"""
-Euclidean Jordan Algebras. These are formally-real Jordan Algebras;
-specifically those where u^2 + v^2 = 0 implies that u = v = 0. They
-are used in optimization, and have some additional nice methods beyond
-what can be supported in a general Jordan Algebra.
-
+Representations and constructions for Euclidean Jordan algebras.
+
+A Euclidean Jordan algebra is a Jordan algebra that has some
+additional properties:
+
+ 1. It is finite-dimensional.
+ 2. Its scalar field is the real numbers.
+ 3a. An inner product is defined on it, and...
+ 3b. That inner product is compatible with the Jordan product
+ in the sense that `<x*y,z> = <y,x*z>` for all elements
+ `x,y,z` in the algebra.
+
+Every Euclidean Jordan algebra is formally-real: for any two elements
+`x` and `y` in the algebra, `x^{2} + y^{2} = 0` implies that `x = y =
+0`. Conversely, every finite-dimensional formally-real Jordan algebra
+can be made into a Euclidean Jordan algebra with an appropriate choice
+of inner-product.
+
+Formally-real Jordan algebras were originally studied as a framework
+for quantum mechanics. Today, Euclidean Jordan algebras are crucial in
+symmetric cone optimization, since every symmetric cone arises as the
+cone of squares in some Euclidean Jordan algebra.
+
+It is known that every Euclidean Jordan algebra decomposes into an
+orthogonal direct sum (essentially, a Cartesian product) of simple
+algebras, and that moreover, up to Jordan-algebra isomorphism, there
+are only five families of simple algebras. We provide constructions
+for these simple algebras:
+
+ * :class:`BilinearFormEJA`
+ * :class:`RealSymmetricEJA`
+ * :class:`ComplexHermitianEJA`
+ * :class:`QuaternionHermitianEJA`
+
+Missing from this list is the algebra of three-by-three octononion
+Hermitian matrices, as there is (as of yet) no implementation of the
+octonions in SageMath. In addition to these, we provide two other
+example constructions,
+
+ * :class:`HadamardEJA`
+ * :class:`TrivialEJA`
+
+The Jordan spin algebra is a bilinear form algebra where the bilinear
+form is the identity. The Hadamard EJA is simply a Cartesian product
+of one-dimensional spin algebras. And last but not least, the trivial
+EJA is exactly what you think. Cartesian products of these are also
+supported using the usual ``cartesian_product()`` function; as a
+result, we support (up to isomorphism) all Euclidean Jordan algebras
+that don't involve octonions.
SETUP::
sage: random_eja()
Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension...
-
"""
from itertools import repeat
from sage.algebras.quatalg.quaternion_algebra import QuaternionAlgebra
from sage.categories.magmatic_algebras import MagmaticAlgebras
+from sage.categories.sets_cat import cartesian_product
from sage.combinat.free_module import CombinatorialFreeModule
from sage.matrix.constructor import matrix
from sage.matrix.matrix_space import MatrixSpace
QuadraticField)
from mjo.eja.eja_element import FiniteDimensionalEJAElement
from mjo.eja.eja_operator import FiniteDimensionalEJAOperator
-from mjo.eja.eja_utils import _mat2vec
+from mjo.eja.eja_utils import _all2list, _mat2vec
class FiniteDimensionalEJA(CombinatorialFreeModule):
r"""
INPUT:
- - basis -- a tuple of basis elements in their matrix form.
+ - ``basis`` -- a tuple; a tuple of basis elements in "matrix
+ form," which must be the same form as the arguments to
+ ``jordan_product`` and ``inner_product``. In reality, "matrix
+ form" can be either vectors, matrices, or a Cartesian product
+ (ordered tuple) of vectors or matrices. All of these would
+ ideally be vector spaces in sage with no special-casing
+ needed; but in reality we turn vectors into column-matrices
+ and Cartesian products `(a,b)` into column matrices
+ `(a,b)^{T}` after converting `a` and `b` themselves.
+
+ - ``jordan_product`` -- a function; afunction of two ``basis``
+ elements (in matrix form) that returns their jordan product,
+ also in matrix form; this will be applied to ``basis`` to
+ compute a multiplication table for the algebra.
+
+ - ``inner_product`` -- a function; a function of two ``basis``
+ elements (in matrix form) that returns their inner
+ product. This will be applied to ``basis`` to compute an
+ inner-product table (basically a matrix) for this algebra.
+
+ - ``field`` -- a subfield of the reals (default: ``AA``); the scalar
+ field for the algebra.
+
+ - ``orthonormalize`` -- boolean (default: ``True``); whether or
+ not to orthonormalize the basis. Doing so is expensive and
+ generally rules out using the rationals as your ``field``, but
+ is required for spectral decompositions.
+
+ SETUP::
+
+ sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import random_eja
- - jordan_product -- function of two elements (in matrix form)
- that returns their jordan product in this algebra; this will
- be applied to ``basis`` to compute a multiplication table for
- the algebra.
+ TESTS:
+
+ We should compute that an element subalgebra is associative even
+ if we circumvent the element method::
- - inner_product -- function of two elements (in matrix form) that
- returns their inner product. This will be applied to ``basis`` to
- compute an inner-product table (basically a matrix) for this algebra.
+ sage: set_random_seed()
+ sage: J = random_eja(field=QQ,orthonormalize=False)
+ sage: x = J.random_element()
+ sage: A = x.subalgebra_generated_by(orthonormalize=False)
+ sage: basis = tuple(b.superalgebra_element() for b in A.basis())
+ sage: J.subalgebra(basis, orthonormalize=False).is_associative()
+ True
"""
Element = FiniteDimensionalEJAElement
inner_product,
field=AA,
orthonormalize=True,
- associative=False,
+ associative=None,
+ cartesian_product=False,
check_field=True,
check_axioms=True,
- prefix='e'):
+ prefix="b"):
+
+ n = len(basis)
if check_field:
if not field.is_subring(RR):
# we've specified a real embedding.
raise ValueError("scalar field is not real")
+ from mjo.eja.eja_utils import _change_ring
# If the basis given to us wasn't over the field that it's
# supposed to be over, fix that. Or, you know, crash.
- basis = tuple( b.change_ring(field) for b in basis )
+ basis = tuple( _change_ring(b, field) for b in basis )
if check_axioms:
# Check commutativity of the Jordan and inner-products.
category = MagmaticAlgebras(field).FiniteDimensional()
- category = category.WithBasis().Unital()
+ category = category.WithBasis().Unital().Commutative()
+
+ if associative is None:
+ # We should figure it out. As with check_axioms, we have to do
+ # this without the help of the _jordan_product_is_associative()
+ # method because we need to know the category before we
+ # initialize the algebra.
+ associative = all( jordan_product(jordan_product(bi,bj),bk)
+ ==
+ jordan_product(bi,jordan_product(bj,bk))
+ for bi in basis
+ for bj in basis
+ for bk in basis)
+
if associative:
# Element subalgebras can take advantage of this.
category = category.Associative()
+ if cartesian_product:
+ # Use join() here because otherwise we only get the
+ # "Cartesian product of..." and not the things themselves.
