Four-dimensional rotations are of two types: simple rotations and double rotations.
Simple rotations A simple rotation about a rotation centre leaves an entire plane through (axis-plane) fixed. Every plane that is
completely orthogonal to intersects in a certain point . For each such point is the centre of the 2D rotation induced by in . All these 2D rotations have the same rotation angle .
Half-lines from in the axis-plane are not displaced; half-lines from orthogonal to are displaced through ; all other half-lines are displaced through an angle less than .
Double rotations , in
stereographic projection, in
double rotation stereographically projected into 3D looks like a
torus, and a double rotation can be seen as a helical path on that torus. For a rotation whose two rotation angles have a rational ratio, the paths will eventually reconnect; while for an irrational ratio they will not. An isoclinic rotation will form a
Villarceau circle on the torus, while a simple rotation will form a circle parallel or perpendicular to the central axis. For each rotation of 4-space (fixing the origin), there is at least one pair of
orthogonal 2-planes and each of which is invariant and whose direct sum is all of 4-space. Hence operating on either of these planes produces an ordinary rotation of that plane. For almost all (all of the 6-dimensional set of rotations except for a 3-dimensional subset), the rotation angles in plane and in plane – both assumed to be nonzero – are different. The unequal rotation angles and satisfying , are almost{{efn|group=nb|Assuming that 4-space is oriented, then an orientation for each of the 2-planes and can be chosen to be consistent with this orientation of 4-space in two equally valid ways. If the angles from one such choice of orientations of and are {{math|{
α,
β}}}, then the angles from the other choice are {{math|{−
α, −
β}}}. (In order to measure a rotation angle in a 2-plane, it is necessary to specify an orientation on that 2-plane. A rotation angle of − is the same as one of +. If the orientation of 4-space is reversed, the resulting angles would be either {{math|{
α, −
β}}} or {{math|{−
α,
β}}}. Hence the absolute values of the angles are well-defined completely independently of any choices.)}} uniquely determined by . Assuming that 4-space is oriented, then the orientations of the 2-planes and can be chosen consistent with this orientation in two ways. If the rotation angles are unequal (), is sometimes termed a "double rotation". In that case of a double rotation, and are the only pair of invariant planes, and
half-lines from the origin in , are displaced through and respectively, and half-lines from the origin not in or are displaced through angles strictly between and .
Isoclinic rotations If the rotation angles of a double rotation are equal then there are infinitely many
invariant planes instead of just two, and all
half-lines from are displaced through the same angle. Such rotations are called
isoclinic or
equiangular rotations, or
Clifford displacements. Beware: not all planes through are invariant under isoclinic rotations; only planes that are spanned by a half-line and the corresponding displaced half-lines are invariant. Assuming that a fixed orientation has been chosen for 4-dimensional space, isoclinic 4D rotations may be put into two categories. To see this, consider an isoclinic rotation , and take an orientation-consistent ordered set of mutually perpendicular half-lines at (denoted as ) such that and span an invariant plane, and therefore and also span an invariant plane. Now assume that only the rotation angle is specified. Then there are in general four isoclinic rotations in planes and with rotation angle , depending on the rotation senses in and . We make the convention that the rotation senses from to and from to are reckoned positive. Then we have the four rotations , , and . and are each other's
inverses; so are and . As long as lies between 0 and , these four rotations will be distinct. Isoclinic rotations with like signs are denoted as
left-isoclinic; those with opposite signs as
right-isoclinic. Left- and right-isoclinic rotations are represented respectively by left- and right-multiplication by unit quaternions; see the paragraph "Relation to quaternions" below. The four rotations are pairwise different except if or . The angle corresponds to the identity rotation; corresponds to the
central inversion, given by the negative of the identity matrix. These two elements of SO(4) are the only ones that are simultaneously left- and right-isoclinic. Left- and right-isocliny defined as above seem to depend on which specific isoclinic rotation was selected. However, when another isoclinic rotation with its own axes , , , is selected, then one can always choose the
order of , , , such that can be transformed into by a rotation rather than by a rotation-reflection (that is, so that the ordered basis , , , is also consistent with the same fixed choice of orientation as , , , ). Therefore, once one has selected an orientation (that is, a system of axes that is universally denoted as right-handed), one can determine the left or right character of a specific isoclinic rotation.
Group structure of SO(4) SO(4) is a
noncommutative compact 6-
dimensional Lie group. Each plane through the rotation centre is the axis-plane of a
commutative subgroup isomorphic to SO(2). All these subgroups are mutually
conjugate in SO(4). Each pair of completely
orthogonal planes through is the pair of
invariant planes of a commutative subgroup of SO(4) isomorphic to . These groups are
maximal tori of SO(4), which are all mutually conjugate in SO(4). See also
Clifford torus. All left-isoclinic rotations form a noncommutative subgroup of SO(4), which is isomorphic to the
multiplicative group of unit
quaternions. All right-isoclinic rotations likewise form a subgroup of SO(4) isomorphic to . Both and are maximal subgroups of SO(4). Each left-isoclinic rotation
commutes with each right-isoclinic rotation. This implies that there exists a
direct product with
normal subgroups and ; both of the corresponding
factor groups are isomorphic to the other factor of the direct product, i.e. isomorphic to . (This is not SO(4) or a subgroup of it, because and are not disjoint: the identity and the central inversion each belong to both and .) Each 4D rotation is in two ways the product of left- and right-isoclinic rotations and . and are together determined up to the central inversion, i.e. when both and are multiplied by the central inversion their product is again. This implies that is the
universal covering group of SO(4) — its unique
double cover — and that and are normal subgroups of SO(4). The identity rotation and the central inversion form a group of order 2, which is the
centre of SO(4) and of both and . The centre of a group is a normal subgroup of that group. The factor group of C2 in SO(4) is isomorphic to SO(3) × SO(3). The factor groups of 3L by C2 and of 3R by C2 are each isomorphic to SO(3). Similarly, the factor groups of SO(4) by 3L and of SO(4) by 3R are each isomorphic to SO(3). The topology of SO(4) is the same as that of the Lie group , namely the space \mathbb{P}^3 \times \mathbb{S}^3 where \mathbb{P}^3 is the
real projective space of dimension 3 and \mathbb{S}^3 is the
3-sphere. However, it is noteworthy that, as a Lie group, SO(4) is not a direct product of Lie groups, and so it is not isomorphic to .
Special property of SO(4) among rotation groups in general The odd-dimensional rotation groups do not contain the central inversion and are
simple groups. The even-dimensional rotation groups do contain the central inversion and have the group {{nowrap|1=C2 = {, }}} as their
centre. For even n ≥ 6, SO(n) is almost simple in that the
factor group SO(n)/C2 of SO(n) by its center is a simple group. SO(4) is different: there is no
conjugation by any element of SO(4) that transforms left- and right-isoclinic rotations into each other.
Reflections transform a left-isoclinic rotation into a right-isoclinic one by conjugation, and vice versa. This implies that under the group O(4) of
all isometries with fixed point the distinct subgroups and are conjugate to each other, and so cannot be normal subgroups of O(4). The 5D rotation group SO(5) and all higher rotation groups contain subgroups isomorphic to O(4). Like SO(4), all even-dimensional rotation groups contain isoclinic rotations. But unlike SO(4), in SO(6) and all higher even-dimensional rotation groups any two isoclinic rotations through the same angle are conjugate. The set of all isoclinic rotations is not even a subgroup of SO(2), let alone a normal subgroup. ==Algebra of 4D rotations==