Superalgebra

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In mathematics and theoretical physics, a superalgebra over a field K is another name for a Z2-graded algebra over K. Specifically, a superalgebra is a super vector space A = A0A1 over K together with a bilinear multiplication

A\otimes A\rightarrow A

which is an even morphism of super vector spaces. This means that

A_iA_j \sube A_{i+j}

where the subscripts are read modulo 2.

Most classes of algebras have a "superanalog". Examples include associative superalgebras and Lie superalgebras. As is true of their ungraded counterparts, associative superalgebras are often assumed to be unital, and in that case, the identity element is necessarily even.

[edit] Further definitions

The even subalgebra of a superalgebra A is the homogeneous subalgebra A0 spanned by the even elements. It forms an ordinary algebra over K. By contrast, the odd subspace A1 does not form a subalgebra since the product of any two odd elements is even.

A commutative superalgebra is one which satisfies a graded version of commutativity. Specifically, A is commutative if

yx = (-1)^{|x||y|}xy.\,

for all homogeneous elements x and y of A. The supercenter of A is the span of all homogeneous elements x which supercommute with all elements of A in the above sense. A commutative superalgebra is one whose supercenter is all of A. The supercenter of A is, in general, different than the center of A as an ungraded algebra.

[edit] Examples