+ category = category.join([category,
+ category.CartesianProducts()])
# Call the superclass constructor so that we can use its from_vector()
# method to build our multiplication table.
- n = len(basis)
- super().__init__(field,
- range(n),
- prefix=prefix,
- category=category,
- bracket=False)
+ CombinatorialFreeModule.__init__(self,
+ field,
+ range(n),
+ prefix=prefix,
+ category=category,
+ bracket=False)
# Now comes all of the hard work. We'll be constructing an
# ambient vector space V that our (vectorized) basis lives in,
# as well as a subspace W of V spanned by those (vectorized)
# basis elements. The W-coordinates are the coefficients that
- # we see in things like x = 1*e1 + 2*e2.
+ # we see in things like x = 1*b1 + 2*b2.
vector_basis = basis
degree = 0
if n > 0:
- # Works on both column and square matrices...
- degree = len(basis[0].list())
+ degree = len(_all2list(basis[0]))
# Build an ambient space that fits our matrix basis when
# written out as "long vectors."
# Save a copy of the un-orthonormalized basis for later.
# Convert it to ambient V (vector) coordinates while we're
# at it, because we'd have to do it later anyway.
- deortho_vector_basis = tuple( V(b.list()) for b in basis )
+ deortho_vector_basis = tuple( V(_all2list(b)) for b in basis )
from mjo.eja.eja_utils import gram_schmidt
basis = tuple(gram_schmidt(basis, inner_product))
# Now create the vector space for the algebra, which will have
# its own set of non-ambient coordinates (in terms of the
# supplied basis).
- vector_basis = tuple( V(b.list()) for b in basis )
+ vector_basis = tuple( V(_all2list(b)) for b in basis )
W = V.span_of_basis( vector_basis, check=check_axioms)
if orthonormalize:
# The jordan product returns a matrixy answer, so we
# have to convert it to the algebra coordinates.
elt = jordan_product(q_i, q_j)
- elt = W.coordinate_vector(V(elt.list()))
+ elt = W.coordinate_vector(V(_all2list(elt)))
self._multiplication_table[i][j] = self.from_vector(elt)
if not orthonormalize:
def product_on_basis(self, i, j):
+ r"""
+ Returns the Jordan product of the `i` and `j`th basis elements.
+
+ This completely defines the Jordan product on the algebra, and
+ is used direclty by our superclass machinery to implement
+ :meth:`product`.
+
+ SETUP::
+
+ sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import random_eja
+
+ TESTS::
+
+ sage: set_random_seed()
+ sage: J = random_eja()
+ sage: n = J.dimension()
+ sage: bi = J.zero()
+ sage: bj = J.zero()
+ sage: bi_bj = J.zero()*J.zero()
+ sage: if n > 0:
+ ....: i = ZZ.random_element(n)
+ ....: j = ZZ.random_element(n)
+ ....: bi = J.monomial(i)
+ ....: bj = J.monomial(j)
+ ....: bi_bj = J.product_on_basis(i,j)
+ sage: bi*bj == bi_bj
+ True
+
+ """
# We only stored the lower-triangular portion of the
# multiplication table.
if j <= i:
sage: y = J.random_element()
sage: (n == 1) or (x.inner_product(y) == (x*y).trace()/2)
True
+
"""
B = self._inner_product_matrix
return (B*x.to_vector()).inner_product(y.to_vector())
+ def is_associative(self):
+ r"""
+ Return whether or not this algebra's Jordan product is associative.
+
+ SETUP::
+
+ sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import ComplexHermitianEJA
+
+ EXAMPLES::
+
+ sage: J = ComplexHermitianEJA(3, field=QQ, orthonormalize=False)
+ sage: J.is_associative()
+ False
+ sage: x = sum(J.gens())
+ sage: A = x.subalgebra_generated_by(orthonormalize=False)
+ sage: A.is_associative()
+ True
+
+ """
+ return "Associative" in self.category().axioms()
+
def _is_commutative(self):
r"""
Whether or not this algebra's multiplication table is commutative.
this algebra was constructed with ``check_axioms=False`` and
passed an invalid multiplication table.
"""
- return all( self.product_on_basis(i,j) == self.product_on_basis(i,j)
- for i in range(self.dimension())
- for j in range(self.dimension()) )
+ return all( x*y == y*x for x in self.gens() for y in self.gens() )
def _is_jordanian(self):
r"""
for i in range(self.dimension())
for j in range(self.dimension()) )
+ def _jordan_product_is_associative(self):
+ r"""
+ Return whether or not this algebra's Jordan product is
+ associative; that is, whether or not `x*(y*z) = (x*y)*z`
+ for all `x,y,x`.
+
+ This method should agree with :meth:`is_associative` unless
+ you lied about the value of the ``associative`` parameter
+ when you constructed the algebra.
+
+ SETUP::
+
+ sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import (random_eja,
+ ....: RealSymmetricEJA,
+ ....: ComplexHermitianEJA,
+ ....: QuaternionHermitianEJA)
+
+ EXAMPLES::
+
+ sage: J = RealSymmetricEJA(4, orthonormalize=False)
+ sage: J._jordan_product_is_associative()
+ False
+ sage: x = sum(J.gens())
+ sage: A = x.subalgebra_generated_by()
+ sage: A._jordan_product_is_associative()
+ True
+
+ ::
+
+ sage: J = ComplexHermitianEJA(2,field=QQ,orthonormalize=False)
+ sage: J._jordan_product_is_associative()
+ False
+ sage: x = sum(J.gens())
+ sage: A = x.subalgebra_generated_by(orthonormalize=False)
+ sage: A._jordan_product_is_associative()
+ True
+
+ ::
+
+ sage: J = QuaternionHermitianEJA(2)
+ sage: J._jordan_product_is_associative()
+ False
+ sage: x = sum(J.gens())
+ sage: A = x.subalgebra_generated_by()
+ sage: A._jordan_product_is_associative()
+ True
+
+ TESTS:
+
+ The values we've presupplied to the constructors agree with
+ the computation::
+
+ sage: set_random_seed()
+ sage: J = random_eja()
+ sage: J.is_associative() == J._jordan_product_is_associative()
+ True
+
+ """
+ R = self.base_ring()
+
+ # Used to check whether or not something is zero.
+ epsilon = R.zero()
+ if not R.is_exact():
+ # I don't know of any examples that make this magnitude
+ # necessary because I don't know how to make an
+ # associative algebra when the element subalgebra
+ # construction is unreliable (as it is over RDF; we can't
+ # find the degree of an element because we can't compute
+ # the rank of a matrix). But even multiplication of floats
+ # is non-associative, so *some* epsilon is needed... let's
+ # just take the one from _inner_product_is_associative?
+ epsilon = 1e-15
+
+ for i in range(self.dimension()):
+ for j in range(self.dimension()):
+ for k in range(self.dimension()):
+ x = self.monomial(i)
+ y = self.monomial(j)
+ z = self.monomial(k)
+ diff = (x*y)*z - x*(y*z)
+
+ if diff.norm() > epsilon:
+ return False
+
+ return True
+
def _inner_product_is_associative(self):
r"""
Return whether or not this algebra's inner product `B` is
this algebra was constructed with ``check_axioms=False`` and
passed an invalid Jordan or inner-product.
"""
+ R = self.base_ring()
- # Used to check whether or not something is zero in an inexact
- # ring. This number is sufficient to allow the construction of
- # QuaternionHermitianEJA(2, field=RDF) with check_axioms=True.
- epsilon = 1e-16
+ # Used to check whether or not something is zero.
