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x + βy) = αf (x) + βf (y) : converse

This document discusses linear maps between Euclidean spaces and their relationship to matrices. It defines a linear map as a map f: Rn → Rm such that f(αx + βy) = αf(x) + βf(y) for all α, β in R and x, y in Rn. Examples of linear maps include projection maps and multiplication by a scalar. The document shows that a linear map can be represented by a matrix whose columns are the images of the standard basis vectors under the linear map. Solving systems of linear equations corresponds to finding the vector x such that the linear map T(x) equals the vector b.

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Paritosh Gupta
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© © All Rights Reserved
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
111 views50 pages

x + βy) = αf (x) + βf (y) : converse

This document discusses linear maps between Euclidean spaces and their relationship to matrices. It defines a linear map as a map f: Rn → Rm such that f(αx + βy) = αf(x) + βf(y) for all α, β in R and x, y in Rn. Examples of linear maps include projection maps and multiplication by a scalar. The document shows that a linear map can be represented by a matrix whose columns are the images of the standard basis vectors under the linear map. Solving systems of linear equations corresponds to finding the vector x such that the linear map T(x) equals the vector b.

Uploaded by

Paritosh Gupta
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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2.

L INEAR M APS ON E UCLIDEAN S PACES


AND M ATRICES

Definition
A map f : Rn → Rm is said to be a linear if

f (αx + βy) = αf (x) + βf (y) ∀ α, β ∈ R, x, y ∈ Rn .

Examples:
Projection map πi : Rn → R; inclusion map
Rn → Rn+t ; multiplication by a fixed scalar
dot product by a fixed vector in Rn gives a linear map
from Rn to R; what about the converse?
f : Rn → Rm linear ⇔ fi linear for each i = 1, . . . , m.
Distance travelled is a linear function of time when
velocity is constant. So is the voltage as a function of
resistance when the current is constant.
|x|, x n (n > 1), sin x, etc. are not linear
7/44
Exercise:
(i) Show that if f : Rn → Rm is a linear map then
k
X k
X
f( αi xi ) = αi f (xi ) ∀ xi ∈ Rn and αi ∈ R.
i=1 i=1

8/44
Exercise:
(i) Show that if f : Rn → Rm is a linear map then
k
X k
X
f( αi xi ) = αi f (xi ) ∀ xi ∈ Rn and αi ∈ R.
i=1 i=1

(ii) Show that the projection on a line L passing through


the origin defines a linear map of R2 to R2 and its
image is equal to L.

8/44
Exercise:
(i) Show that if f : Rn → Rm is a linear map then
k
X k
X
f( αi xi ) = αi f (xi ) ∀ xi ∈ Rn and αi ∈ R.
i=1 i=1

(ii) Show that the projection on a line L passing through


the origin defines a linear map of R2 to R2 and its
image is equal to L.
(iii) Show that rotation through a fixed angle θ is a linear
map from R2 → R2 .

8/44
Exercise:
(i) Show that if f : Rn → Rm is a linear map then
k
X k
X
f( αi xi ) = αi f (xi ) ∀ xi ∈ Rn and αi ∈ R.
i=1 i=1

(ii) Show that the projection on a line L passing through


the origin defines a linear map of R2 to R2 and its
image is equal to L.
(iii) Show that rotation through a fixed angle θ is a linear
map from R2 → R2 .
(iv) By a rigid motion of Rn we mean a map f : Rn → Rn
such that
d(f (x), f (y)) = d(x, y) ∀ x, y ∈ Rn .

8/44
Exercise:
(i) Show that if f : Rn → Rm is a linear map then
k
X k
X
f( αi xi ) = αi f (xi ) ∀ xi ∈ Rn and αi ∈ R.
i=1 i=1

(ii) Show that the projection on a line L passing through


the origin defines a linear map of R2 to R2 and its
image is equal to L.
(iii) Show that rotation through a fixed angle θ is a linear
map from R2 → R2 .
(iv) By a rigid motion of Rn we mean a map f : Rn → Rn
such that
d(f (x), f (y)) = d(x, y) ∀ x, y ∈ Rn .
Show that a rigid motion of R3 which fixes the origin
is a linear map.
8/44
Structure of linear maps
L(n, m) = Set of all linear maps from Rn to Rm

9/44
Structure of linear maps
L(n, m) = Set of all linear maps from Rn to Rm
For f , g ∈ L(n, m) define αf and f + g by
(αf )(x) = αf (x); (f + g)(x) = f (x) + g(x)

