This section applies unchanged when the division ring is
commutative. More specific terminology then also applies: the division ring is a field, the anti-automorphism is also an automorphism, and the right module is a vector space. The following applies to a left module with suitable reordering of expressions.
Definition A
-sesquilinear form over a right -module is a
bi-additive map with an associated
anti-automorphism of a
division ring such that, for all in and all in , :\varphi(x \alpha, y \beta) = \sigma(\alpha) \, \varphi(x, y) \, \beta . The associated anti-automorphism for any nonzero sesquilinear form is uniquely determined by .
Orthogonality Given a sesquilinear form over a module and a subspace (
submodule) of , the
orthogonal complement of with respect to is :W^{\perp}=\{\mathbf{v} \in M \mid \varphi (\mathbf{v}, \mathbf{w})=0,\ \forall \mathbf{w}\in W\} . Similarly, is
orthogonal to with respect to , written (or simply if can be inferred from the context), when . This
relation need not be
symmetric, i.e. does not imply (but see '''' below).
Reflexivity A sesquilinear form is
reflexive if, for all in , :\varphi(x, y) = 0 implies \varphi(y, x) = 0. That is, a sesquilinear form is reflexive precisely when the derived orthogonality relation is symmetric.
Hermitian variations A -sesquilinear form is called
-Hermitian if there exists in such that, for all in , :\varphi(x, y) = \sigma ( \varphi (y, x)) \, \varepsilon . If , the form is called -
Hermitian, and if , it is called -
anti-Hermitian. (When is implied, respectively simply
Hermitian or
anti-Hermitian.) For a nonzero -Hermitian form, it follows that for all in , : \sigma ( \varepsilon ) = \varepsilon^{-1} : \sigma ( \sigma ( \alpha ) ) = \varepsilon \alpha \varepsilon^{-1} . It also follows that is a
fixed point of the map . The fixed points of this map form a
subgroup of the
additive group of . A -Hermitian form is reflexive, and every reflexive -sesquilinear form is -Hermitian for some . In the special case that is the
identity map (i.e., ), is commutative, is a bilinear form and . Then for the bilinear form is called
symmetric, and for is called
skew-symmetric.
i }}} of the vector space , a sesquilinear form on uniquely determines the matrix by: : \varphi (x, y) = x M_\varphi \sigma (y)^{\rm T}. --> V \times V^* \to F , where is the dual space of . -->
Example Let be the three dimensional vector space over the
finite field , where is a
prime power. With respect to the standard basis we can write and and define the map by: :\varphi(x, y) = x_1 y_1{}^q + x_2 y_2{}^q + x_3 y_3{}^q. The map is an
involutory automorphism of . The map is then a -sesquilinear form. The matrix associated to this form is the
identity matrix. This is a Hermitian form. ==In projective geometry==