+ epsilon = R.zero()
+ if not R.is_exact():
+ # This choice is sufficient to allow the construction of
+ # QuaternionHermitianEJA(2, field=RDF) with check_axioms=True.
+ epsilon = 1e-15
for i in range(self.dimension()):
for j in range(self.dimension()):
z = self.monomial(k)
diff = (x*y).inner_product(z) - x.inner_product(y*z)
- if self.base_ring().is_exact():
- if diff != 0:
- return False
- else:
- if diff.abs() > epsilon:
- return False
+ if diff.abs() > epsilon:
+ return False
return True
SETUP::
- sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import (JordanSpinEJA,
+ sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import (random_eja,
+ ....: JordanSpinEJA,
....: HadamardEJA,
....: RealSymmetricEJA)
...
ValueError: not an element of this algebra
+ Tuples work as well, provided that the matrix basis for the
+ algebra consists of them::
+
+ sage: J1 = HadamardEJA(3)
+ sage: J2 = RealSymmetricEJA(2)
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: J( (J1.matrix_basis()[1], J2.matrix_basis()[2]) )
+ b1 + b5
+
TESTS:
- Ensure that we can convert any element of the two non-matrix
- simple algebras (whose matrix representations are columns)
- back and forth faithfully::
+ Ensure that we can convert any element back and forth
+ faithfully between its matrix and algebra representations::
sage: set_random_seed()
- sage: J = HadamardEJA.random_instance()
- sage: x = J.random_element()
- sage: J(x.to_vector().column()) == x
- True
- sage: J = JordanSpinEJA.random_instance()
+ sage: J = random_eja()
sage: x = J.random_element()
- sage: J(x.to_vector().column()) == x
+ sage: J(x.to_matrix()) == x
True
+ We cannot coerce elements between algebras just because their
+ matrix representations are compatible::
+
+ sage: J1 = HadamardEJA(3)
+ sage: J2 = JordanSpinEJA(3)
+ sage: J2(J1.one())
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ ValueError: not an element of this algebra
+ sage: J1(J2.zero())
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ ValueError: not an element of this algebra
"""
msg = "not an element of this algebra"
- if elt == 0:
- # The superclass implementation of random_element()
- # needs to be able to coerce "0" into the algebra.
- return self.zero()
- elif elt in self.base_ring():
+ if elt in self.base_ring():
# Ensure that no base ring -> algebra coercion is performed
# by this method. There's some stupidity in sage that would
# otherwise propagate to this method; for example, sage thinks
raise ValueError(msg)
try:
+ # Try to convert a vector into a column-matrix...
elt = elt.column()
except (AttributeError, TypeError):
- # Try to convert a vector into a column-matrix
+ # and ignore failure, because we weren't really expecting
+ # a vector as an argument anyway.
pass
if elt not in self.matrix_space():
# closure whereas the base ring of the 3-by-3 identity matrix
# could be QQ instead of QQbar.
#
+ # And, we also have to handle Cartesian product bases (when
+ # the matrix basis consists of tuples) here. The "good news"
+ # is that we're already converting everything to long vectors,
+ # and that strategy works for tuples as well.
+ #
# We pass check=False because the matrix basis is "guaranteed"
# to be linearly independent... right? Ha ha.
- V = VectorSpace(self.base_ring(), elt.nrows()*elt.ncols())
- W = V.span_of_basis( (_mat2vec(s) for s in self.matrix_basis()),
+ elt = _all2list(elt)
+ V = VectorSpace(self.base_ring(), len(elt))
+ W = V.span_of_basis( (V(_all2list(s)) for s in self.matrix_basis()),
check=False)
try:
- coords = W.coordinate_vector(_mat2vec(elt))
+ coords = W.coordinate_vector(V(elt))
except ArithmeticError: # vector is not in free module
raise ValueError(msg)
sage: J = JordanSpinEJA(4)
sage: J.multiplication_table()
+----++----+----+----+----+
- | * || e0 | e1 | e2 | e3 |
+ | * || b0 | b1 | b2 | b3 |
+====++====+====+====+====+
- | e0 || e0 | e1 | e2 | e3 |
+ | b0 || b0 | b1 | b2 | b3 |
+----++----+----+----+----+
- | e1 || e1 | e0 | 0 | 0 |
+ | b1 || b1 | b0 | 0 | 0 |
+----++----+----+----+----+
- | e2 || e2 | 0 | e0 | 0 |
+ | b2 || b2 | 0 | b0 | 0 |
+----++----+----+----+----+
- | e3 || e3 | 0 | 0 | e0 |
+ | b3 || b3 | 0 | 0 | b0 |
+----++----+----+----+----+
"""
# And to each subsequent row, prepend an entry that belongs to
# the left-side "header column."
- M += [ [self.monomial(i)] + [ self.product_on_basis(i,j)
- for j in range(n) ]
+ M += [ [self.monomial(i)] + [ self.monomial(i)*self.monomial(j)
+ for j in range(n) ]
for i in range(n) ]
return table(M, header_row=True, header_column=True, frame=True)
Why implement this for non-matrix algebras? Avoiding special
cases for the :class:`BilinearFormEJA` pays with simplicity in
its own right. But mainly, we would like to be able to assume
- that elements of a :class:`DirectSumEJA` can be displayed
+ that elements of a :class:`CartesianProductEJA` can be displayed
nicely, without having to have special classes for direct sums
one of whose components was a matrix algebra.
sage: J = RealSymmetricEJA(2)
sage: J.basis()
- Finite family {0: e0, 1: e1, 2: e2}
+ Finite family {0: b0, 1: b1, 2: b2}
sage: J.matrix_basis()
(
[1 0] [ 0 0.7071067811865475?] [0 0]
sage: J = JordanSpinEJA(2)
sage: J.basis()
- Finite family {0: e0, 1: e1}
+ Finite family {0: b0, 1: b1}
sage: J.matrix_basis()
(
[1] [0]
we think of them as matrices (including column vectors of the
appropriate size).
- Generally this will be an `n`-by-`1` column-vector space,
+ "By default" this will be an `n`-by-`1` column-matrix space,
except when the algebra is trivial. There it's `n`-by-`n`
(where `n` is zero), to ensure that two elements of the matrix
- space (empty matrices) can be multiplied.
+ space (empty matrices) can be multiplied. For algebras of
+ matrices, this returns the space in which their
+ real embeddings live.
+
+ SETUP::
+
+ sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import (ComplexHermitianEJA,
+ ....: JordanSpinEJA,
+ ....: QuaternionHermitianEJA,
+ ....: TrivialEJA)
+
+ EXAMPLES:
+
+ By default, the matrix representation is just a column-matrix
+ equivalent to the vector representation::
+
+ sage: J = JordanSpinEJA(3)
+ sage: J.matrix_space()
+ Full MatrixSpace of 3 by 1 dense matrices over Algebraic
+ Real Field
+
+ The matrix representation in the trivial algebra is
+ zero-by-zero instead of the usual `n`-by-one::
+
+ sage: J = TrivialEJA()
+ sage: J.matrix_space()
+ Full MatrixSpace of 0 by 0 dense matrices over Algebraic
+ Real Field
+
+ The matrix space for complex/quaternion Hermitian matrix EJA
+ is the space in which their real-embeddings live, not the
+ original complex/quaternion matrix space::
+
+ sage: J = ComplexHermitianEJA(2,field=QQ,orthonormalize=False)
+ sage: J.matrix_space()
+ Full MatrixSpace of 4 by 4 dense matrices over Rational Field
+ sage: J = QuaternionHermitianEJA(1,field=QQ,orthonormalize=False)
+ sage: J.matrix_space()
+ Full MatrixSpace of 4 by 4 dense matrices over Rational Field
- Matrix algebras override this with something more useful.
