The Sequence of Ideas in the Discovery of Quaternions Author(s): E. T. Whittaker Source: Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. Section A: Mathematical and Physical Sciences, Vol. 50 (1944/1945), pp. 93-98 Published by: Royal Irish Academy Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20520633 . Accessed: 27/02/2011 09:47 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at . http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=ria. . Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact
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Quaternion Centenary Celebration.
THl,E SEQUENCE
OF
IN THE
IDEAS
93
OF
DISCOVERY
QIJATE INIONS. BY E. T. WHITTAKER, Edinburg THE first communiication as printed how years but
later
said3
in the Tranisactions
that
then
uniits
13,
1843,l.
gives
the multi
aiiy
inidicatioln of
' lead Novemiiber
headed
for in July,
13, 1843,"
2
1846, Hamilton
of
for the Transactions
four
appeared
wlhieh
melmoir
be of later date:
"reservinig
to the Academy,
i, j, k, withiout
extenisive
is also
formii must
lie was a more
Academy
The
obtaiined.
in its published
by Hamiltoni
for November
for the qutaterinionic
they had been
made
oni quiaternions
in the Proceedings
plicatioiu-formulae
h University.
Irish
the Royal
anid systematic accouint of his researches on the I itself lie mleintions that some slheets of it were
comiplete
subject,"5 and in the memoir
the method
of
in that paper represents the hiistorical development For information ideas in his owIn mindi. this we regardinig miust depenid
of
being
printed
exposition
in Jtunie, 1847.
sources,
otlher
There
is thus nio assuraniee
that
adopted
particularly
the Letter
in the Ptilosophical
published October
17,
1843-the
to John
1'. Graves,
Esq.,
in Decemlber, 1844, Mag(azine after the actuial discovery-amid
day
which
but was the
on was
dated lengthy
Preface to the Lectures on Quateritiots, which is dated Jtune, 1853-nearly later-togetlher
teni years
with
in a commuinication
made
different
As
memoirs.
some of
harmnonise very well with which
must
occasion
be filled
of
Hamilton's
the
first aspect
centenary,
for
an
there attemnpt
11,
of Hamilton, 1844,' and in
niot at first sight
does
rest, and as there
in the Transactions . . are
QLiaternioils. and conception,
algebraic
Couples
Academy
in Novenmber,
seventeenth
the
the material
in by conjecture,
Life
on November, are
some gaps
is perhaps
to
seeni
in the story
justification,
on tlle
to trace
the
development
tells
that
"the
of
ideas.
The memoir respecting
givenii i Graves'
indicationis
to the Academy
volume
...
of 1848
to be considered of
a continuation
wlhich 1833,
were
first
and were
as being, those
T'his
R.I.A.,
*Proc. 5Proc.
R.I.A., R.I A.,
3(1846), 3 (1846),
276.
3 (1844-45),
296. 1-16.
researches
least
in their
concerning
to the Royal
in the year
latter
iProc. 2 (1843), 423-434. R.I.A., 3Trans. 21 (1848), 199-296. R.I.A.,
at
speculations
comnmuniicated puiblished
of its Transactions."
3Proc.
us
1835,
is ani algebraic
Irish in the paper,
94
Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy.
in which
e.g. the comnplex number
couple"
+
b /-
1
. (a,,
b2)
1848 memoir
=
a)
follows
-
(bQ a,
this up by
as a " numnber
is regarded
-
(a, b) with themultiplication-law
(b1, The
a
b
b2 a2,
initroducing
b, a2)
+
a,
in a purely
quaternionis
algebraic fashion, defining the units i, j, leby means of substitutions. But is evidence
there
that
this was
not
In 1844 Hamilton
discovered.
led " him " to conceive
the way
in which
had
they
been
told the Academy that "what originally of quiaternions
his theory
. . .was his desire
to fornm to
himself a distinct conception . . . of a fourth proportional to three rectangular of those lines were takeii into account: as lines, when the DIRECTIONS Mr. Warner
and Dr.
Peacock
had
shown
how
and
to conceive
the
express
fourth proportional to any three lines having direction buit situiated in one common plane." "The first conjecture,"he says," " respecting geometrical triplets, which
I find noted
among my
papers
(so lon)g agro as 1830) was,
that
while lines in spacemight be added according to the same rule as in the plane, they rniht be multiplied by multiplying their lengths, and adding their polar angles. if we write Now
In the method
then as that of Mr. Warren,
to me
known
. . ." the Rev.
