In
mathematical physics, the Dirac algebra is the
Clifford algebra
In mathematics, a Clifford algebra is an algebra generated by a vector space with a quadratic form, and is a unital associative algebra. As -algebras, they generalize the real numbers, complex numbers, quaternions and several other hyperc ...
. This was introduced by the mathematical physicist
P. A. M. Dirac
Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac (; 8 August 1902 – 20 October 1984) was an English theoretical physicist who is regarded as one of the most significant physicists of the 20th century. He was the Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at the Univer ...
in 1928 in developing the
Dirac equation for
spin-½ particles with a matrix representation of the
gamma matrices, which represent the generators of the algebra.
The gamma matrices are a set of four
matrices
with entries in
, that is, elements of
, satisfying
:
where by convention, an identity matrix has been suppressed on the right-hand side. The numbers
are the components of the
Minkowski metric.
For this article we fix the signature to be ''mostly minus'', that is,
.
The Dirac algebra is then the linear span of the identity, the gamma matrices
as well as any linearly independent products of the gamma matrices. This forms a finite-dimensional
algebra over the field
or
, with dimension
.
Basis for the algebra
The algebra has a basis
:
:
:
:
:
where in each expression, each greek index is increasing as we move to the right. In particular, there is no repeated index in the expressions. By dimension counting, the dimension of the algebra is 16.
The algebra can be generated by taking products of the
alone: the identity arises as
:
while the others are explicitly products of the
.
These elements span the space generated by
. We conclude that we really do have a basis of the Clifford algebra generated by the
Quadratic powers and Lorentz algebra
For the theory in this section, there are many choices of conventions found in the literature, often corresponding to factors of
. For clarity, here we will choose conventions to minimise the number of numerical factors needed, but may lead to generators being anti-Hermitian rather than Hermitian.
There is another common way to write the quadratic subspace of the Clifford algebra:
: