Classification of Clifford Algebras - Complex Case

Complex Case

The complex case is particularly simple: every nondegenerate quadratic form on a complex vector space is equivalent to the standard diagonal form

where n = dim V, so there is essentially only one Clifford algebra in each dimension. We will denote the Clifford algebra on Cn with the standard quadratic form by Cn(C).

There are two separate cases to consider, according to whether n is even or odd. When n is even the algebra Cn(C) is central simple and so by the Artin-Wedderburn theorem is isomorphic to a matrix algebra over C. When n is odd, the center includes not only the scalars but the pseudoscalars (degree n elements) as well. We can always find a normalized pseudoscalar ω such that ω2 = 1. Define the operators

These two operators form a complete set of orthogonal idempotents, and since they are central they give a decomposition of Cn(C) into a direct sum of two algebras

where .

The algebras Cn±(C) are just the positive and negative eigenspaces of ω and the P± are just the projection operators. Since ω is odd these algebras are mixed by α (the linear map on V defined by v → −v):

.

and therefore isomorphic (since α is an automorphism). These two isomorphic algebras are each central simple and so, again, isomorphic to a matrix algebra over C. The sizes of the matrices can be determined from the fact that the dimension of Cn(C) is 2n. What we have then is the following table:

n Cn(C)
2m C(2m)
2m+1 C(2m) ⊕ C(2m)

The even subalgebra of Cn(C) is (non-canonically) isomorphic to Cn−1(C). When n is even, the even subalgebra can be identified with the block diagonal matrices (when partitioned into 2×2 block matrix). When n is odd, the even subalgebra are those elements of C(2m) ⊕ C(2m) for which the two factors are identical. Picking either piece then gives an isomorphism with Cn−1(C) ≅ C(2m).

Read more about this topic:  Classification Of Clifford Algebras

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