9/44
Structure of linear maps
L(n, m) = Set of all linear maps from Rn to Rm
For f , g ∈ L(n, m) define αf and f + g by
(αf )(x) = αf (x); (f + g)(x) = f (x) + g(x)
If f ∈ L(n, m) and g ∈ L(p, n), then f ◦ g ∈ L(p, m)

9/44
Structure of linear maps
L(n, m) = Set of all linear maps from Rn to Rm
For f , g ∈ L(n, m) define αf and f + g by
(αf )(x) = αf (x); (f + g)(x) = f (x) + g(x)
If f ∈ L(n, m) and g ∈ L(p, n), then f ◦ g ∈ L(p, m)
If f , g ∈ L(n, 1), then define fg : Rn → R by
(fg)(x) = f (x)g(x).
Does fg ∈ L(n, 1)?

9/44
Structure of linear maps
L(n, m) = Set of all linear maps from Rn to Rm
For f , g ∈ L(n, m) define αf and f + g by
(αf )(x) = αf (x); (f + g)(x) = f (x) + g(x)
If f ∈ L(n, m) and g ∈ L(p, n), then f ◦ g ∈ L(p, m)
If f , g ∈ L(n, 1), then define fg : Rn → R by
(fg)(x) = f (x)g(x).
Does fg ∈ L(n, 1)?
Let ei = (0, . . . , 0, 1, 0, . . . , 0) (standard basis
elements). If x ∈ Rn , then x = ni=1 xi ei .
P

9/44
Structure of linear maps
L(n, m) = Set of all linear maps from Rn to Rm
For f , g ∈ L(n, m) define αf and f + g by
(αf )(x) = αf (x); (f + g)(x) = f (x) + g(x)
If f ∈ L(n, m) and g ∈ L(p, n), then f ◦ g ∈ L(p, m)
If f , g ∈ L(n, 1), then define fg : Rn → R by
(fg)(x) = f (x)g(x).
Does fg ∈ L(n, 1)?
Let ei = (0, . . . , 0, 1, 0, . . . , 0) (standard basis
elements). If x ∈ Rn , then x = ni=1 xi ei .
P

If f ∈ L(n, m), then


X
f (x) = xi f (ei )
i

9/44
Conversely, if given v1 , . . . , vn ∈ Rm , define a (unique)
linear map f by assigning f (ei ) = vi

10/44
Conversely, if given v1 , . . . , vn ∈ Rm , define a (unique)
linear map f by assigning f (ei ) = vi
Examples:

10/44
Conversely, if given v1 , . . . , vn ∈ Rm , define a (unique)
linear map f by assigning f (ei ) = vi
Examples:
1. Given a f ∈ L(n, 1), if we put u = (f (e1 ), . . . , f (en )),
n
then for each x ∈ RP we can write
f (x) = i xi f (ei ) = u.x

10/44
Conversely, if given v1 , . . . , vn ∈ Rm , define a (unique)
linear map f by assigning f (ei ) = vi
Examples:
1. Given a f ∈ L(n, 1), if we put u = (f (e1 ), . . . , f (en )),
n
then for each x ∈ RP we can write
f (x) = i xi f (ei ) = u.x
2. Consider a system of linear equations

a11 x1 + a12 x2 + . . . + a1n xn = b1


a21 x1 + a22 x2 + . . . + a2n xn = b2
... ...
am1 x1 + am2 x2 + . . . + amn xn = bm

10/44
Conversely, if given v1 , . . . , vn ∈ Rm , define a (unique)
linear map f by assigning f (ei ) = vi
Examples:
1. Given a f ∈ L(n, 1), if we put u = (f (e1 ), . . . , f (en )),
n
then for each x ∈ RP we can write
f (x) = i xi f (ei ) = u.x
2. Consider a system of linear equations

a11 x1 + a12 x2 + . . . + a1n xn = b1


a21 x1 + a22 x2 + . . . + a2n xn = b2
... ...
am1 x1 + am2 x2 + . . . + amn xn = bm

The set of all solutions of the j th equation is a


hyperplane Pj in Rn . Solving the system means
finding the intersection P1 ∩ . . . ∩ Pm of these
hyperplanes.
10/44
On the other hand the LHS of each of these
equations can be thought of as a linear map
Ti : Rn → R, which associates to (x1 , . . . , xn ) ∈ Rn the
scalar ai1 x1 + ai2 x2 + . . . + ain xn in R.

11/44
On the other hand the LHS of each of these
equations can be thought of as a linear map
Ti : Rn → R, which associates to (x1 , . . . , xn ) ∈ Rn the
scalar ai1 x1 + ai2 x2 + . . . + ain xn in R. Together, they
define a linear map
T ∈ L(Rn , Rm ) given by T = (T1 , . . . , Tm ).

