Maths - Quaternion Notations

There are a number of notations and ways to think about quaternions:

1

We usually denote quaternions as entities with the form:

a + i b + j c + k d

Where a,b,c and d are scalar values and i,j and k are 'imaginary operators' which define how the scalar values combine. This is how we introduced them on this page.

2 We can see that the above notation is a superset of complex numbers with two additional imaginary values.
3

We can think of quaternions as an element consisting of a scalar number together with a 3 dimensional vector. In other words we have combined the 3 imaginary values into a vector. We could denote it like this:

(s,v)

4 As the product of two independent complex planes.
5 As a special case of a clifford algebra
6 As a division of vectors
7 'Euler Parameters' which are just quaternions but with a different notation. It is shown as four numbers separated by commas instead of the usual notation with the imaginary parts denoted with i, j and k. 
 
Euler Parameters tends to be used in older textbooks, I don't think its used much these days.

When we are using quaternions to represent rotations in 3 dimensions, then we restrict the quaternions to unit length and only use the multiplication operator, in this case there are other notations and ways to think about quaternions:

1 As a quantity similar to axis-angle except that real part is equal to cos(angle/2) and the complex part is made up of the axis vector times sin(angle/2).
2 As a 2x2 matrix whose elements are complex numbers, generated by Pauli matrices.
3 As the equivalent of a unit radius sphere in 4 dimensions.
4 As a spinor in 3 dimensions.
5 These are all equivalent and in group theory are represented by the group SU(2).
6 The group generated by H = <a,b | a² = b² = (ab)²>
7 Even when normalised, there is still some redundancy when used for 3D rotations, in that the quaternions a + i b + j c + k d represents the same rotation as -a - i b - j c - k d. At least it does in classical mechanics. However in quantum mechanics a + i b + j c + k d and -a - i b - j c - k d represent different spins for particles, so a particle has to rotate through 720° instead of 360° to get back where it started.

metadata block
see also:

 

Correspondence about this page

Book Shop - Further reading.

Where I can, I have put links to Amazon for books that are relevant to the subject, click on the appropriate country flag to get more details of the book or to buy it from them.

 

cover us uk de jp fr ca Quaternions and Rotation Sequences.

Terminology and Notation

Specific to this page here:

 

This site may have errors. Don't use for critical systems.

Copyright (c) 1998-2023 Martin John Baker - All rights reserved - privacy policy.