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quadratic map
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(Derivation)
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Given a commutative ring $K$ and two $K$ -modules $M$ and $N$ then a map $q:M\rightarrow N$ is called quadratic if
- $q(\alpha x)=\alpha^2 q(x)$ for all $x\in M$ and $\alpha\in K$ .
- $b(x,y):=q(x+y)-q(x)-q(y)$ , for $x,y\in M$ , is a bilinear map.
The only difference between quadratic maps and quadratic forms is the insistence on the codomain $N$ instead of a $K$ . So in this way every quadratic form is a special case of a quadratic map. Most of the properties for quadratic forms apply to quadratic maps as well. For instance, if $K$ has no 2-torsion ($2x=0$ implies $x=0$ ) then $$ 2c(x,y)=q(x+y)-q(x)-q(y)
$$ defines a symmetric $K$ -bilinear map $c:M\times M\to N$ with $c(x,x)=q(x)$ . In particular if $1/2\in K$ then $c(x,y)=\frac{1}{2}b(x,y)$ . This definition is one instance of a polarization (i.e.: substituting a single variable in a formula with $x+y$ and comparing the result with the formula over $x$ and $y$ separately.) Continuing without $2$ -torsion, if
$b$ is a symmetric $K$ -bilinear map (perhaps not a form) then defining $q_b(x)=b(x,x)$ determines a quadratic map since $$ q_b(\alpha x)=b(\alpha x,\alpha x)=\alpha^2 b(x,x)=\alpha^2 q(x $$ and $$ q_b(x+y)-q_b(x)-q_b(y) =b(x+y,x+y)-b(x,x)-b(y,y)=b(x,y)+b(y,x)=2 b(x,y) $$ Have have no $2$ -torsion we can recover $b$ form $q_b$ . So in odd and 0 characteristic rings we find symmetric bilinear maps and quadratic maps are in 1-1 correspondence.
An alternative understanding of $b$ is to treat this as the obstruction to $q$ being an additive homomorphism. Thus a submodule $T$ of $M$ for which $b(T,T)=0$ is a submodule of $M$ on which $q|_T$ is an additive homomorphism. Of course because of the first condition, $q$ is semi-linear on $T$ only when $\alpha\mapsto \alpha^2$ is an automorphism of $K$ , in particular, if $K$ has characteristic 2. When the characteristic of $K$ is odd or 0 then $q(T)=0$ if and only if $b(T,T)=0$ simply because $q(x)=b(x,x)$ (or up to a $1/2$ multiple depending on conventions). However, in characteristic 2 it is possible for $b(T,T)=0$ yet $q(T)\neq 0$ . For instance, we can have $q(x)\neq 0$ yet $b(x,x)=q(2x)-q(x)-q(x)=0$ . This is summed up in the following definition:
A subspace $T$ of $M$ is called totally singular if $q(T)=0$ and totally isotropic if $b(T,T)=0$ . In odd or 0 characteristic, totally singular subspaces are precisely totally isotropic subspaces.
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"quadratic map" is owned by Algeboy.
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Cross-references: subspace, multiple, automorphism, submodule, homomorphism, additive, 1-1 correspondence, rings, characteristic, odd, formula, variable, polarization, symmetric, implies, properties, codomain, quadratic forms, difference, bilinear map, map, commutative ring
There are 9 references to this entry.
This is version 6 of quadratic map, born on 2006-12-14, modified 2007-07-30.
Object id is 8625, canonical name is QuadraticMap2.
Accessed 4518 times total.
Classification:
| AMS MSC: | 15A63 (Linear and multilinear algebra; matrix theory :: Quadratic and bilinear forms, inner products) | | | 11E04 (Number theory :: Forms and linear algebraic groups :: Quadratic forms over general fields) | | | 11E08 (Number theory :: Forms and linear algebraic groups :: Quadratic forms over local rings and fields) |
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Pending Errata and Addenda
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