From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In mathematics , the tensor product of quadratic forms is most easily understood when one views the quadratic forms as quadratic spaces . If R is a commutative ring where 2 is invertible , and if
(
V
1
,
q
1
)
{\displaystyle (V_{1},q_{1})}
and
(
V
2
,
q
2
)
{\displaystyle (V_{2},q_{2})}
are two quadratic spaces over R , then their tensor product
(
V
1
⊗
V
2
,
q
1
⊗
q
2
)
{\displaystyle (V_{1}\otimes V_{2},q_{1}\otimes q_{2})}
is the quadratic space whose underlying R -module is the tensor product
V
1
⊗
V
2
{\displaystyle V_{1}\otimes V_{2}}
of R -modules and whose quadratic form is the quadratic form associated to the tensor product of the bilinear forms associated to
q
1
{\displaystyle q_{1}}
and
q
2
{\displaystyle q_{2}}
.
In particular, the form
q
1
⊗
q
2
{\displaystyle q_{1}\otimes q_{2}}
satisfies
(
q
1
⊗
q
2
)
(
v
1
⊗
v
2
)
=
q
1
(
v
1
)
q
2
(
v
2
)
∀
v
1
∈
V
1
,
v
2
∈
V
2
{\displaystyle (q_{1}\otimes q_{2})(v_{1}\otimes v_{2})=q_{1}(v_{1})q_{2}(v_{2})\quad \forall v_{1}\in V_{1},\ v_{2}\in V_{2}}
(which does uniquely characterize it however). It follows from this that if the quadratic forms are diagonalizable (which is always possible if 2 is invertible in R ), i.e.,
q
1
≅
⟨
a
1
,
.
.
.
,
a
n
⟩
{\displaystyle q_{1}\cong \langle a_{1},...,a_{n}\rangle }
q
2
≅
⟨
b
1
,
.
.
.
,
b
m
⟩
{\displaystyle q_{2}\cong \langle b_{1},...,b_{m}\rangle }
then the tensor product has diagonalization
q
1
⊗
q
2
≅
⟨
a
1
b
1
,
a
1
b
2
,
.
.
.
a
1
b
m
,
a
2
b
1
,
.
.
.
,
a
2
b
m
,
.
.
.
,
a
n
b
1
,
.
.
.
a
n
b
m
⟩
.
{\displaystyle q_{1}\otimes q_{2}\cong \langle a_{1}b_{1},a_{1}b_{2},...a_{1}b_{m},a_{2}b_{1},...,a_{2}b_{m},...,a_{n}b_{1},...a_{n}b_{m}\rangle .}