The physical heritage of Sir W.R. Hamilton

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Publication:6468670

arXivmath-ph/0201058MaRDI QIDQ6468670FDOQ6468670


Authors: Andre Gsponer, Jean-Pierre Hurni Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 28 January 2002

Abstract: 150 years after the discovery of quaternions, Hamilton's conjecture that quaternions are a fundamental language for physics is reevaluated and shown to be essentially correct, provided one admits complex numbers in both classical and quantum physics, and accepts carrying along the intricacies of the relativistic formalism. Examples are shown in classical dynamics, electrodynamics, and quantum theory. Lanczos's, Einstein's, and Petiau's generalizations of Dirac's equation are shown to be very naturally formulated with biquaternions. The discussion of spin, isospin, and mass quantization is greatly facilitated. Compared with other formalisms, biquaternions have the advantage of giving compact but at the same time explicit formulas which are directly usable for algebraic or numerical calculations.













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