The easiest way to get the inverse of a full quaternion
is to go back to its representation by elementary matrices, in the 2x2 form
Nevertheless, the difference is important, because null quaternions exist, just as well as null vectors, and they cannot be invertible. Hamiton's quaternions are invertible unless zero. Not only do they constitute a field, albeit noncommutative; they lie amongst the very few examples of algebraically and topologically complete infinite fields. The objects which we have just defined are not quaternions according to Hamilton's definition; neither are Hamiton's own quaternions taken with complex coefficients (look at , which vanishes).
At least we have a quantity which decides the invertibility of a quaternion such as
,
multiplicative for being a determinant, and consistent with the definition of the vector norm relative to a sign choice.
There are null vectors in the Minkowski metric, which is to say, nonzero vectors with zero norm. What would a null vector look like? Consider
.
A general form for a null vector could be to take
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