Inversion with respect to the origin corresponds to
additive inversion of the position vector, and also to
scalar multiplication by −1. The operation commutes with every other
linear transformation, but not with
translation: it is in the
center of the
general linear group. "Inversion" without indicating "in a point", "in a line" or "in a plane", means this inversion; in physics 3-dimensional reflection through the origin is also called a
parity transformation. In mathematics,
reflection through the origin refers to the point reflection of
Euclidean space Rn across the
origin of the
Cartesian coordinate system. Reflection through the origin is an
orthogonal transformation corresponding to
scalar multiplication by -1, and can also be written as -I, where I is the
identity matrix. In three dimensions, this sends (x, y, z) \mapsto (-x, -y, -z), and so forth.
Representations As a
scalar matrix, it is represented in every basis by a matrix with -1 on the diagonal, and, together with the identity, is the
center of the
orthogonal group O(n). It is a product of
n orthogonal reflections (reflection through the axes of any
orthogonal basis); note that orthogonal reflections commute. In 2 dimensions, it is in fact rotation by 180 degrees, and in dimension 2n, it is rotation by 180 degrees in
n orthogonal planes; note again that rotations in orthogonal planes commute.
Properties It has determinant (-1)^n (from the representation by a matrix or as a product of reflections). Thus it is orientation-preserving in even dimension, thus an element of the
special orthogonal group SO(2
n), and it is orientation-reversing in odd dimension, thus not an element of SO(2
n + 1) and instead providing a
splitting of the map O(2n+1) \to \pm 1, showing that O(2n + 1) = SO(2n + 1) \times \{\pm I\} as an
internal direct product. • Together with the identity, it forms the
center of the
orthogonal group. • It preserves every quadratic form, meaning Q(-v) = Q(v), and thus is an element of every
indefinite orthogonal group as well. • It equals the identity if and only if the characteristic is 2. • It is the
longest element of the
Coxeter group of
signed permutations. Analogously, it is a longest element of the orthogonal group, with respect to the generating set of reflections: elements of the orthogonal group all have
length at most
n with respect to the generating set of reflections, and reflection through the origin has length
n, though it is not unique in this: other maximal combinations of rotations (and possibly reflections) also have maximal length.
Geometry In SO(2
r), reflection through the origin is the farthest point from the identity element with respect to the usual metric. In O(2
r + 1), reflection through the origin is not in SO(2
r+1) (it is in the non-identity component), and there is no natural sense in which it is a "farther point" than any other point in the non-identity component, but it does provide a
base point in the other component.
Clifford algebras and spin groups It should
not be confused with the element -1 \in \mathrm{Spin}(n) in the
spin group. This is particularly confusing for even spin groups, as -I \in SO(2n), and thus in \operatorname{Spin}(n) there is both -1 and 2 lifts of -I. Reflection through the identity extends to an automorphism of a
Clifford algebra, called the
main involution or
grade involution. Reflection through the identity lifts to a
pseudoscalar. ==See also==