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Cheat Sheet

This document outlines 20 propositions and theorems regarding matrices and linear algebra concepts like row equivalence, invertibility, vector spaces, subspaces, linear independence, spanning sets, bases, and dimensions. Some key ideas are: - Row equivalence is an equivalence relation on matrices and determines whether a matrix is invertible. - A set of vectors is linearly independent if no vector can be written as a linear combination of the others. - A subspace is a subset of a vector space that is closed under addition and scalar multiplication. - The span of a set of vectors is the smallest subspace containing those vectors. - The dimension of a vector space or subspace is equal to the size of any basis for

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
325 views2 pages

Cheat Sheet

This document outlines 20 propositions and theorems regarding matrices and linear algebra concepts like row equivalence, invertibility, vector spaces, subspaces, linear independence, spanning sets, bases, and dimensions. Some key ideas are: - Row equivalence is an equivalence relation on matrices and determines whether a matrix is invertible. - A set of vectors is linearly independent if no vector can be written as a linear combination of the others. - A subspace is a subset of a vector space that is closed under addition and scalar multiplication. - The span of a set of vectors is the smallest subspace containing those vectors. - The dimension of a vector space or subspace is equal to the size of any basis for

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Anvit Mangal
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Proposition 1: Given any mn matrix A, there exists an RREF matrix which is row-equivalent to A.

Proposition 2: Row equivalence is an equivalence relation on the set R mn of mn matrices with entries from the
field R of real numbers.
Proposition 3: If A is a square matrix, then A is row equivalent to the identity matrix if and only if the
homogeneous system Ax = 0 has only the trivial solution.
Proposition 4: The system is consistent if and only if the rightmost column of R is not a pivot column, i.e. if there
is no row of the form:
[0 0 b] with b non-zero.
If the system is consistent, then it has either (i) a unique solution if there are no free variables or (ii) infinitely
many solutions when there is at least one free variable.
Proposition 5: If e is an elementary row operation and E is the mm elementary matrix e(Im), then for every mn
matrix A, e(A) = EA.
Proposition 6: Every elementary matrix is invertible.
Proposition 7: Let V be a vector space. Then:
a) The zero vector is unique.
b) The additive inverse vector of any vector u is unique; we use the notation u for the inverse vector
c) 0u = 0 for every vector u
d) c0 = 0 for every scalar c
e) u = (1)u for every vector u
Proposition 8: A subset W of V is a subspace if and only if it satisfies the following three properties:
a) The zero vector 0 is in W
b) W is closed under addition. That is, for each u and v in W, the sum u + v is in W
c) W is closed under scalar multiplication. That is, for each u in W, and each scalar c, the scalar
product cu is in W
Proposition 9: A non-empty subset W of V is a subspace if and only if for each u and v in W, and each scalar c,
the sum cu + v is in W
Proposition 10: If S = {v1,v2,.,vp} is a set of vectors in a vector space V, then Span S = Span {v1,v2,.,vp} is
a subspace of V.
Proposition 11: B = {v1,v2,.,vn} is a basis of the vector space V if and only if every vector v V is uniquely
expressible as a linear combination of the elements of B.
Proposition 12 (Steinitz Exchange Lemma): Suppose v1,v2,., vn are linearly independent vectors in a vector
space V, and suppose V= Span {w1,w2,.,wm}. Then:
a) n m
b) {v1,v2,., vn,wn + 1 ,wn + 2,.,wm } span V, after re-ordering the ws if necessary.
Proposition 13: If V is a finite-dimensional vector space, then any two bases of V have the same number of
elements.
Proposition 14: Suppose S = {v1,v2,.,vn} is a linearly independent set in a vector space V. Suppose v is a
vector which is not in Span S. Then the set obtained by adjoining v to S is linearly independent.
Proposition 15: Any linearly independent set S in a finite-dimensional vector space can be expanded to a basis.
Proposition 16: Any finite spanning set S in a non-zero vector space can be contracted to a basis.
Proposition 17: Let V be a finite-dimensional vector space with dimension n. Then:
a)
Any subset of V which contains more than n elements is linearly dependent
b) No subset of V which contains less than n vectors can span V
Proposition 18: If W is a proper subspace of a finite-dimensional space V, then W is also finite-dimensional and 0
< dim W < dim V.
Proposition 19: If U and W are subspaces of the vector space V, then V = U W if and only if V = U + W and U
W = {0}.
Proposition 20: If U and W are finite-dimensional subspaces of the vector space V, then dim (U + W) = dim U +
dim W dim (U W).
Corollary to Proposition 20: If V is the direct sum of the finite dimensional subspaces U and W, then dim V =
dim (U W) = dim U + dim W.
1. Corollary 1.1: An invertible matrix A is a product of elementary matrices. Any sequence of
row operations that reduces A to I also transforms I into A1.
Corollary 1.2: If A has a left inverse or a right inverse, then it has an inverse.
Corollary 1.3: Suppose a square matrix A is factored as a product of square matrices, i.e. A = A 1A2An (all
square matrices). Then A is invertible if and only if each Ai is invertible.
Corollary 1.4: (Alternative version of last equivalence in VIT): The matrix A is invertible if and only if the system
of equations Ax = b has a unique solution for each and every vector b in Rm.
Corollary 10.1: Let V be a vector space.
a) If U and W are two subspaces of V, then U W (i.e. the intersection of U and W) is also a subspace of V
b) If S = {v1,v2,.,vp} is a set of vectors in a vector space V, then Span S = Span {v 1,v2,.,vp} is the
smallest subspace which
contains S, i.e. if W is a subspace such that S W, then Span S W.

REMARK: In terms of this, Span S is sometimes described as the intersection of all subspaces of V
containing S. (Also left as an exercise.)
Theorem 1: The following are equivalent for an mm square matrix A:
a. A is invertible
b. A is row equivalent to the identity matrix
c. The homogeneous system Ax = 0 has only the trivial solution
d. The system of equations Ax = b has at least one solution for every b in Rm.

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