"""
if self.is_trivial():
return MatrixSpace(self.base_ring(), 0)
sage: J = HadamardEJA(5)
sage: J.one()
- e0 + e1 + e2 + e3 + e4
+ b0 + b1 + b2 + b3 + b4
The unit element in the Hadamard EJA is inherited in the
subalgebras generated by its elements::
sage: J = HadamardEJA(5)
sage: J.one()
- e0 + e1 + e2 + e3 + e4
+ b0 + b1 + b2 + b3 + b4
sage: x = sum(J.gens())
sage: A = x.subalgebra_generated_by(orthonormalize=False)
sage: A.one()
- f0
+ c0
sage: A.one().superalgebra_element()
- e0 + e1 + e2 + e3 + e4
+ b0 + b1 + b2 + b3 + b4
TESTS:
if not c.is_idempotent():
raise ValueError("element is not idempotent: %s" % c)
- from mjo.eja.eja_subalgebra import FiniteDimensionalEJASubalgebra
-
# Default these to what they should be if they turn out to be
# trivial, because eigenspaces_left() won't return eigenvalues
# corresponding to trivial spaces (e.g. it returns only the
# eigenspace corresponding to lambda=1 if you take the
# decomposition relative to the identity element).
- trivial = FiniteDimensionalEJASubalgebra(self, ())
+ trivial = self.subalgebra(())
J0 = trivial # eigenvalue zero
J5 = VectorSpace(self.base_ring(), 0) # eigenvalue one-half
J1 = trivial # eigenvalue one
J5 = eigspace
else:
gens = tuple( self.from_vector(b) for b in eigspace.basis() )
- subalg = FiniteDimensionalEJASubalgebra(self,
- gens,
- check_axioms=False)
+ subalg = self.subalgebra(gens, check_axioms=False)
if eigval == 0:
J0 = subalg
elif eigval == 1:
# The theory says that only the first "r" coefficients are
# nonzero, and they actually live in the original polynomial
- # ring and not the fraction field. We negate them because
- # in the actual characteristic polynomial, they get moved
- # to the other side where x^r lives.
- return -A_rref.solve_right(E*b).change_ring(R)[:r]
+ # ring and not the fraction field. We negate them because in
+ # the actual characteristic polynomial, they get moved to the
+ # other side where x^r lives. We don't bother to trim A_rref
+ # down to a square matrix and solve the resulting system,
+ # because the upper-left r-by-r portion of A_rref is
+ # guaranteed to be the identity matrix, so e.g.
+ #
+ # A_rref.solve_right(Y)
+ #
+ # would just be returning Y.
+ return (-E*b)[:r].change_ring(R)
@cached_method
def rank(self):
sage: set_random_seed() # long time
sage: J = random_eja() # long time
- sage: caches = J.rank() # long time
+ sage: cached = J.rank() # long time
sage: J.rank.clear_cache() # long time
sage: J.rank() == cached # long time
True
return len(self._charpoly_coefficients())
+ def subalgebra(self, basis, **kwargs):
+ r"""
+ Create a subalgebra of this algebra from the given basis.
+ """
+ from mjo.eja.eja_subalgebra import FiniteDimensionalEJASubalgebra
+ return FiniteDimensionalEJASubalgebra(self, basis, **kwargs)
+
+
def vector_space(self):
"""
Return the vector space that underlies this algebra.
return self.zero().to_vector().parent().ambient_vector_space()
- Element = FiniteDimensionalEJAElement
class RationalBasisEJA(FiniteDimensionalEJA):
r"""
if not all( all(b_i in QQ for b_i in b.list()) for b in basis ):
raise TypeError("basis not rational")
+ super().__init__(basis,
+ jordan_product,
+ inner_product,
+ field=field,
+ check_field=check_field,
+ **kwargs)
+
self._rational_algebra = None
if field is not QQ:
# There's no point in constructing the extra algebra if this
jordan_product,
inner_product,
field=QQ,
+ associative=self.is_associative(),
orthonormalize=False,
check_field=False,
check_axioms=False)
- super().__init__(basis,
- jordan_product,
- inner_product,
- field=field,
- check_field=check_field,
- **kwargs)
-
@cached_method
def _charpoly_coefficients(self):
r"""
True
"""
- Xu = cls.real_unembed(X)
- Yu = cls.real_unembed(Y)
- tr = (Xu*Yu).trace()
-
- try:
- # Works in QQ, AA, RDF, et cetera.
- return tr.real()
- except AttributeError:
- # A quaternion doesn't have a real() method, but does
- # have coefficient_tuple() method that returns the
- # coefficients of 1, i, j, and k -- in that order.
- return tr.coefficient_tuple()[0]
+ # This does in fact compute the real part of the trace.
+ # If we compute the trace of e.g. a complex matrix M,
+ # then we do so by adding up its diagonal entries --
+ # call them z_1 through z_n. The real embedding of z_1
+ # will be a 2-by-2 REAL matrix [a, b; -b, a] whose trace
+ # as a REAL matrix will be 2*a = 2*Re(z_1). And so forth.
+ return (X*Y).trace()/cls.dimension_over_reals()
class RealMatrixEJA(MatrixEJA):
EXAMPLES::
sage: J = RealSymmetricEJA(2)
- sage: e0, e1, e2 = J.gens()
- sage: e0*e0
- e0
- sage: e1*e1
- 1/2*e0 + 1/2*e2
- sage: e2*e2
- e2
+ sage: b0, b1, b2 = J.gens()
+ sage: b0*b0
+ b0
+ sage: b1*b1
+ 1/2*b0 + 1/2*b2
+ sage: b2*b2
+ b2
In theory, our "field" can be any subfield of the reals::
- sage: RealSymmetricEJA(2, field=RDF)
+ sage: RealSymmetricEJA(2, field=RDF, check_axioms=True)
Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 3 over Real Double Field
- sage: RealSymmetricEJA(2, field=RR)
+ sage: RealSymmetricEJA(2, field=RR, check_axioms=True)
Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 3 over Real Field with
53 bits of precision
# if the user passes check_axioms=True.
if "check_axioms" not in kwargs: kwargs["check_axioms"] = False
- super(RealSymmetricEJA, self).__init__(self._denormalized_basis(n),
- self.jordan_product,
- self.trace_inner_product,
- **kwargs)
+ associative = False
+ if n <= 1:
+ associative = True
+
+ super().__init__(self._denormalized_basis(n),
+ self.jordan_product,
+ self.trace_inner_product,
+ associative=associative,
+ **kwargs)
# TODO: this could be factored out somehow, but is left here
# because the MatrixEJA is not presently a subclass of the
True
"""
- super(ComplexMatrixEJA,cls).real_embed(M)
+ super().real_embed(M)
n = M.nrows()
# We don't need any adjoined elements...
True
"""
- super(ComplexMatrixEJA,cls).real_unembed(M)
+ super().real_unembed(M)
n = ZZ(M.nrows())
d = cls.dimension_over_reals()
F = cls.complex_extension(M.base_ring())
In theory, our "field" can be any subfield of the reals::
- sage: ComplexHermitianEJA(2, field=RDF)
+ sage: ComplexHermitianEJA(2, field=RDF, check_axioms=True)
Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 4 over Real Double Field
- sage: ComplexHermitianEJA(2, field=RR)
+ sage: ComplexHermitianEJA(2, field=RR, check_axioms=True)
Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 4 over Real Field with
53 bits of precision
# if the user passes check_axioms=True.
if "check_axioms" not in kwargs: kwargs["check_axioms"] = False
- super(ComplexHermitianEJA, self).__init__(self._denormalized_basis(n),
- self.jordan_product,
- self.trace_inner_product,
- **kwargs)
+ associative = False
+ if n <= 1:
+ associative = True
+
+ super().__init__(self._denormalized_basis(n),
+ self.jordan_product,
+ self.trace_inner_product,
+ associative=associative,
+ **kwargs)
# TODO: this could be factored out somehow, but is left here
# because the MatrixEJA is not presently a subclass of the
# FDEJA class that defines rank() and one().
True
"""
- super(QuaternionMatrixEJA,cls).real_embed(M)
+ super().real_embed(M)
quaternions = M.base_ring()
n = M.nrows()
True
"""
- super(QuaternionMatrixEJA,cls).real_unembed(M)
+ super().real_unembed(M)
n = ZZ(M.nrows())
d = cls.dimension_over_reals()
In theory, our "field" can be any subfield of the reals::
- sage: QuaternionHermitianEJA(2, field=RDF)
+ sage: QuaternionHermitianEJA(2, field=RDF, check_axioms=True)
Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 6 over Real Double Field
- sage: QuaternionHermitianEJA(2, field=RR)
+ sage: QuaternionHermitianEJA(2, field=RR, check_axioms=True)
Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 6 over Real Field with
53 bits of precision
# if the user passes check_axioms=True.
if "check_axioms" not in kwargs: kwargs["check_axioms"] = False
- super(QuaternionHermitianEJA, self).__init__(self._denormalized_basis(n),
- self.jordan_product,
- self.trace_inner_product,
- **kwargs)
+ associative = False
+ if n <= 1:
+ associative = True
+
+ super().__init__(self._denormalized_basis(n),
+ self.jordan_product,
+ self.trace_inner_product,
+ associative=associative,
+ **kwargs)
+
# TODO: this could be factored out somehow, but is left here
# because the MatrixEJA is not presently a subclass of the
# FDEJA class that defines rank() and one().
This multiplication table can be verified by hand::
sage: J = HadamardEJA(3)
- sage: e0,e1,e2 = J.gens()
- sage: e0*e0
- e0
- sage: e0*e1
+ sage: b0,b1,b2 = J.gens()
+ sage: b0*b0
+ b0
+ sage: b0*b1
0
- sage: e0*e2
+ sage: b0*b2
0
- sage: e1*e1
- e1
- sage: e1*e2
+ sage: b1*b1
+ b1
+ sage: b1*b2
0
- sage: e2*e2
- e2
+ sage: b2*b2
+ b2
TESTS:
if "check_axioms" not in kwargs: kwargs["check_axioms"] = False
column_basis = tuple( b.column() for b in FreeModule(ZZ, n).basis() )
- super().__init__(column_basis, jordan_product, inner_product, **kwargs)
+ super().__init__(column_basis,
+ jordan_product,
+ inner_product,
+ associative=True,
+ **kwargs)
self.rank.set_cache(n)
if n == 0:
n = B.nrows()
column_basis = tuple( b.column() for b in FreeModule(ZZ, n).basis() )
- super(BilinearFormEJA, self).__init__(column_basis,
- jordan_product,
- inner_product,
- **kwargs)
+
+ # TODO: I haven't actually checked this, but it seems legit.
+ associative = False
+ if n <= 2:
+ associative = True
+
+ super().__init__(column_basis,
+ jordan_product,
+ inner_product,
+ associative=associative,
+ **kwargs)
# The rank of this algebra is two, unless we're in a
# one-dimensional ambient space (because the rank is bounded
This multiplication table can be verified by hand::
sage: J = JordanSpinEJA(4)
- sage: e0,e1,e2,e3 = J.gens()
- sage: e0*e0
- e0
- sage: e0*e1
- e1
- sage: e0*e2
- e2
- sage: e0*e3
- e3
- sage: e1*e2
+ sage: b0,b1,b2,b3 = J.gens()
+ sage: b0*b0
+ b0
+ sage: b0*b1
+ b1
+ sage: b0*b2
+ b2
+ sage: b0*b3
+ b3
+ sage: b1*b2
0
- sage: e1*e3
+ sage: b1*b3
0
- sage: e2*e3
+ sage: b2*b3
0
We can change the generator prefix::
# But also don't pass check_field=False here, because the user
# can pass in a field!
- super(JordanSpinEJA, self).__init__(B, **kwargs)
+ super().__init__(B, **kwargs)
@staticmethod
def _max_random_instance_size():
if "orthonormalize" not in kwargs: kwargs["orthonormalize"] = False
if "check_axioms" not in kwargs: kwargs["check_axioms"] = False
- super(TrivialEJA, self).__init__(basis,
- jordan_product,
- inner_product,
- **kwargs)
+ super().__init__(basis,
+ jordan_product,
+ inner_product,
+ associative=True,
+ **kwargs)
+
# The rank is zero using my definition, namely the dimension of the
# largest subalgebra generated by any element.
self.rank.set_cache(0)
return cls(**kwargs)
-class DirectSumEJA(FiniteDimensionalEJA):
+class CartesianProductEJA(FiniteDimensionalEJA):
r"""
- The external (orthogonal) direct sum of two other Euclidean Jordan
- algebras. Essentially the Cartesian product of its two factors.
- Every Euclidean Jordan algebra decomposes into an orthogonal
- direct sum of simple Euclidean Jordan algebras, so no generality
- is lost by providing only this construction.
+ The external (orthogonal) direct sum of two or more Euclidean
+ Jordan algebras. Every Euclidean Jordan algebra decomposes into an
+ orthogonal direct sum of simple Euclidean Jordan algebras which is
+ then isometric to a Cartesian product, so no generality is lost by
+ providing only this construction.
