Prove that is a subring of the real Hamilton Quaternions H, which is a field but it is not contained in the center of H.
Answer & Explanation
Jacob Homer
Beginner2022-01-15Added 41 answers
Step 1
Note:
where , Called Quaternions ring
Now,
Now, let Clearly
Now
and is Subring of H is unity for any element S is Commotative S is field any
rodclassique4r
Beginner2022-01-16Added 37 answers
Following your suggestion:
Let
Then investigate conditions for i and h to commute!
Thus i and h commute only if
Proceeding similarly we find that
j and h commute only if
and
k and h commute only if
Thus it seems as if I am being driven to the conclusion that the only Hamilton Quaternions that commute with every element of the ring of Hamilton Quaternions are elements of the form
But I am unsure of how to formally and validly argue from the facts established above to conclude this!
alenahelenash
Expert2022-01-24Added 556 answers
Step 1Proven that only quaternions of the form: commute with i (this makes sense if you think about it, as neither j nor k commute with i). well if is in Z(H), it has to commute with i, since i is a quaternion. so that alone narrows down the possibilities right there. what you've done with j and k is fine, although you could also show that if commutes with j, then , and likewise for k. this means that only real quaternions can possibly be in the center. it's not hard to show that all real quaternions are indeed central, which settles the matter. EDIT: a little reflection should convince you that the center of the quaternions has to be a field. the only possibilities for the dimension (as a vector space over R) of this field is either 1 or 2 (if it was 2, it would have to be an isomorph of the complex numbers). the fact that i doesn't commute with j or k, effectively kills this possibility. it actually makes more sense to think of i,j and k being ''3 identical copies of '', because there's no real way to tell them apart from one another. this is why H is sometimes viewed as ''scalars+vectors'', the ''pure quaternion (non-real)'' part, acts very much like a vector in , which was actually Hamilton's original goal-to find an ''algebra'' for 3-vectors. the fact that , the center of the group of quaternion units, is equal to should reassure you that your conclusion is correct.