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Slides The Basis 07 Unique Representation

The document discusses the unique representation of vectors in a vector space in terms of a basis. It states that if a1, ..., an form a basis for the vector space V, then for any vector v in V there is exactly one representation of v as a linear combination of the basis vectors a1, ..., an. This is known as the Unique-Representation Lemma. The document also provides a proof of this lemma. Finally, it notes that the Unique-Representation Lemma implies that for any edge in a graph, there is a unique path in a spanning forest connecting the endpoints of that edge.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
29 views3 pages

Slides The Basis 07 Unique Representation

The document discusses the unique representation of vectors in a vector space in terms of a basis. It states that if a1, ..., an form a basis for the vector space V, then for any vector v in V there is exactly one representation of v as a linear combination of the basis vectors a1, ..., an. This is known as the Unique-Representation Lemma. The document also provides a proof of this lemma. Finally, it notes that the Unique-Representation Lemma implies that for any edge in a graph, there is a unique path in a spanning forest connecting the endpoints of that edge.

Uploaded by

lmaraujo67
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Unique representation

Recall idea of coordinate system for a vector space V :


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Generators a1 , . . . , an of V

Every vector v in V can be written as a linear combination v = 1 a1 + + n an We represent vector v by its coordinate representation [1 , . . . , n ]

Question: How can we ensure that each point has only one coordinate representation? Answer: The generators a1 , . . . , an should form a basis. Unique-Representation Lemma Let a1 , . . . , an be a basis for V . For any vector v V , there is exactly one representation of v in terms of the basis vectors.

Uniqueness of representation in terms of a basis


Unique-Representation Lemma: Let a1 , . . . , an be a basis for V . For any vector v V , there is exactly one representation of v in terms of the basis vectors. Proof: Let v be any vector in V . The vectors a1 , . . . , an span V , so there is at least one representation of v in terms of the basis vectors. Suppose there are two such representations:

v = 1 a1 + + n an = 1 a1 + + n an
We get the zero vector by subtracting one from the other:

0 = 1 a1 + + n an (1 a1 + + n an ) = (1 1 ) a1 + + (n n ) an
Since the vectors a1 , . . . , an are linearly independent, the coecients 1 1 , . . . , n n must all be zero, so the two representations are really the same. QED

Uniqueness of representation in terms of a basis: The case of graphs

Unique-Representation Lemma Let a1 , . . . , an be a basis for V . For any vector v V , there is exactly one representation of v in terms of the basis vectors.
Pembroke Campus Athletic Complex Main Quad

Keeney Quad Bio-Med

Wriston Quad Gregorian Quad

A basis for a graph is a spanning forest. Unique Representation shows that, for each edge xy in the graph,
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there is an x -to-y path in the spanning forest, and there is only one such path.

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