John Warren,
A.M., was
a Fellow
and Tutor
of Jesus
who had ptublished in 1828 a book A lTreatiseon the College, Camrrbridge, qf the Square
Geomtetr-ical Representation
Boots
of Nlegative
it was
Quantities:
essentially a description and elaboration of what to-day is called the Argand diagram,
representing
the complex
a + b /-
number
1
by a vector whose
rectanigular components are (a, b). From the above extracts it is evident that Hamilton that already
had
read
this work
in 1830-three
almost
years before
as soon as it was
and
published,
the date of the memoir
oni algebra
it had suggested to him the problem ofmultiplying together two vectors in three-dimensional space. In 1834 and 1835 he devised a "general theory of triplets":
: and
"there was,"
he says,8 "a motive
which
induced me
then
to
attach a special importance to the consideration of triplets . . . This was tlle desire to correct, in some inew and useful (or at least interesting) way, calculation with geometry, through some unidiscovered extension, to space of three dimensions,
of a method
or represenitation,
of construction
which
had
been employed with success by Mr. Warren." The maticians,
and
the brothers
by The 6
was
problem
various John
final and successful
Preface
to Liotu
res
(39).
very
inuch
attempts
in
at a solutioni
and Charles attack
the minds were
Graves
and
by Hamiiilton
must
7Preface
to Lectures
of contemporary made
by Augustus
about
matlhe this
now be described.
(20),
(23).
time
De Morgan.
8 Ibid.
(31).
95
Qu*aternionCentenary Celebration.
In the Argand representation of a vector in a plane by an ordinary complex quanitity, the multiplication of vectors is deterninied by the algebraical formula 2
where
(x +
iy) (x'
+
X
= xx'
- yy',
= - 1,
i y')
=
+
X
jY
= xy'? fx'y
Y
Now the formiiulafor themnultiplication of determinants9 gives x 2 ++y2
xx'-yy'
- yy'
xx'
or
xt2
-y -
+
(1)
g,'
J'2 + y
(x + y2)(X2` + y2)j
(2)
so (xA + y2) i is the nodaluts of mucltiplication, i.e. the funietion which, in the product, has the same value as the product of the corresponding fuinctioinsof the factors. In 1843 Hamilton, abandoninig his previous notatioin, proposed to repre senit a vector
in three-dimensional
are enitities such that
x + i y + jz,
space by
j2 _ j2
1
i and j
where
(3)
_
their other properties being as yet undetermiinied. A second vector wouild be
then
represented
by
+
x'
i y' + jz',
and
obvious
the
(1) is a case of (Cauchy's theorem on the multiplication namely, Ix2+y2+Z2
x
xx'-yyj-z'
I
+t
-
+y
X +y2
| Z2
2
-y t
XJ
x
analogue
of
of two arrays, 2
-z
y
2
z
,
x
or (X2 + y2
+ z2)(X'2
+ y'2
+ Z'2)
=
(X'
_ yy'
+
(ry'
+ x'y)2
-
=t)2 (X i + X'Z)
+
+
yz)2
(yZ'
T'he left-hand side of this equation is the product of the squares of the moduli of multiplication of the two vectors, but the right-hand side containis foutr, not
three, squtares.
that
the
their
description
operation vector
geometrical which
J, we
not wheni
see that
the ratio of the leingths
on
Pondering of
operatioins triplets
but
performed in order of a and
this, however, three-dimensional
qtiadruplets:
for if we a converts
to specify
betweeil
consider
e.g.
for the
it into another need
to know
them, and
the node
this operation,
j3, the angle
requir ed
space
on one vector
to see
came
Hamilton
we
The determinantal theorems here quoted had long been known, though the notation now used for determinants had been introduced only two years previously by Cayley, and Hamilton does
not
refer
to it in this
connexion.
I use
it here
because
it brings
analogies which, as I believe, determined the course of Hamilton's thought.
into
prominence
the
96
Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy.
and
of
inclination
altogether:
the
plane
he was
thus
in which
prepared
they
lie-that
to accept
is, fouir nuimbers (4) as
equation
the equiation
giving themodulus of multiplication of the product of two vectors. we have on multiplying
Now
+
(x + jy + jz)(x
out
= (xx' - yy' - zz')
*y + yz)
+
us compare
Let
(5) with
? j
+ 4'y)
i (x'
It appears
(4).
+ x'z)
(xz'
from
+ {jyz'
+
(5)
jizy'.
(5) thiat the equiation
for
themodulus of multiplication of the two vectors, whiclh on the left-hand side of
consists
side
on the right-hand + x'y),
(x,y'
(A2 + yt
the product the
with
order
this
(4) that
to obtaini
last
the creative
lt began
which
Boole's
matrices,
whichi
process broke
for
k
i j,
(A2 +
z2)(X'2
iy
-+ jz)(x'
in
synmbolism.
Cayley
but all tihe
and Sylvester's Gibbs'
Ausdehnungslelhre,
of qualntum-mechanics.
algebra
we have
(4) and
y2 +
and
have
quaterniomis,
rules-
Grassumaiui's
logic,
= -t
ij and the equations
2
y'z)
of mathematical
not only
yielded
'dyadics, and the Heisenberg-Dirac Writinag
of
which
it appears from the
we niust clearly
from the old
away
symbolic
square
(y z' -
be
in the history
the suipremiie moinent
othler systems
anid another
. But
have
muist
the square
= - Al.
ji This was
z y',
Z' 2),
zz' )
-
y'
square must
ij y z' + ji
this from
-y
ij y Z' + 5 i Z
corresponds to the terms comparison
xx'
(x z' + x'z),
of'-
square
+ y' 2 +
+ z2) (/2
the sqtuare of
i
(6)
(5) can now be written
+ y'2
+ z2) 2
X22
+ jz')
= X
+ Y2
+ Z2
* W2
(4a)
iY
+ jZ
kW
(5a)
where (x
+
From
(3) and
ij2 =
2
+
iy'
(6) we cani deduce
42 -I
+
the
immediately
fundameintal
jkk -
j j=i
i
equations
-kj,
(7)
15 - 5 = - i/c Hamilton
now made
a fresh start, writing w
At
one time he thought
prevailed. the equations
+
ix
of calling
+ jy
the quiadriiionoial + kz.
it a grammarithm,
The multiplication-theorem (7), and the new science
but
for quaternions is founded.
the iname quaternion follows
at once
from
Qutaternion Centenary Celebration.