SETUP::
sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import (random_eja,
+ ....: CartesianProductEJA,
....: HadamardEJA,
- ....: RealSymmetricEJA,
- ....: DirectSumEJA)
+ ....: JordanSpinEJA,
+ ....: RealSymmetricEJA)
- EXAMPLES::
+ EXAMPLES:
+
+ The Jordan product is inherited from our factors and implemented by
+ our CombinatorialFreeModule Cartesian product superclass::
+ sage: set_random_seed()
sage: J1 = HadamardEJA(2)
- sage: J2 = RealSymmetricEJA(3)
- sage: J = DirectSumEJA(J1,J2)
- sage: J.dimension()
- 8
+ sage: J2 = RealSymmetricEJA(2)
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: x,y = J.random_elements(2)
+ sage: x*y in J
+ True
+
+ The ability to retrieve the original factors is implemented by our
+ CombinatorialFreeModule Cartesian product superclass::
+
+ sage: J1 = HadamardEJA(2, field=QQ)
+ sage: J2 = JordanSpinEJA(3, field=QQ)
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: J.cartesian_factors()
+ (Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 2 over Rational Field,
+ Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 3 over Rational Field)
+
+ You can provide more than two factors::
+
+ sage: J1 = HadamardEJA(2)
+ sage: J2 = JordanSpinEJA(3)
+ sage: J3 = RealSymmetricEJA(3)
+ sage: cartesian_product([J1,J2,J3])
+ Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 2 over Algebraic Real
+ Field (+) Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 3 over Algebraic
+ Real Field (+) Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 6 over
+ Algebraic Real Field
+
+ Rank is additive on a Cartesian product::
+
+ sage: J1 = HadamardEJA(1)
+ sage: J2 = RealSymmetricEJA(2)
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: J1.rank.clear_cache()
+ sage: J2.rank.clear_cache()
+ sage: J.rank.clear_cache()
sage: J.rank()
- 5
- sage: J.matrix_space()
- The Cartesian product of (Full MatrixSpace of 2 by 1 dense matrices
- over Algebraic Real Field, Full MatrixSpace of 3 by 3 dense matrices
- over Algebraic Real Field)
+ 3
+ sage: J.rank() == J1.rank() + J2.rank()
+ True
+
+ The same rank computation works over the rationals, with whatever
+ basis you like::
+
+ sage: J1 = HadamardEJA(1, field=QQ, orthonormalize=False)
+ sage: J2 = RealSymmetricEJA(2, field=QQ, orthonormalize=False)
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: J1.rank.clear_cache()
+ sage: J2.rank.clear_cache()
+ sage: J.rank.clear_cache()
+ sage: J.rank()
+ 3
+ sage: J.rank() == J1.rank() + J2.rank()
+ True
+
+ The product algebra will be associative if and only if all of its
+ components are associative::
+
+ sage: J1 = HadamardEJA(2)
+ sage: J1.is_associative()
+ True
+ sage: J2 = HadamardEJA(3)
+ sage: J2.is_associative()
+ True
+ sage: J3 = RealSymmetricEJA(3)
+ sage: J3.is_associative()
+ False
+ sage: CP1 = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: CP1.is_associative()
+ True
+ sage: CP2 = cartesian_product([J1,J3])
+ sage: CP2.is_associative()
+ False
+
+ Cartesian products of Cartesian products work::
+
+ sage: J1 = JordanSpinEJA(1)
+ sage: J2 = JordanSpinEJA(1)
+ sage: J3 = JordanSpinEJA(1)
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,cartesian_product([J2,J3])])
+ sage: J.multiplication_table()
+ +----++----+----+----+
+ | * || b0 | b1 | b2 |
+ +====++====+====+====+
+ | b0 || b0 | 0 | 0 |
+ +----++----+----+----+
+ | b1 || 0 | b1 | 0 |
+ +----++----+----+----+
+ | b2 || 0 | 0 | b2 |
+ +----++----+----+----+
+ sage: HadamardEJA(3).multiplication_table()
+ +----++----+----+----+
+ | * || b0 | b1 | b2 |
+ +====++====+====+====+
+ | b0 || b0 | 0 | 0 |
+ +----++----+----+----+
+ | b1 || 0 | b1 | 0 |
+ +----++----+----+----+
+ | b2 || 0 | 0 | b2 |
+ +----++----+----+----+
TESTS:
- The external direct sum construction is only valid when the two factors
- have the same base ring; an error is raised otherwise::
+ All factors must share the same base field::
- sage: set_random_seed()
- sage: J1 = random_eja(field=AA)
- sage: J2 = random_eja(field=QQ,orthonormalize=False)
- sage: J = DirectSumEJA(J1,J2)
+ sage: J1 = HadamardEJA(2, field=QQ)
+ sage: J2 = RealSymmetricEJA(2)
+ sage: CartesianProductEJA((J1,J2))
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
- ValueError: algebras must share the same base field
+ ValueError: all factors must share the same base field
+
+ The cached unit element is the same one that would be computed::
+
+ sage: set_random_seed() # long time
+ sage: J1 = random_eja() # long time
+ sage: J2 = random_eja() # long time
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2]) # long time
+ sage: actual = J.one() # long time
+ sage: J.one.clear_cache() # long time
+ sage: expected = J.one() # long time
+ sage: actual == expected # long time
+ True
"""
- def __init__(self, J1, J2, **kwargs):
- if J1.base_ring() != J2.base_ring():
- raise ValueError("algebras must share the same base field")
- field = J1.base_ring()
-
- M = J1.matrix_space().cartesian_product(J2.matrix_space())
- self._cartprod_algebra = J1.cartesian_product(J2)
-
- self._matrix_basis = tuple( [M((a,0)) for a in J1.matrix_basis()] +
- [M((0,b)) for b in J2.matrix_basis()] )
-
- n = len(self._matrix_basis)
- self._sets = None
- CombinatorialFreeModule.__init__(
- self,
- field,
- range(n),
- category=self._cartprod_algebra.category(),
- bracket=False,
- **kwargs)
- self.rank.set_cache(J1.rank() + J2.rank())
+ Element = FiniteDimensionalEJAElement
+
+
+ def __init__(self, factors, **kwargs):
+ m = len(factors)
+ if m == 0:
+ return TrivialEJA()
+
+ self._sets = factors
+
+ field = factors[0].base_ring()
+ if not all( J.base_ring() == field for J in factors ):
+ raise ValueError("all factors must share the same base field")
+ associative = all( f.is_associative() for f in factors )
+ MS = self.matrix_space()
+ basis = []
+ zero = MS.zero()
+ for i in range(m):
+ for b in factors[i].matrix_basis():
+ z = list(zero)
+ z[i] = b
+ basis.append(z)
- def product(self,x,y):
+ basis = tuple( MS(b) for b in basis )
+
+ # Define jordan/inner products that operate on that matrix_basis.
+ def jordan_product(x,y):
+ return MS(tuple(
+ (factors[i](x[i])*factors[i](y[i])).to_matrix()
+ for i in range(m)
+ ))
+
+ def inner_product(x, y):
+ return sum(
+ factors[i](x[i]).inner_product(factors[i](y[i]))
+ for i in range(m)
+ )
+
+ # There's no need to check the field since it already came
+ # from an EJA. Likewise the axioms are guaranteed to be
+ # satisfied, unless the guy writing this class sucks.
+ #
+ # If you want the basis to be orthonormalized, orthonormalize
+ # the factors.
+ FiniteDimensionalEJA.__init__(self,
+ basis,
+ jordan_product,
+ inner_product,
+ field=field,
+ orthonormalize=False,
+ associative=associative,
+ cartesian_product=True,
+ check_field=False,
+ check_axioms=False)
+
+ ones = tuple(J.one().to_matrix() for J in factors)
+ self.one.set_cache(self(ones))
+ self.rank.set_cache(sum(J.rank() for J in factors))
+
+ def cartesian_factors(self):
+ # Copy/pasted from CombinatorialFreeModule_CartesianProduct.
+ return self._sets
+
+ def cartesian_factor(self, i):
r"""
+ Return the ``i``th factor of this algebra.
+ """
+ return self._sets[i]
+
+ def _repr_(self):
+ # Copy/pasted from CombinatorialFreeModule_CartesianProduct.
+ from sage.categories.cartesian_product import cartesian_product
+ return cartesian_product.symbol.join("%s" % factor
+ for factor in self._sets)
+
+ def matrix_space(self):
+ r"""
+ Return the space that our matrix basis lives in as a Cartesian
+ product.
