- Polarization of an algebraic form
In
mathematics , in particular inalgebra , polarization is a technique for expressing ahomogeneous polynomial in a simpler fashion by adjoining more variables. Specifically, given a homogeneous polynomial, polarization produces amultilinear form from which the original polynomial can be recovered by evaluating along a certain diagonal.Although the technique is deceptively simple, it has applications in many areas of abstract mathematics: in particular to
algebraic geometry ,invariant theory , andrepresentation theory . Polarization and related techniques form the foundations forWeyl's invariant theory .The technique
The fundamental ideas are as follows. Let "f"(u) be a polynomial of "n" variables u = ("u"1, "u"2, ..., "u"n). Suppose that "f" is homogeneous of degree "d", which means that:"f"("t" u) = "t""d" "f"(u) for all "t".
Let u(1), u(2), ..., u(d) be a collection of
indeterminate s with u(i) = ("u"1(i), "u"2(i), ..., "u"n(i)), so that there are "dn" variables altogether. The polar form of "f" is a polynomial:"F"(u(1), u(2), ..., u(d))which is linear separately in each u(i) (i.e., "F" is multilinear), symmetric among the u(i), and such that:"F"(u,u, ..., u)="f"(u).The polar form of "f" is given by the following construction:In other words, "F" is a constant multiple of the coefficient of λ1 λ2...λd in the expansion of "f"(λ1u(1) + ... + λdu(d)).
Examples
*Suppose that x=("x","y") and "f"(x) is the
quadratic form :.Then the polarization of "f" is a function in x(1) = ("x"(1), "y"(1)) and x(2) = ("x"(2), "y"(2)) given by:*More generally, if "f" is any quadratic form, then the polarization of "f" agrees with the conclusion of the
polarization identity .*A cubic example. Let "f"("x","y")="x"3 + 2"xy"2. Then the polarization of "f" is given by:
Mathematical details and consequences
The polarization of a homogeneous polynomial of degree "d" is valid over any
commutative ring in which "d"! is a unit. In particular, it holds over any field ofcharacteristic zero or whose characteristic is strictly greater than "d".The polarization isomorphism (by degree)
For simplicity, let "k" be a field of characteristic zero and let "A"="k" [x] be the
polynomial ring in "n" variables over "k". Then "A" is graded by degree, so that:The polarization of algebraic forms then induces an isomorphism of vector spaces in each degree:where "Sym""d" is the "d"-thsymmetric power of the "n"-dimensional space "k"n.These isomorphisms can be expressed independently of a basis as follows. If "V" is a finite-dimensional vector space and "A" is the ring of "k"-valued polynomial functions on "V", graded by homogeneous degree, then polarization yields an isomorphism:
The algebraic isomorphism
Furthermore, the polarization is compatible with the algebraic structure on "A", so that:where "Sym"."V"* is the full
symmetric algebra over "V"*.Remarks
* For fields of
positive characteristic "p", the foregoing isomorphisms apply if the graded algebras are truncated at degree "p"-1.
* There do exist generalizations when "V" is an infinite dimensionaltopological vector space .
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