Understanding the scope of the printed work Volume 1This page is an extract from “Grassmann Algebra Volume 1: Foundations - Exploring extended vector algebra with Mathematica” by John Browne. First Edition 2012.
1 Introduction
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1.1 Background
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The mathematical representation of physical entities 5The central concept of the Ausdehnungslehre5Comparison with the vector and tensor algebras 6Algebraicizing the notion of linear dependence 6Grassmann algebra as a geometric calculus 7
1.2 The Exterior Product
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The anti-symmetry of the exterior product 8Exterior products of vectors in a three-dimensional space 9Terminology: elements and entities 10The grade of an element 11Interchanging the order of the factors in an exterior product 12A brief summary of the properties of the exterior product 12
1.3 The Regressive Product
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The regressive product as a dual product to the exterior product 13Unions and intersections of spaces 14A brief summary of the properties of the regressive product 14The Common Factor Axiom 15The intersection of two bivectors in a three-dimensional space 17
1.4 Geometric Interpretations
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Points and vectors 17Sums and differences of points 18Determining a mass-centre 20Lines and planes 21The intersection of two lines 22
1.5 The Complement
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The complement as a correspondence between spaces 23The Euclidean complement 24The complement of a complement 26The Complement Axiom 27
1.6 The Interior Product
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The definition of the interior product 28Inner products and scalar products 29Sequential interior products 29Orthogonality 30Measure and magnitude 30Calculating interior products from their definition 31Expanding interior products 32The interior product of a bivector and a vector32The cross product 33
1.7 Summary
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Summary of operations 34Summary of objects 35
2 The Exterior Product
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2.1 Introduction
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2.2 The Exterior Product
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Basic properties of the exterior product 38Declaring scalar and vector symbols in GrassmannAlgebra40Entering exterior products 40
2.3 Exterior Linear Spaces
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Composing m-elements 40Composing elements automatically 41Spaces and congruence 42The associativity of the exterior product 42Transforming exterior products 43
2.4 Axioms for Exterior Linear Spaces
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Summary of axioms 44Grassmann algebras 46On the nature of scalar multiplication 46Factoring scalars 47Grassmann expressions 47Calculating the grade of a Grassmann expression 48
2.5 Bases
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Bases for exterior linear spaces 49Declaring a basis in GrassmannAlgebra49Composing bases of exterior linear spaces 50Composing palettes of basis elements 50Standard ordering 51Indexing basis elements of exterior linear spaces 52
2.6 Cobases
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Definition of a cobasis 52The cobasis of unity 53Composing palettes of cobasis elements 54The cobasis of a cobasis 54
2.7 Determinants
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Determinants from exterior products 55Properties of determinants 56The Laplace expansion technique 56Calculating determinants 57
2.8 Cofactors
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Cofactors from exterior products 58The Laplace expansion in cofactor form 59Transformations of cobases 60
2.9 Solution of Linear Equations
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Grassmann's approach to solving linear equations 61Example solution: 3 equations in 4 unknowns 62Example solution: 4 equations in 4 unknowns 62
2.10 Simplicity
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The concept of simplicity 63All (n-1)-elements are simple 63Conditions for simplicity of a 2-element in a 4-space 64Conditions for simplicity of a 2-element in a 5-space 64Factorizing simple elements from first principles 65
2.11 Exterior Division
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The definition of an exterior quotient 67Division by a 1-element 67Division by a k-element 68Automating the division process 69
2.12 Multilinear Forms
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The span of a simple element 69Composing spans 70Example: Refactorizations 72Multilinear forms 73Defining m:k-forms 74Composing m:k-forms 75Expanding and simplifying m:k-forms 76Developing invariant forms 76The invariance of m:k-forms 77The complete span of a simple element 78The Zero Form Theorem 81Zero Form formulae 82
2.13 Unions and Intersections
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Union and intersection as a multilinear form 85Where the intersection is evident 86Where the intersections is not evident 88Intersection with a non-simple element 89Factorizing simple elements 90
2.14 Summary
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3 The Regressive Product
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3.1 Introduction
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3.2 Duality
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The notion of duality 93Examples: Obtaining the dual of an axiom 94Summary: The duality transformation algorithm 96
3.3 Properties of the Regressive Product
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Axioms for the regressive product 96The unit n-element 97The inverse of an n-element 99Grassmann's notation for the regressive product 100
3.4 The Grassmann Duality Principle
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The dual of a dual 101The Grassmann Duality Principle 101Using the GrassmannAlgebra function Dual 102
3.5 The Common Factor Axiom
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Motivation 104The Common Factor Axiom 105Extension of the Common Factor Axiom to general elements 106Special cases of the Common Factor Axiom 107Dual versions of the Common Factor Axiom 107Application of the Common Factor Axiom 108When the common factor is not simple 110
3.6 The Common Factor Theorem
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Development of the Common Factor Theorem 110Proof of the Common Factor Theorem 113The A and B forms of the Common Factor Theorem 115Example: The decomposition of a 1-element 116Example: Applying the Common Factor Theorem 117Automating the application of the Common Factor Theorem 118A special form of the Common Factor Theorem 120
3.7 The Regressive Product of Simple Elements
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The regressive product of simple elements 122The regressive product of (n-1)-elements 122Regressive products leading to scalar results 122The cobasis form of the Common Factor Axiom 123The regressive product of cobasis elements 124
3.8 Expressing an Element in another Basis
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Expressing an element in terms of another basis 125Using the computable form of the Common Factor Theorem 126Automating the process 127The symmetric expansion of a 1-element in terms of another basis 128
3.9 Factorization of Simple Elements
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Factorization using the regressive product 129Factorizing elements expressed in terms of basis elements 131The factorization algorithm 133Factorization of (n-1)-elements 135Factorizing simple m-elements 136Factorizing contingently simple m-elements 138Determining if an element is simple 140
3.10 Product Formulae for Regressive Products
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The Product Formula 141Deriving Product Formulae 143Deriving Product Formulae automatically 143Computing the General Product Formula 145Comparing the two forms of the Product Formula 149The invariance of the General Product Formula 150Alternative forms for the General Product Formula 150The Decomposition Formula 152Exploration: Dual forms of the General Product Formulae 153The double sum form of the General Product Formula 154