+
SETUP::
- sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import (JordanSpinEJA,
- ....: ComplexHermitianEJA,
- ....: DirectSumEJA)
+ sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import (HadamardEJA,
+ ....: RealSymmetricEJA)
- TESTS::
+ EXAMPLES::
+
+ sage: J1 = HadamardEJA(1)
+ sage: J2 = RealSymmetricEJA(2)
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: J.matrix_space()
+ The Cartesian product of (Full MatrixSpace of 1 by 1 dense
+ matrices over Algebraic Real Field, Full MatrixSpace of 2
+ by 2 dense matrices over Algebraic Real Field)
+
+ """
+ from sage.categories.cartesian_product import cartesian_product
+ return cartesian_product( [J.matrix_space()
+ for J in self.cartesian_factors()] )
+
+ @cached_method
+ def cartesian_projection(self, i):
+ r"""
+ SETUP::
+
+ sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import (random_eja,
+ ....: JordanSpinEJA,
+ ....: HadamardEJA,
+ ....: RealSymmetricEJA,
+ ....: ComplexHermitianEJA)
+
+ EXAMPLES:
+
+ The projection morphisms are Euclidean Jordan algebra
+ operators::
+
+ sage: J1 = HadamardEJA(2)
+ sage: J2 = RealSymmetricEJA(2)
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: J.cartesian_projection(0)
+ Linear operator between finite-dimensional Euclidean Jordan
+ algebras represented by the matrix:
+ [1 0 0 0 0]
+ [0 1 0 0 0]
+ Domain: Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 2 over Algebraic
+ Real Field (+) Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 3 over
+ Algebraic Real Field
+ Codomain: Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 2 over Algebraic
+ Real Field
+ sage: J.cartesian_projection(1)
+ Linear operator between finite-dimensional Euclidean Jordan
+ algebras represented by the matrix:
+ [0 0 1 0 0]
+ [0 0 0 1 0]
+ [0 0 0 0 1]
+ Domain: Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 2 over Algebraic
+ Real Field (+) Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 3 over
+ Algebraic Real Field
+ Codomain: Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 3 over Algebraic
+ Real Field
+
+ The projections work the way you'd expect on the vector
+ representation of an element::
+
+ sage: J1 = JordanSpinEJA(2)
+ sage: J2 = ComplexHermitianEJA(2)
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: pi_left = J.cartesian_projection(0)
+ sage: pi_right = J.cartesian_projection(1)
+ sage: pi_left(J.one()).to_vector()
+ (1, 0)
+ sage: pi_right(J.one()).to_vector()
+ (1, 0, 0, 1)
+ sage: J.one().to_vector()
+ (1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1)
+
+ TESTS:
+
+ The answer never changes::
sage: set_random_seed()
- sage: J1 = JordanSpinEJA(3, field=QQ)
- sage: J2 = ComplexHermitianEJA(2, field=QQ, orthonormalize=False)
- sage: J = DirectSumEJA(J1,J2)
- sage: J.random_element()*J.random_element() in J
+ sage: J1 = random_eja()
+ sage: J2 = random_eja()
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: P0 = J.cartesian_projection(0)
+ sage: P1 = J.cartesian_projection(0)
+ sage: P0 == P1
True
"""
- xv = self._cartprod_algebra.from_vector(x.to_vector())
- yv = self._cartprod_algebra.from_vector(y.to_vector())
- return self.from_vector((xv*yv).to_vector())
+ offset = sum( self.cartesian_factor(k).dimension()
+ for k in range(i) )
+ Ji = self.cartesian_factor(i)
+ Pi = self._module_morphism(lambda j: Ji.monomial(j - offset),
+ codomain=Ji)
+ return FiniteDimensionalEJAOperator(self,Ji,Pi.matrix())
- def cartesian_factors(self):
+ @cached_method
+ def cartesian_embedding(self, i):
r"""
- Return the pair of this algebra's factors.
-
SETUP::
- sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import (HadamardEJA,
+ sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import (random_eja,
....: JordanSpinEJA,
- ....: DirectSumEJA)
+ ....: HadamardEJA,
+ ....: RealSymmetricEJA)
+
+ EXAMPLES:
+
+ The embedding morphisms are Euclidean Jordan algebra
+ operators::
+
+ sage: J1 = HadamardEJA(2)
+ sage: J2 = RealSymmetricEJA(2)
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: J.cartesian_embedding(0)
+ Linear operator between finite-dimensional Euclidean Jordan
+ algebras represented by the matrix:
+ [1 0]
+ [0 1]
+ [0 0]
+ [0 0]
+ [0 0]
+ Domain: Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 2 over
+ Algebraic Real Field
+ Codomain: Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 2 over
+ Algebraic Real Field (+) Euclidean Jordan algebra of
+ dimension 3 over Algebraic Real Field
+ sage: J.cartesian_embedding(1)
+ Linear operator between finite-dimensional Euclidean Jordan
+ algebras represented by the matrix:
+ [0 0 0]
+ [0 0 0]
+ [1 0 0]
+ [0 1 0]
+ [0 0 1]
+ Domain: Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 3 over
+ Algebraic Real Field
+ Codomain: Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 2 over
+ Algebraic Real Field (+) Euclidean Jordan algebra of
+ dimension 3 over Algebraic Real Field
+
+ The embeddings work the way you'd expect on the vector
+ representation of an element::
+
+ sage: J1 = JordanSpinEJA(3)
+ sage: J2 = RealSymmetricEJA(2)
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: iota_left = J.cartesian_embedding(0)
+ sage: iota_right = J.cartesian_embedding(1)
+ sage: iota_left(J1.zero()) == J.zero()
+ True
+ sage: iota_right(J2.zero()) == J.zero()
+ True
+ sage: J1.one().to_vector()
+ (1, 0, 0)
+ sage: iota_left(J1.one()).to_vector()
+ (1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0)
+ sage: J2.one().to_vector()
+ (1, 0, 1)
+ sage: iota_right(J2.one()).to_vector()
+ (0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1)
+ sage: J.one().to_vector()
+ (1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1)
+
+ TESTS:
+
+ The answer never changes::
+
+ sage: set_random_seed()
+ sage: J1 = random_eja()
+ sage: J2 = random_eja()
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: E0 = J.cartesian_embedding(0)
+ sage: E1 = J.cartesian_embedding(0)
+ sage: E0 == E1
+ True
+
+ Composing a projection with the corresponding inclusion should
+ produce the identity map, and mismatching them should produce
+ the zero map::
+
+ sage: set_random_seed()
+ sage: J1 = random_eja()
+ sage: J2 = random_eja()
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: iota_left = J.cartesian_embedding(0)
+ sage: iota_right = J.cartesian_embedding(1)
+ sage: pi_left = J.cartesian_projection(0)
+ sage: pi_right = J.cartesian_projection(1)
+ sage: pi_left*iota_left == J1.one().operator()
+ True
+ sage: pi_right*iota_right == J2.one().operator()
+ True
+ sage: (pi_left*iota_right).is_zero()
+ True
+ sage: (pi_right*iota_left).is_zero()
+ True
+
+ """
+ offset = sum( self.cartesian_factor(k).dimension()
+ for k in range(i) )
+ Ji = self.cartesian_factor(i)
+ Ei = Ji._module_morphism(lambda j: self.monomial(j + offset),
+ codomain=self)
+ return FiniteDimensionalEJAOperator(Ji,self,Ei.matrix())
- EXAMPLES::
- sage: J1 = HadamardEJA(2, field=QQ)
- sage: J2 = JordanSpinEJA(3, field=QQ)
- sage: J = DirectSumEJA(J1,J2)
- sage: J.cartesian_factors()
- (Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 2 over Rational Field,
- Euclidean Jordan algebra of dimension 3 over Rational Field)
-
- """
- return self._cartprod_algebra.cartesian_factors()
-
-
-# def projections(self):
-# r"""
-# Return a pair of projections onto this algebra's factors.
