exceptional Lie group G2 is the automorphism group of the octonions and the other exceptional Lie groups F4 E6 E7 and E8 can be understood as the isometries of certain projective planes defined using the octonions 14 The set of self adjoint 3 3 octonionic matrices equipped with a symmetrized matrix product defines the Albert algebra In discrete mathematics the octonions provide an elementary derivation of the Leech lattice and thus they are closely related to the sporadic simple groups 15 16 Applications of the octonions to physics have largely been conjectural For example in the 1970s attempts were made to understand quarks by way of an octonionic Hilbert space 17 It is known that the octonions and the fact that only four normed division algebras can exist relates to the spacetime dimensions in which supersymmetric quantum field theories can be constructed 18 19 Also attempts have been made to obtain the Standard Model of elementary particle physics from octonionic constructions for example using the Dixon algebra C H O 20 21 Octonions have also arisen in the study of black hole entropy quantum information science 22 23 and string theory 24 Octonions have been used in solutions to the hand eye calibration problem in robotics 25 Deep octonion networks provide a means of efficient and compact expression in machine learning applications 26 Integral octonions EditThere are several natural ways to choose an integral form of the octonions The simplest is just to take the octonions whose coordinates are integers This gives a nonassociative algebra over the integers called the Gravesian octonions However it is not a maximal order in the sense of ring theory there are exactly seven maximal orders containing it These seven maximal orders are all equivalent under automorphisms The phrase integral octonions usually refers to a fixed choice of one of these seven orders These maximal orders were constructed by Kirmse 1925 harvtxt error no target CITEREFKirmse1925 help Dickson and Bruck as follows Label the eight basis vectors by the points of the projective line over the field with seven elements First form the Kirmse integers these consist of octonions whose coordinates are integers or half integers and that are half integers that is halves of odd integers on one of the 16 sets 124 235 346 450 561 602 013 0123456 0356 1460 2501 3612 4023 5134 6245 of the extended quadratic residue code of length 8 over the field of two elements given by 124 and its images under adding a constant modulo 7 and the complements of these eight sets Then switch infinity and any one other coordinate this operation creates a bijection of the Kirmse integers onto a different set which is a maximal order There are seven ways to do this giving seven maximal orders which are all equivalent under cyclic permutations of the seven coordinates 0123456 Kirmse incorrectly claimed that the Kirmse integers also form a maximal order so he thought there were eight maximal orders rather than seven but as Coxeter 1946 pointed out they are not closed under multiplication this mistake occurs in several published papers The Kirmse integers and the seven maximal orders are all isometric to the E8 lattice rescaled by a factor of 1 2 In particular there are 240 elements of minimum nonzero norm 1 in each of these orders forming a Moufang loop of order 240 The integral octonions have a division with remainder property given integral octonions a and b 0 we can find q and r with a qb r where the remainder r has norm less than that of b In the integral octonions all left ideals and right ideals are 2 sided ideals and the only 2 sided ideals are the principal ideals nO where n is a non negative integer The integral octonions have a version of factorization into primes though it is not straightforward to state because the octonions are not associative so the product of octonions depends on the order in which one does the products The irreducible integral octonions are exactly those of prime norm and every integral octonion can be written as a product of irreducible octonions More precisely an integral octonion of norm mn can be written as a product of integral octonions of norms m and n The automorphism group of the integral octonions is the group G2 F2 of order 12 096 which has a simple subgroup of index 2 isomorphic to the unitary group 2A2 32 The isotopy group of the integral octonions is the perfect double cover of the group of rotations of the E8 lattice See also EditG2 manifold Octonion algebra Okubo algebra Spin 7 manifold Spin 8 Split octonions TrialityNotes Edit Sabadini Irene et al p 168 Hypercomplex Analysis Birkhauser Basel 2009 https books google com books id H 5v6pPpyb4C amp dq december 2026 2C 201843 20octonion amp pg PA168 Graves 1845 Cayley Arthur 1845 On Jacobi s elliptic functions in reply to the Rev and on quaternions Philosophical Magazine 26 208 211 doi 10 1080 14786444508645107 Appendix reprinted in The Collected Mathematical Papers Johnson Reprint Co New York 1963 p 127 Hamilton 1848 Note by Sir W R Hamilton respecting the researches of John T Graves Esq Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy 21 338 341 a b G Gentili C Stoppato DC Struppa F Vlacci 2009 Recent developments for regular functions of a hypercomplex variable in Irene Sabadini M Shapiro F Sommen eds Hypercomplex analysis Birkhauser p 168 ISBN 978 3 7643 9892 7 L V Sabinin L Sbitneva I P Shestakov 2006 17 2 Octonion algebra and its regular bimodule representation Non associative algebra and its applications CRC Press p 235 ISBN 0 8247 2669 3 Rafal Ablamowicz Pertti Lounesto Josep M Parra 1996 Four ocotonionic basis numberings Clifford algebras with numeric and symbolic computations Birkhauser p 202 ISBN 0 8176 3907 1 Jorg Schray Corinne A Manogue January 1996 Octonionic representations of Clifford algebras and triality Foundations of Physics 26 1 17 70 arXiv hep th 9407179 Bibcode 1996FoPh 26 17S doi 10 1007 BF02058887 S2CID 119604596 Available as ArXive preprint Figure 1 is located here a b Baez 2002 p 6 Tevian Dray amp Corinne A Manogue 2004 Chapter 29 Using octonions to describe fundamental particles in Rafal Ablamowicz ed Clifford algebras applications to mathematics physics and engineering Birkhauser p 452 ISBN 0 8176 3525 4 Figure 29 1 Representation of multiplication table on projective plane Baez 2002 pp 37 38 Conway amp Smith 2003 Chapter 8 6 Conway amp Smith 2003 Chapter 8 Baez 2002 section 4 Wilson Robert A 2009 09 15 Octonions and the Leech lattice PDF Journal of Algebra 322 6 2186 2190 doi 10 1016 j jalgebra 2009 03 021 Wilson Robert A 2010 08 13 Conway s group and octonions PDF Journal of Group Theory 14 1 8 doi 10 1515 jgt 2010 038 S2CID 16590883 Gunaydin M Gursey F 1973 Quark structure and octonions Journal of Mathematical Physics 14 11 1651 1667 Bibcode 1973JMP 14 1651G doi 10 1063 1 1666240 Gunaydin M Gursey F 1974 Quark statistics and octonions Physical Review D 9 12 3387 3391 Bibcode 1974PhRvD 9 3387G doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 9 3387 Kugo Taichiro Townsend Paul 1983 07 11 Supersymmetry and the division algebras Nuclear Physics B 221 2 357 380 Bibcode 1983NuPhB 221 357K doi 10 1016 0550 3213 83 90584 9 Baez John C Huerta John 2010 Division Algebras and Supersymmetry I In Doran R Friedman G Rosenberg J eds Superstrings Geometry Topology and C algebras American Mathematical Society arXiv 0909 0551 Wolchover Natalie 2018 07 20 The Peculiar Math That Could Underlie the Laws of Nature Quanta Magazine Retrieved 2018 10 30 Furey Cohl 2012 07 20 Unified theory of ideals Physical Review D 86 2 025024 arXiv 1002 1497 Bibcode 2012PhRvD 86b5024F doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 86 025024 S2CID 118458623 Furey Cohl 2018 10 10 Three generations two unbroken gauge symmetries and one eight dimensional algebra Physics Letters B 785 84 89 arXiv 1910 08395 Bibcode 2018PhLB 785 84F doi 10 1016 j physletb 2018 08 