mnb96
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Hello,
I have recently started to study some Geometric Algebra.
I was wondering how should I interpret complex-vectors in \mathcal{C}^n in the framework of Geometric Algebra.
I understand already that a complex-scalar should be interpreted as an entity of the kind:
z = x + y (\textbf{e}_1 \wedge \textbf{e}_2)
where the imaginary-unit is instead the unit bi-vector in \mathcal{R}^2. Now for a real-vector in \mathcal{R}^n one would obviously have:
\textbf{x} = x_1 \textbf{e}_1 + \ldots + x_n \textbf{e}_n
But what would be the equivalent if x were instead complex?
I have recently started to study some Geometric Algebra.
I was wondering how should I interpret complex-vectors in \mathcal{C}^n in the framework of Geometric Algebra.
I understand already that a complex-scalar should be interpreted as an entity of the kind:
z = x + y (\textbf{e}_1 \wedge \textbf{e}_2)
where the imaginary-unit is instead the unit bi-vector in \mathcal{R}^2. Now for a real-vector in \mathcal{R}^n one would obviously have:
\textbf{x} = x_1 \textbf{e}_1 + \ldots + x_n \textbf{e}_n
But what would be the equivalent if x were instead complex?