97
The difficulties regarding triplets, which so long baffledHamilton; 10were solved in an entirely different way by De Morgan,"' whose triple algebra is not without interest. As we have seen, Hamilton had laid down the condition that the mnodulus of multiplication of the triplet a + hi + ej be
should
(a2 + bh +
el) I .
It
is certain
'that there
be a systenm
cannot
of triple algebra with this modulus: for the problem of finding three squares in which accented and unaccented letters enter symmetrically, and of which
the sum
showni
to be
sphere,
each
is equal
equivalent
(a2 +
to
to
the
b" + c'2),
'I)(a'2+ of
problem
is antipodal
of wlhich
b2 +
to both
three
finding
the other
can
points
be
on
a
two.
It is, however, not necessary that the modulus should be a symmetric function
of a, b, c, anid De Morgan
systeims
of triple algebra
laws
are
obeyed.
showed
can be devised
Thus,
the
denoting
if this condition
that, in which triplet
all
a + bi
by
is dropped,
the ordinary
algebraic
+ aj,
if we
impose the rules p 4
J
jt
the formuila for the prodctit
then
of two triplets
of multiplication
moduluis
1,
jJJ=
is
= (bh' + cb' + aa') + (ah' + ba' - cc') i + (ac' + ca' - bb')j.
(a + bi + cj) (a' + b'i + cj)
The
,
=
(a? +
is
b2 + c2 + ab
+ ac
- bc)t
if
for A
=
we have
+c?ba
bc'
B
taa'a
=
+
ab'
- CaC'
ba'
C
=
ac'
+
ca'
hb',
the identity
(a2 + b6 + a2+ ab + ac - bc) (a"' + b2 + a'2 + a'b' + a'c' - Y'a') = A2+B2+
For
C2+AB+AC-BC.
this system the associative, commutative, anld distributive laws are
all valid.
Anothier
of De Morgan's
proposal
was
to retain
and distributive, but to surrenider the associative law; instance with
the triplet
a + i2
10 William
=
b i + Cj j2
=
(aged 9) and Archibald Henry " Whereto be was obliged you multiply triplets can only add and subtract them."?Graves' life. Edwin
?
11Trans.
Camb. Phil
Soc,
* (1844),
241.
=j
if we
impose
the commutative
this happens for
the rules
I
" Well, (8) used to ask at breakfast, Papa, can to reply with a sad shake of the head, " No, I
98
Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy.
Since
is not equal
(ii)j
to
i (ij),
the associative
law does not hold.
We
should now have for the product of two triplets (a +
bi +
cj)(a'
=
+ <'j)
+ b'i
Iaa'
-
(b + c)(b'
The modulus of imultiplication is i (b + c)2
at
a!2 +
t 07)
(6'
-
+
+ c')
+ ba')i
(ab'
4
(ac'
+
ca')].
{(a2+ (b + c)'J : for we have identically -
'aa'
+ c'))t
(b + c)(b'
+ (ab'
+ ba'
+ ac' +
ra'.
De Morgani discussed the geometrical initerpretation of his algebras; but it
is not
as
that
in principle,
as
so simple
advantages
long afterwards)
(discovered
of quaternions.
that
that the only
have
quaternions
Moreover,
instance
fol
inidicated
by
linear associative
the
algebras
theorem over
the
field of real numbers in which division is uniquely possible are the field of real numbers, the field of ordiinary complex numbers, and real quaternions. In the competition of systems, Hamilton's survived as the fittest; and its rivals are now forgotten.
QUATERNIONS AND MATRICES. By A. W.
CONWAY,
University College, Dublini. Introduction. Tim
term matrices
was
first
used
in a paper
by Cayley
in French
in
Crelle's Journal (1855). A formal presentation of some of the principal mnatrix properties was given by him later in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society (1855). Many properties were previously known to Hamilton. In his lectures on Quaternions (1853) he published the fact
that a matrix
a cubic.
Cayley
inferred
that
quaternion
satisfied
proved
it must
as a matrix
a certain symbolical in this case equation, this for the case of a quadratic and a cubie and
be true
in general.
IVM+
1 .e.
w
V
O0
0t
1 )
V O
y
i .t
e-0 y
C. S. Peirce
ax +
w +
thus
-
J
yz
i
t
expressed
is equivalent
1
+ t
1
0 )
i) z
a to
-iz
iz0 O0/
(1881)
/3 y +
z 0
i\
i
0)