User talk:Rschwieb/Basic GAWe can move solidified portions to User:Rschwieb/Basic GA. This page can serve as a scratch pad and communication area. Exercises in GASome backgroundFor simplicity, Gibbs's vector algebra, geometric algebra will be considered over the same set: scalars, vectors etc. This will simplify reasoning. The only difference is the operations defined. The number of dimensions and the metric will in general be unspecified other than being nondegenerate. The expansion to bivectors etc. will be assumed, though these are not used in Gibbs's algebra. Axial vectors are sometimes treated as a separate vector space, but here it will be simpler to have them live in 1-vector space as is normal at an elementary level (the sign of the axial vector is handled by the conversion to a bivector). Defined notation, operations and operatorsConventions (apply unless stated):
Symbols:
Definitions in terms of basisThe geometric product
The dot product
The wedge product
The cross product
The ∇ operator can be applied using any of the multiplication operators in a pretty obvious way. For example:
Exercises and questionsPlease go through any aspects you want to review or have me describe (visualization), or ask me to set problems. My problem is that I have no idea where to start, since you have more knowledge that I have in pretty much every math area, but you clearly want to gain familiarity with some things so that they are automatic. There are some concepts I may thow in, such as ∇ being defined as generalized directional derivative. — Quondumtc 19:33, 17 December 2011 (UTC) A wacko question: What are the implications of the bilinear form being nonsymmetric? An exercise: complete a consistent definition of geometric product in this setting, with reference only to the bilinear form, not the other products or a tensor product. Then formulate relationships between all the products. |
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