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π (1) π (n) 1 n 1 n i<j i j

This document contains homework problems on linear algebra concepts such as permutations, bilinear forms, and bases. 1. The first problem asks to prove properties of permutations including that the sign of a composition of permutations equals the product of signs, the sign of a transposition is -1, and a permutation expressed as compositions of transpositions has parity of the number of transpositions. 2. The second problem considers a non-degenerate symmetric bilinear form and asks to prove the map from a vector space to its dual is an isomorphism, express a dual basis in terms of a given basis, construct a basis where the bilinear form is the identity, and show two sets of vectors are bases if the bilinear form between them

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
66 views4 pages

π (1) π (n) 1 n 1 n i<j i j

This document contains homework problems on linear algebra concepts such as permutations, bilinear forms, and bases. 1. The first problem asks to prove properties of permutations including that the sign of a composition of permutations equals the product of signs, the sign of a transposition is -1, and a permutation expressed as compositions of transpositions has parity of the number of transpositions. 2. The second problem considers a non-degenerate symmetric bilinear form and asks to prove the map from a vector space to its dual is an isomorphism, express a dual basis in terms of a given basis, construct a basis where the bilinear form is the identity, and show two sets of vectors are bases if the bilinear form between them

Uploaded by

YuanqingWu
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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Homework 5 | Due February 12 (Friday) 1

Read : Lax, Chapter 5, pages 44–54.

1. Let Sn denote the set of all permutations of {1, . . . , n}.

(a) Prove that sgn(π1 ◦ π2 ) = sgn(π1 ) sgn(π2 ).


(b) Prove that sgn(τ ) = −1 for all transpositions τ ∈ Sn .
(c) Let π ∈ Sn , and suppose that π = τk ◦ · · · ◦ τ1 = σ` ◦ · · · ◦ σ1 , where τi , σj ∈ Sn are
transpositions. Prove that k ≡ ` mod 2.

Solution:
(a) Recall that
P (xπ(1) , · · · , xπ(n) ) = sgn(π)P (x1 , · · · , xn ) (1)
Q
where P (x1 , · · · , xn ) is the descriminant i<j (xi − xj ).
We have:
P (xπ1 ◦π2 (1) , · · · , xπ1 ◦π2 (n) ) = sgn(π1 ◦ π2 )P (x1 , · · · , xn )
= sgn(π1 )P (xπ2 (1) , · · · , xπ2 (n) ) (2)
= sgn(π1 ) sgn(π2 )P (x1 , · · · , xn )
which proved the claim.
(b) Consider the transposition τ = (ij) of i and j = i + m with i < j, which sends
(1, 2, · · · , n) to:
(1, 2, · · · , i + m, · · · , i, · · · , n) (3)
Then in the permuted desriminant, the terms that change sign for moving i to the location
of i + m are:
xi − xi+1 , xi − xi+2 , · · · xi − xi+m (4)
i.e., xi was to the left of xi+1 , · · · , xi+m , but now is to the right to them. Similarly, the
terms that change sign for moving i + m to i are:

xi − xi+m , xi+1 − xi+m , · · · , xi+m−1 − xi+m (5)

They add up to a total of 2m − 1 (since the two lists share xi − xi+m ) terms, which means:

P (xτ (1) , · · · , xτ (n) ) = −P (x1 , · · · , xn ) (6)

We have then shown that sgn(τ ) = −1.


(c) Using conclusion of (a) and (b) together, we see that:

sgn(π) = sgn(τk ◦ · · · ◦ τ1 ) = sgn(τk ) · · · sgn(τ1 ) = (−1)k (7)

Similarly, we have:

sgn(π) = sgn(σl ◦ · · · ◦ σ1 ) = sgn(σl ) · · · sgn(σ1 ) = (−1)l (8)

We have (−1)k = (−1)l , or k ≡ l mod 2.

Math 8530 | Linear Algebra | Spring 2021 | M. Macauley


Homework 5 | Due February 12 (Friday) 2

2. Let f be a non-degenerate symmetric bilinear form over an n-dimensional vector space X.


That is, for all nonzero x ∈ X, there is some y ∈ X for which f (x, y) 6= 0. Consequently,
fixing any nonzero x ∈ X defines a nonzero dual vector

f (x, −) ∈ X 0 , f (x, −) : y 7−→ f (x, y).

(a) Prove that the map Lf : X → X 0 given by Lf : x 7→ f (x, −) is an isomorphism.


(b) Let x1 , . . . , xn be a basis for X. Express the dual basis `1 , . . . , `n in this form. That
is, find g for which Lg : xi 7→ `i .
(c) Show how to construct another basis y1 , . . . , yn such that f (xi , yj ) = δij .
(d) Conversely, prove that if BX = {x1 , . . . , xn } and BY = {y1 , . . . , yn } are sets of vectors
in X with f (xi , yj ) = δij , then BX and BY are bases for X.

