Pfister form
Quadratic form
title: "Pfister form" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["quadratic-forms"] description: "Quadratic form" topic_path: "general/quadratic-forms" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pfister_form" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Quadratic form ::
In mathematics, a Pfister form is a particular kind of quadratic form, introduced by Albrecht Pfister in 1965. In what follows, quadratic forms are considered over a field F of characteristic not 2. For a natural number n, an n-fold Pfister form over F is a quadratic form of dimension 2n that can be written as a tensor product of quadratic forms
:\langle!\langle a_1, a_2, \ldots , a_n \rangle!\rangle \cong \langle 1, -a_1 \rangle \otimes \langle 1, -a_2 \rangle \otimes \cdots \otimes \langle 1, -a_n \rangle,
for some nonzero elements a1, ..., a**n of F. (Some authors omit the signs in this definition; the notation here simplifies the relation to Milnor K-theory, discussed below.) An n-fold Pfister form can also be constructed inductively from an (n−1)-fold Pfister form q and a nonzero element a of F, as q \oplus (-a)q.
So the 1-fold and 2-fold Pfister forms look like:
:\langle!\langle a\rangle!\rangle\cong \langle 1, -a \rangle = x^2 - ay^2. :\langle!\langle a,b\rangle!\rangle\cong \langle 1, -a, -b, ab \rangle = x^2 - ay^2 - bz^2 + abw^2.
For n ≤ 3, the n-fold Pfister forms are norm forms of composition algebras. In that case, two n-fold Pfister forms are isomorphic if and only if the corresponding composition algebras are isomorphic. In particular, this gives the classification of octonion algebras.
The n-fold Pfister forms additively generate the n-th power I n of the fundamental ideal of the Witt ring of F.
Characterizations
A quadratic form q over a field F is multiplicative if, for vectors of indeterminates x and y, we can write q(x).q(y) = q(z) for some vector z of rational functions in the x and y over F. Isotropic quadratic forms are multiplicative. For anisotropic quadratic forms, Pfister forms are multiplicative, and conversely.
For n-fold Pfister forms with n ≤ 3, this had been known since the 19th century; in that case z can be taken to be bilinear in x and y, by the properties of composition algebras. It was a remarkable discovery by Pfister that n-fold Pfister forms for all n are multiplicative in the more general sense here, involving rational functions. For example, he deduced that for any field F and any natural number n, the set of sums of 2n squares in F is closed under multiplication, using that the quadratic form x_1^2 +\cdots + x_{2^n}^2 is an n-fold Pfister form (namely, \langle!\langle -1, \ldots , -1 \rangle!\rangle).
Another striking feature of Pfister forms is that every isotropic Pfister form is in fact hyperbolic, that is, isomorphic to a direct sum of copies of the hyperbolic plane \langle 1, -1 \rangle. This property also characterizes Pfister forms, as follows: If q is an anisotropic quadratic form over a field F, and if q becomes hyperbolic over every extension field E such that q becomes isotropic over E, then q is isomorphic to aφ for some nonzero a in F and some Pfister form φ over F.
Connection with ''K''-theory
Let k**n(F) be the n-th Milnor K-group modulo 2. There is a homomorphism from k**n(F) to the quotient I**n/I**n+1 in the Witt ring of F, given by
: {a_1,\ldots,a_n} \mapsto \langle!\langle a_1, a_2, \ldots , a_n \rangle!\rangle ,
where the image is an n-fold Pfister form. The homomorphism is surjective, since the Pfister forms additively generate I**n. One part of the Milnor conjecture, proved by Orlov, Vishik and Voevodsky, states that this homomorphism is in fact an isomorphism k**n(F) ≅ I**n/I**n+1. That gives an explicit description of the abelian group I**n/I**n+1 by generators and relations. The other part of the Milnor conjecture, proved by Voevodsky, says that k**n(F) (and hence I**n/I**n+1) maps isomorphically to the Galois cohomology group H**n(F, F2).
Pfister neighbors
A Pfister neighbor is an anisotropic form σ which is isomorphic to a subform of aφ for some nonzero a in F and some Pfister form φ with dim φ /(F)2 is trivial. A field F has the property that every 5-dimensional anisotropic form over F is a Pfister neighbor if and only if it is a linked field.
Notes
References
- , Ch. 10
References
- Elman, Karpenko, Merkurjev (2008), section 9.B.
- Lam (2005) p. 316
- Lam (2005) p. 324
- Lam (2005) p. 325
- Lam (2005) p. 319
- Elman, Karpenko, Merkurjev (2008), Corollary 23.4.
- Elman, Karpenko, Merkurjev (2008), section 5.
- Orlov, Vishik, Voevodsky (2007).
- Elman, Karpenko, Merkurjev (2008), Definition 23.10.
- Lam (2005) p. 341
- Lam (2005) p. 342
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