-
-# SETUP::
-
-# sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import (JordanSpinEJA,
-# ....: ComplexHermitianEJA,
-# ....: DirectSumEJA)
-
-# EXAMPLES::
-
-# sage: J1 = JordanSpinEJA(2)
-# sage: J2 = ComplexHermitianEJA(2)
-# sage: J = DirectSumEJA(J1,J2)
-# sage: (pi_left, pi_right) = J.projections()
-# sage: J.one().to_vector()
-# (1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1)
-# sage: pi_left(J.one()).to_vector()
-# (1, 0)
-# sage: pi_right(J.one()).to_vector()
-# (1, 0, 0, 1)
-
-# """
-# (J1,J2) = self.factors()
-# m = J1.dimension()
-# n = J2.dimension()
-# V_basis = self.vector_space().basis()
-# # Need to specify the dimensions explicitly so that we don't
-# # wind up with a zero-by-zero matrix when we want e.g. a
-# # zero-by-two matrix (important for composing things).
-# P1 = matrix(self.base_ring(), m, m+n, V_basis[:m])
-# P2 = matrix(self.base_ring(), n, m+n, V_basis[m:])
-# pi_left = FiniteDimensionalEJAOperator(self,J1,P1)
-# pi_right = FiniteDimensionalEJAOperator(self,J2,P2)
-# return (pi_left, pi_right)
-
-# def inclusions(self):
-# r"""
-# Return the pair of inclusion maps from our factors into us.
-
-# SETUP::
-
-# sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import (random_eja,
-# ....: JordanSpinEJA,
-# ....: RealSymmetricEJA,
-# ....: DirectSumEJA)
-
-# EXAMPLES::
-
-# sage: J1 = JordanSpinEJA(3)
-# sage: J2 = RealSymmetricEJA(2)
-# sage: J = DirectSumEJA(J1,J2)
-# sage: (iota_left, iota_right) = J.inclusions()
-# sage: iota_left(J1.zero()) == J.zero()
-# True
-# sage: iota_right(J2.zero()) == J.zero()
-# True
-# sage: J1.one().to_vector()
-# (1, 0, 0)
-# sage: iota_left(J1.one()).to_vector()
-# (1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0)
-# sage: J2.one().to_vector()
-# (1, 0, 1)
-# sage: iota_right(J2.one()).to_vector()
-# (0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1)
-# sage: J.one().to_vector()
-# (1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1)
-
-# TESTS:
-
-# Composing a projection with the corresponding inclusion should
-# produce the identity map, and mismatching them should produce
-# the zero map::
-
-# sage: set_random_seed()
-# sage: J1 = random_eja()
-# sage: J2 = random_eja()
-# sage: J = DirectSumEJA(J1,J2)
-# sage: (iota_left, iota_right) = J.inclusions()
-# sage: (pi_left, pi_right) = J.projections()
-# sage: pi_left*iota_left == J1.one().operator()
-# True
-# sage: pi_right*iota_right == J2.one().operator()
-# True
-# sage: (pi_left*iota_right).is_zero()
-# True
-# sage: (pi_right*iota_left).is_zero()
-# True
-
-# """
-# (J1,J2) = self.factors()
-# m = J1.dimension()
-# n = J2.dimension()
-# V_basis = self.vector_space().basis()
-# # Need to specify the dimensions explicitly so that we don't
-# # wind up with a zero-by-zero matrix when we want e.g. a
-# # two-by-zero matrix (important for composing things).
-# I1 = matrix.column(self.base_ring(), m, m+n, V_basis[:m])
-# I2 = matrix.column(self.base_ring(), n, m+n, V_basis[m:])
-# iota_left = FiniteDimensionalEJAOperator(J1,self,I1)
-# iota_right = FiniteDimensionalEJAOperator(J2,self,I2)
-# return (iota_left, iota_right)
-
-# def inner_product(self, x, y):
-# r"""
-# The standard Cartesian inner-product.
-
-# We project ``x`` and ``y`` onto our factors, and add up the
-# inner-products from the subalgebras.
-
-# SETUP::
-
-
-# sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import (HadamardEJA,
-# ....: QuaternionHermitianEJA,
-# ....: DirectSumEJA)
-
-# EXAMPLE::
-
-# sage: J1 = HadamardEJA(3,field=QQ)
-# sage: J2 = QuaternionHermitianEJA(2,field=QQ,orthonormalize=False)
-# sage: J = DirectSumEJA(J1,J2)
-# sage: x1 = J1.one()
-# sage: x2 = x1
-# sage: y1 = J2.one()
-# sage: y2 = y1
-# sage: x1.inner_product(x2)
-# 3
-# sage: y1.inner_product(y2)
-# 2
-# sage: J.one().inner_product(J.one())
-# 5
-
-# """
-# (pi_left, pi_right) = self.projections()
-# x1 = pi_left(x)
-# x2 = pi_right(x)
-# y1 = pi_left(y)
-# y2 = pi_right(y)
-
-# return (x1.inner_product(y1) + x2.inner_product(y2))
-
-
-
-random_eja = ConcreteEJA.random_instance
+
+FiniteDimensionalEJA.CartesianProduct = CartesianProductEJA
+
+class RationalBasisCartesianProductEJA(CartesianProductEJA,
+ RationalBasisEJA):
+ r"""
+ A separate class for products of algebras for which we know a
+ rational basis.
+
+ SETUP::
+
+ sage: from mjo.eja.eja_algebra import (JordanSpinEJA,
+ ....: RealSymmetricEJA)
+
+ EXAMPLES:
+
+ This gives us fast characteristic polynomial computations in
+ product algebras, too::
+
+
+ sage: J1 = JordanSpinEJA(2)
+ sage: J2 = RealSymmetricEJA(3)
+ sage: J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ sage: J.characteristic_polynomial_of().degree()
+ 5
+ sage: J.rank()
+ 5
+
+ """
+ def __init__(self, algebras, **kwargs):
+ CartesianProductEJA.__init__(self, algebras, **kwargs)
+
+ self._rational_algebra = None
+ if self.vector_space().base_field() is not QQ:
+ self._rational_algebra = cartesian_product([
+ r._rational_algebra for r in algebras
+ ])
+
+
+RationalBasisEJA.CartesianProduct = RationalBasisCartesianProductEJA
+
+def random_eja(*args, **kwargs):
+ J1 = ConcreteEJA.random_instance(*args, **kwargs)
+
+ # This might make Cartesian products appear roughly as often as
+ # any other ConcreteEJA.
+ if ZZ.random_element(len(ConcreteEJA.__subclasses__()) + 1) == 0:
+ # Use random_eja() again so we can get more than two factors.
+ J2 = random_eja(*args, **kwargs)
+ J = cartesian_product([J1,J2])
+ return J
+ else:
+ return J1