Blade (geometry)
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blade_(geometry)
In the study of geometric algebras, a k-blade or a simple k-vector is a generalization of the concept of scalars and vectors to include simple bivectors, trivectors, etc. Specifically, a k-blade is a k-vector that can be expressed as the exterior product (informally wedge product) of 1-vectors, and is of grade k. In detail:
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Blade (geometry)
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In the study of geometric algebras, a k-blade or a simple k-vector is a generalization of the concept of scalars and vectors to include simple bivectors, trivectors, etc. Specifically, a k-blade is a k-vector that can be expressed as the exterior product (informally wedge product) of 1-vectors, and is of grade k. In detail:
* A 0-blade is a scalar.
* A 1-blade is a vector. Every vector is simple.
* A 2-blade is a simple bivector. Sums of 2-blades are also bivectors, but not always simple. A 2-blade may be expressed as the wedge product of two vectors a and b:
* A 3-blade is a simple trivector, that is, it may be expressed as the wedge product of three vectors a, b, and c:
* In a vector space of dimension n, a blade of grade n − 1 is called a pseudovector or an antivector.
* The highest grade element in a space is called a pseudoscalar, and in a space of dimension n is an n-blade.
* In a vector space of dimension n, there are k(n − k) + 1 dimensions of freedom in choosing a k-blade, of which one dimension is an overall scaling multiplier. A vector subspace of finite dimension k may be represented by the k-blade formed as a wedge product of all the elements of a basis for that subspace. Indeed, a k-blade is naturally equivalent to a k-subspace endowed with a volume form (an alternating k-multilinear scalar-valued function) normalized to take unit value on the k-blade.
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