11/44
On the other hand the LHS of each of these
equations can be thought of as a linear map
Ti : Rn → R, which associates to (x1 , . . . , xn ) ∈ Rn the
scalar ai1 x1 + ai2 x2 + . . . + ain xn in R. Together, they
define a linear map
T ∈ L(Rn , Rm ) given by T = (T1 , . . . , Tm ).
Solving the system of linear equations corresponds
to determining x ∈ Rn such that T (x) = b,
where b = (b1 , . . . , bm )
Henceforth, we will think of Rn as the collection of
column vectors
 
x1
 x2 
 ..  = (x1 , x2 , . . . , xn )T
 
 . 
xn
Here the superscript T stands for transpose.
11/44
Matrix representation of a linear map
As before, let ei = (0, . . . , 0, 1, 0, . . . , 0)T , with 1 in the
i th place and 0 elsewhere , be standard basis vectors.

12/44
Matrix representation of a linear map
As before, let ei = (0, . . . , 0, 1, 0, . . . , 0)T , with 1 in the
i th place and 0 elsewhere , be standard basis vectors.
Given linear map f : Rn → Rm we get n column
vectors (of size m) viz., f (e1 ), . . . , f (en ). Place them
side by side:

12/44
Matrix representation of a linear map
As before, let ei = (0, . . . , 0, 1, 0, . . . , 0)T , with 1 in the
i th place and 0 elsewhere , be standard basis vectors.
Given linear map f : Rn → Rm we get n column
vectors (of size m) viz., f (e1 ), . . . , f (en ). Place them
side by side:
Thus if f (ej ) = (f1j , f2j , . . . , fmj )T , then we obtain
 
f11 f12 . . . f1n
 f21 f22 . . . f2n 
Mf =  .. ..  .
 
 . . 
fm1 fm2 . . . fmn

12/44
Matrix representation of a linear map
As before, let ei = (0, . . . , 0, 1, 0, . . . , 0)T , with 1 in the
i th place and 0 elsewhere , be standard basis vectors.
Given linear map f : Rn → Rm we get n column
vectors (of size m) viz., f (e1 ), . . . , f (en ). Place them
side by side:
Thus if f (ej ) = (f1j , f2j , . . . , fmj )T , then we obtain
 
f11 f12 . . . f1n
 f21 f22 . . . f2n 
Mf =  .. ..  .
 
 . . 
fm1 fm2 . . . fmn

This array is called a matrix with m rows and n


columns.
12/44
Matrix representation of a linear map
As before, let ei = (0, . . . , 0, 1, 0, . . . , 0)T , with 1 in the
i th place and 0 elsewhere , be standard basis vectors.
Given linear map f : Rn → Rm we get n column
vectors (of size m) viz., f (e1 ), . . . , f (en ). Place them
side by side:
Thus if f (ej ) = (f1j , f2j , . . . , fmj )T , then we obtain
 
f11 f12 . . . f1n
 f21 f22 . . . f2n 
Mf =  .. ..  .
 
 . . 
fm1 fm2 . . . fmn

This array is called a matrix with m rows and n


columns. We say matrix Mf is of size m × n.
12/44
Notation: Mf = ((fij ))

13/44
Notation: Mf = ((fij ))
Matrices are equal if their sizes are the same and the
entries are the same.

13/44
Notation: Mf = ((fij ))
Matrices are equal if their sizes are the same and the
entries are the same.
If m = 1 we get row matrices; if n = 1 we get
column matrices

13/44
Notation: Mf = ((fij ))
Matrices are equal if their sizes are the same and the
entries are the same.
If m = 1 we get row matrices; if n = 1 we get
column matrices
M : L(n, m) → Mm,n
f 7→ Mf
is one-one and called matrix representation of linear
maps

13/44
Notation: Mf = ((fij ))
Matrices are equal if their sizes are the same and the
entries are the same.
If m = 1 we get row matrices; if n = 1 we get
column matrices
M : L(n, m) → Mm,n
f 7→ Mf
is one-one and called matrix representation of linear
maps

Mf +g = Mf + Mg ; Mαf = αMf

13/44
Examples:

14/44
Examples:
1. MId

14/44
Examples:
1. MId= I or In where
1 0 ... 0
 0 1 ... 0 
I =  ..
 
