Rings often do not support division. Thus, the
commutator of two elements
a and
b of a ring (or any
associative algebra) is defined differently by : [a, b] = ab - ba. The commutator is zero if and only if
a and
b commute. In
linear algebra, if two
endomorphisms of a space are represented by commuting matrices in terms of one basis, then they are so represented in terms of every basis. By using the commutator as a
Lie bracket, every associative algebra can be turned into a
Lie algebra. The
anticommutator of two elements and of a ring or associative algebra is defined by : \{a, b\} = ab + ba. Sometimes [a,b]_+ is used to denote anticommutator, while [a,b]_- is then used for commutator. The anticommutator is used less often, but can be used to define
Clifford algebras and
Jordan algebras and in the derivation of the
Dirac equation in
particle physics. The commutator of two operators acting on a
Hilbert space is a central concept in
quantum mechanics, since it quantifies how well the two
observables described by these operators can be measured simultaneously. The
uncertainty principle is ultimately a theorem about such commutators, by virtue of the
Robertson–Schrödinger relation. In
phase space, equivalent commutators of function
star-products are called
Moyal brackets and are completely isomorphic to the Hilbert space commutator structures mentioned.
Identities (ring theory) The commutator has the following properties:
Lie-algebra identities • [A + B, C] = [A, C] + [B, C] • [A, A] = 0 • [A, B] = -[B, A] • [A, [B, C + [B, [C, A + [C, [A, B = 0 Relation (3) is called
anticommutativity, while (4) is the
Jacobi identity.
Additional identities • [A, BC] = [A, B]C + B[A, C] • [A, BCD] = [A, B]CD + B[A, C]D + BC[A, D] • [A, BCDE] = [A, B]CDE + B[A, C]DE + BC[A, D]E + BCD[A, E] • [AB, C] = A[B, C] + [A, C]B • [ABC, D] = AB[C, D] + A[B, D]C + [A, D]BC • [ABCD, E] = ABC[D, E] + AB[C, E]D + A[B, E]CD + [A, E]BCD • [A, B + C] = [A, B] + [A, C] • [A + B, C + D] = [A, C] + [A, D] + [B, C] + [B, D] • [AB, CD] = A[B, C]D + [A, C]BD + CA[B, D] + C[A, D]B =A[B, C]D + AC[B,D] + [A,C]DB + C[A, D]B • A, C], [B, D = [A, B], C], D] + [B, C], D], A] + [C, D], A], B] + [D, A], B], C] If is a fixed element of a ring
R, identity (1) can be interpreted as a
Leibniz rule for the map \operatorname{ad}_A: R \rightarrow R given by \operatorname{ad}_A(B) = [A, B]. In other words, the map ad
A defines a
derivation on the ring
R. Identities (2), (3) represent Leibniz rules for more than two factors, and are valid for any derivation. Identities (4)–(6) can also be interpreted as Leibniz rules. Identities (7), (8) express
Z-
bilinearity. From identity (9), one finds that the commutator of integer powers of ring elements is: : [A^N, B^M] = \sum_{n=0}^{N-1}\sum_{m=0}^{M-1} A^{n}B^{m} [A,B] B^{M-m-1}A^{N-n-1} = \sum_{n=0}^{N-1}\sum_{m=0}^{M-1} B^{m}A^{n} [A,B] A^{N-n-1}B^{M-m-1} Some of the above identities can be extended to the anticommutator using the above ± subscript notation. For example: • [AB, C]_\pm = A[B, C]_- + [A, C]_\pm B • [AB, CD]_\pm = A[B, C]_- D + AC[B, D]_- + [A, C]_- DB + C[A, D]_\pm B • A,B],[C,D=[B,C]_+,A]_+,D]-[B,D]_+,A]_+,C]+[A,D]_+,B]_+,C]-[A,C]_+,B]_+,D] • \left[A, [B, C]_\pm\right] + \left[B, [C, A]_\pm\right] + \left[C, [A, B]_\pm\right] = 0 • [A,BC]_\pm = [A,B]_- C + B[A,C]_\pm = [A,B]_\pm C \mp B[A,C]_- • [A,BC] = [A,B]_\pm C \mp B[A,C]_\pm
Exponential identities Consider a ring or algebra in which the
exponential e^A = \exp(A) = 1 + A + \tfrac{1}{2!}A^2 + \cdots can be meaningfully defined, such as a
Banach algebra or a ring of
formal power series. In such a ring,
Hadamard's lemma applied to nested commutators gives: e^A Be^{-A} \ =\ B + [A, B] + \frac{1}{2!}[A, [A, B + \frac{1}{3!}[A, [A, [A, B] + \cdots \ =\ e^{\operatorname{ad}_A}(B). (For the last expression, see
Adjoint derivation below.) This formula underlies the
Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff expansion of log(exp(
A) exp(
B)). A similar expansion expresses the group commutator of expressions e^A (analogous to elements of a
Lie group) in terms of a series of nested commutators (Lie brackets), e^A e^B e^{-A} e^{-B} = \exp\!\left( [A, B] + \frac{1}{2!}[A{+}B, [A, B + \frac{1}{3!} \left(\frac{1}{2} [A, [B, [B, A] + [A{+}B, [A{+}B, [A, B]\right) + \cdots\right). == Graded rings and algebras ==