032 S2CID 126205768 Stoica O C 2018 Leptons quarks and gauge from the complex Clifford algebra C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp ℓ6 Advances in Applied Clifford Algebras 28 52 arXiv 1702 04336 doi 10 1007 s00006 018 0869 4 S2CID 125913482 Gresnigt Niels G 2017 11 21 Quantum groups and braid groups as fundamental symmetries European Physical Society conference on High Energy Physics 5 12 July 2017 Venice Italy arXiv 1711 09011 Dixon Geoffrey M 1994 Division Algebras Octonions Quaternions Complex Numbers and the Algebraic Design of Physics Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 1 4757 2315 1 ISBN 978 0 7923 2890 2 OCLC 30399883 Baez John C 2011 01 29 The Three Fold Way Part 4 The n Category Cafe Retrieved 2018 11 02 Borsten Leron Dahanayake Duminda Duff Michael J Ebrahim Hajar Rubens Williams 2009 Black holes qubits and octonions Physics Reports 471 3 4 113 219 arXiv 0809 4685 Bibcode 2009PhR 471 113B doi 10 1016 j physrep 2008 11 002 S2CID 118488578 Stacey Blake C 2017 Sporadic SICs and the Normed Division Algebras Foundations of Physics 47 8 1060 1064 arXiv 1605 01426 Bibcode 2017FoPh 47 1060S doi 10 1007 s10701 017 0087 2 S2CID 118438232 Beyond space and time 8D Surfer s paradise New Scientist Wu J Sun Y Wang and M Liu M June 2020 Hand Eye Calibration 4 D Procrustes Analysis Approach IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement 69 6 2966 81 Bibcode 2020ITIM 69 2966W doi 10 1109 TIM 2019 2930710 S2CID 201245901 Wu J Xu L Wu F Kong Y Senhadji L Shu H 2020 Deep octonion networks Neurocomputing 397 179 191 doi 10 1016 j neucom 2020 02 053 S2CID 84186686 hal 02865295 References EditBaez John C 2002 The Octonions Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 39 2 145 205 arXiv math 0105155 doi 10 1090 S0273 0979 01 00934 X ISSN 0273 0979 MR 1886087 S2CID 586512 Baez John C 2005 Errata for The Octonions PDF Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 42 2 213 214 doi 10 1090 S0273 0979 05 01052 9 Conway John Horton Smith Derek A 2003 On Quaternions and Octonions Their Geometry Arithmetic and Symmetry A K Peters Ltd ISBN 1 56881 134 9 Zbl 1098 17001 Review Coxeter H S M 1946 Integral Cayley numbers Duke Math J 13 4 561 578 doi 10 1215 s0012 7094 46 01347 6 MR 0019111 Dixon Geoffrey M 1994 Division Algebras Octonions Quaternions Complex Numbers and the Algebraic Design of Physics Kluvwer Academic Publishers ISBN 0 7923 2890 6 Freudenthal Hans 1985 1951 Oktaven Ausnahmegruppen und Oktavengeometrie Geom Dedicata 19 1 7 63 doi 10 1007 BF00233101 MR 0797151 S2CID 121496094 Graves 1845 On a Connection between the General Theory of Normal Couples and the Theory of Complete Quadratic Functions of Two Variables Phil Mag 26 315 320 doi 10 1080 14786444508645136 Kirmse 1924 Uber die Darstellbarkeit naturlicher ganzer Zahlen als Summen von acht Quadraten und uber ein mit diesem Problem zusammenhangendes nichtkommutatives und nichtassoziatives Zahlensystem Ber Verh Sachs Akad Wiss Leipzig Math Phys Kl 76 63 82 Lahti Usko 2015 Prof Corvus Adamas Luvut ja todistusmenetelmat Johdanto matematiikan perusteisiin innokkaiden opiskelijoiden seurassa Helsinki Books on Demand ISBN 978 952 318 558 6 Salzmann Helmut Betten Dieter Grundhofer Theo Hahl Hermann Lowen Rainer Stroppel Markus 1995 Compact Projective Planes With an Introduction to Octonion Geometry De Gruyter Expositions in Mathematics Walter de Gruyter ISBN 3 11 011480 1 ISSN 0938 6572 OCLC 748698685 van der Blij F 1961 History of the octaves Simon Stevin 34 106 125 MR 0130283External links EditKoutsoukou Argyraki Angeliki Octonions Formal proof development in Isabelle HOL Archive of Formal Proofs Cayley numbers Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Wilson R A 2008 Octonions PDF Pure Mathematics Seminar notes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Octonion amp oldid 1176055003, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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