.. 
 . . 
0 0 ... 1

14/44
Examples:
1. MId= I or In where
1 0 ... 0
 0 1 ... 0 
I =  .. ..  = ((δij ))
 
 . . 
0 0 ... 1

14/44
Examples:
1. MId= I or In where
1 0 ... 0
 0 1 ... 0 
I =  .. ..  = ((δij ))
 
 . . 
0 0 ... 1
δij = 1 if i = j and = 0 otherwise

14/44
Examples:
1. MId= I or In where
1 0 ... 0
 0 1 ... 0 
I =  .. ..  = ((δij ))
 
 . . 
0 0 ... 1
δij = 1 if i = j and = 0 otherwise
(Kronecker delta)

14/44
Examples:
1. MId= I or In where
1 0 ... 0
 0 1 ... 0 
I =  .. ..  = ((δij ))
 
 . . 
0 0 ... 1
δij = 1 if i = j and = 0 otherwise
(Kronecker delta)

2. Linear T : R2 → R2 which interchange coordinates is


represented by

14/44
Examples:
1. MId= I or In where
1 0 ... 0
 0 1 ... 0 
I =  .. ..  = ((δij ))
 
 . . 
0 0 ... 1
δij = 1 if i = j and = 0 otherwise
(Kronecker delta)

2. Linear T : R2 →R2 which


 interchange coordinates is
0 1
represented by
1 0

14/44
Examples:
1. MId= I or In where
1 0 ... 0
 0 1 ... 0 
I =  .. ..  = ((δij ))
 
 . . 
0 0 ... 1
δij = 1 if i = j and = 0 otherwise
(Kronecker delta)

2. Linear T : R2 →R2 which


 interchange coordinates is
0 1
represented by
1 0
3. Corresponding to multiplication by α ∈ R is

14/44
Examples:
1. MId= I or In where
1 0 ... 0
 0 1 ... 0 
I =  .. ..  = ((δij ))
 
 . . 
0 0 ... 1
δij = 1 if i = j and = 0 otherwise
(Kronecker delta)

2. Linear T : R2 →R2 which  interchange coordinates is


0 1
represented by
1 0
3. Corresponding to multiplication by α ∈ R is the
diagonal matrix D(α, . . . , α)

14/44
Examples:
1. MId= I or In where
1 0 ... 0
 0 1 ... 0 
I =  .. ..  = ((δij ))
 
 . . 
0 0 ... 1
δij = 1 if i = j and = 0 otherwise
(Kronecker delta)

2. Linear T : R2 →R2 which  interchange coordinates is


0 1
represented by
1 0
3. Corresponding to multiplication by α ∈ R is the
diagonal matrix D(α, . . . , α) = ((αδij ))

14/44
4. The rotation through an angle θ about the origin

15/44
4. The rotation through an angle θ about the origin
 
cos θ − sin θ
←→
sin θ cos θ

15/44
4. The rotation through an angle θ about the origin
 
cos θ − sin θ
←→
sin θ cos θ

Linearity can be shown by:

15/44
4. The rotation through an angle θ about the origin
 
cos θ − sin θ
←→
sin θ cos θ

Linearity can be shown by:


Law of congruent triangles;

15/44
4. The rotation through an angle θ about the origin
 
cos θ − sin θ
←→
sin θ cos θ

Linearity can be shown by:


Law of congruent triangles;
Alternatively, write down the image of e1 and e2
under rotation,

15/44
4. The rotation through an angle θ about the origin
 
cos θ − sin θ
←→
sin θ cos θ

Linearity can be shown by:


Law of congruent triangles;
Alternatively, write down the image of e1 and e2
under rotation, write down the matrix M

15/44
4. The rotation through an angle θ about the origin
 
cos θ − sin θ
←→
sin θ cos θ

Linearity can be shown by:


Law of congruent triangles;
Alternatively, write down the image of e1 and e2
under rotation, write down the matrix M and then
show that rotation takes (x, y )T to M(x, y )T .

15/44
4. The rotation through an angle θ about the origin
 
cos θ − sin θ
←→
sin θ cos θ

Linearity can be shown by:


Law of congruent triangles;
Alternatively, write down the image of e1 and e2
under rotation, write down the matrix M and then
show that rotation takes (x, y )T to M(x, y )T .

5. the inclusion map R2 → R3

15/44
4. The rotation through an angle θ about the origin
 
cos θ − sin θ
←→
sin θ cos θ

Linearity can be shown by:


Law of congruent triangles;
Alternatively, write down the image of e1 and e2
under rotation, write down the matrix M and then
show that rotation takes (x, y )T to M(x, y )T .

5. the inclusion map R2 → R3


 
1 0
←→  0 1 
0 0

15/44

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