Anticommutativity
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In mathematics, anticommutativity refers to the property of a operation being anticommutative, i.e. being non commutative in a precise way. Anticommutative operations are widely used in algebra, geometry, mathematical analysis and, as a consequence in physics: they are often called antisymmetric operations.
Contents |
[edit] Formal definition
A n-ary operation, i.e. a map from the set of all n-tuples of elements in a set A (where n is a general integer) to a group (whose operation is written in additive notation for the sake of simplicity), is anticommutative if and only if
where is an arbitrary permutation of the set (n) of first n non-zero integers and sgn(σ) is its sign. This equality express the following concept
- the value of the operation is unchanged, when applied to all ordered tuples constructed by even permutation of the elements of a fixed one.
- the value of the operation is the inverse of its value on a fixed tuple, when applied to all ordered tuples constructed by odd permutation to the elements of the fixed one. The need for the existence of this inverse element is the main reason for requiring the codomain of the operation to be at least a group.
Note that this is an abuse of notation, since the codomain of the operation need only to be a group: " − 1" has not a precise meaning since a multiplication is not necessarily defined on .
Particularly important is the case n = 2. A binary operation is anticommutative if and only if
This means that is the inverse of the element in .
[edit] Properties
If the group is such that
i.e. the only element equal to its inverse is the neutral element, then for all the ordered tuples such that xj = xi for at least two different index i,j
In the case n = 2 this means
[edit] Examples
Anticommutative operators include:
[edit] See also
- Commutativity
- Commutator
- Operation (mathematics)
- Symmetry in mathematics
- Particle statistics (for anticommutativity in physics).
[edit] References
- Bourbaki, Nicolas (1989), Algebra. Chapters 1-3 (paperback ed.), Berlin, Heidelberg, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 3-540-64243-9, chapter III, "Tensor algebras, exterior algebras, symmetric algebras".
[edit] External links
- Weisstein, Eric W."Anticommutative". From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource.
- A.T. Gainov, "Anti-commutative algebra", Springer-Verlag Online Encyclopaedia of Mathematics.