Anticommutativity

In mathematics, anticommutativity is the property of an operation with two or more arguments wherein swapping the position of any two arguments negates the result. Anticommutative operations are widely used in algebra, geometry, mathematical analysis and, as a consequence, in physics: they are often called antisymmetric operations.

Definition

An -ary operation is anticommutative if swapping the order of any two arguments negates the result. For example, a binary operation ∗ is anti-commutative if for all x and y,

xy = −(yx).

More formally, a map from the set of all n-tuples of elements in a set A (where n is a non-negative integer) to a group is anticommutative if and only if

where is an arbitrary permutation of the set (n) of the first n positive integers and is its sign. This equality expresses the following concept:

Note that this is an abuse of notation, since the codomain of the operation needs only to be a group: "−1" does not have a precise meaning since a multiplication is not necessarily defined on .

Particularly important is the case n = 2. A binary operation is anticommutative if and only if

This means that x1x2 is the inverse of the element x2x1 in .

Properties

If the group is such that

i.e. the only element equal to its inverse is the neutral element, then for all the ordered tuples such that for at least two different index

In the case this means

Examples

Examples of anticommutative binary operations include:

See also

References

External links

Look up anticommutativity in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

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