(a) We prove that Lf sends a basis of X to a basis of X 0 . Let us pick a basis (x1 , · · · , xn )
for X, then we claim that (f (x1 , −), · · · , f (xn , −)) is a basis of X 0 . We only need to prove
they are linearly independent, since then the fact that there are n of them, and span a
n-dimensional subspace of X 0 , which also has dimension n means they span the whole
of X 0 . Now, given any linear combination of these linear functions that equals the zero
function:
n
X
λi f (xi , −) = 0 (not the zero vector, but the zero linear function!) (9)
i=1

Since f is bilinear, we have:


n
X n
X
f( λi xi , −) = 0 ⇒ f( λi xi , y) = 0, ∀y ∈ X (10)
i=1 i=1
Pn
But f
Pn is non-degenerate, i=1 λi xi = 0 (for otherwise, there must exist y ∈ X such that
f ( i=1 λi xi , y) 6= 0). Since (x1 , · · · , xn ) is a basis of X, we infer that λi = 0, i = 1, · · · , n.
This means that f (xi , −)’s are linearly independent.
(b) Since `1 , · · · , `n are dual to x1 , · · · , xn , we see that:

Lg (xi ) : xj 7→ `i (xj ) = g(xi , xj ) = δij , ∀i, j ∈ {1 · · · , n} (11)

Since g is bilinear, it is uniquely determined by the above equations (i.e., its values on a
set of basis).
(c) It is not difficult to see that f (xi , −)’s serve as the dual basis of yj ’s, and therefore
using conclusion of (b), we see that:

Lg : yi 7→ f (xi , −) (12)

Starting from xi ’s, we can reach yi ’s by:

L−1
g ◦ Lf : xi 7→ f (xi , −) 7→ yi (13)

Math 8530 | Linear Algebra | Spring 2021 | M. Macauley


Homework 5 | Due February 12 (Friday) 3
Pn
(d) We prove that BX and BY are linearly independent. Given any relationship i=1 λi xi =
0, we have that:
Xn n
X
f( λi xi , yj ) = λi δij = λj = 0, j = 1, · · · , n (14)
i=1 i=1

We see that BX are linearly independent and form a basis since dim X = n. The proof is
similar for BY .

3. Let f be a non-degenerate symmetric bilinear form over a real n-dimensional vector space,
where 1 + 1 6= 0.

(a) Show that there exists x1 ∈ X with f (x1 , x1 ) 6= 0.


(b) Let Z1 be the nullspace of f (x1 , −). Show that f restricted to Z1 is non-degenerate.
(c) Construct a basis {z1 , . . . , zn } for X that satisfies f (zi , zj ) = δij .

(a) Since f is non-degenerate, there exists x, y ∈ X s.t. f (x, y) 6= 0. If there does not
exist x1 ∈ X s.t. f (x1 , x1 ) 6= 0, we can say f (z, z) = 0, ∀z ∈ X. In this case, we seek the
following contradictin:

:0
:0 :0


f (x + x+y) = 
y, f (x,
x)
+ f (x, y) + f (y, x) + 
f (y,
 y)= 2f (x, y) = 0 (15)
  

which leads to f (x, y) = 0 since 1 + 1 6= 0. This leads to a contradiction.


(b) Z1 is the nullspace of the following linear map:

f (x1 , −) : X → R (16)

The map is onto since we know that f (x1 , x1 ) 6= 0. Therefore, we know that X/Z1 is
isomorphic to R and that dim Z1 = n − 1. It is also clear that x1 6∈ Z1 , and therefore
X = Z1 ⊕ Rx1 (here Rx1 denotes the 1 dimensional vector subspace spanned by x1 ).
Assume that f (−, −) is degenerate on Z1 , which is to say there exists y ∈ Z1 that:

f (y, z) = 0, ∀z ∈ Z1 (17)

However, since y ∈ Z1 , we also have f (y, x1 ) = f (x1 , y) = 0. This leads to the conclusion
that f (y, z) = 0, ∀z ∈ X. However, this is impossible since f is non-degenerate on X.
(c) With the help of (a) and (b), we can construct the required basis as follows. First
pick x1 as in (a), then we have:
x1 x1
f(p ,p )=1 (18)
f (x1 , x1 ) f (x1 , x1 )

This is possible only when f (x1 , x1 ) > 0, and therefore the problem is wrong! We should
change the problem to f (zi , zj ) = ±δij , and then:
x1 x1
f( p , p ) = ±1 (19)
| f (x1 , x1 )| | f (x1 , x1 )|

Math 8530 | Linear Algebra | Spring 2021 | M. Macauley


Homework 5 | Due February 12 (Friday) 4

x1
Take this √ to be our z1 , and denote the nullspace of f (z1 , −) by Z1 . By (b), f is
| f (x1 ,x1 )|
non-degenerate on Z1 , and therefore we can repeat the same process and find us z2 such
that f (z2 , z2 ) = ±1. At the same time, we know that since z2 ∈ Z1 , we have f (z1 , z2 ) = 0.
Continue this process until you get all zi ’s (formal proof requries induction).

4. Let f be a bilinear form over a vector space X with basis {x1 , x2 }.

(a) Assume f is alternating. Determine a formula for f (u, v) in terms of each f (xi , xj )
and the coefficients used to express u and v with this basis. [Pun intented!]
(b) Repeat Part (a) but assume that f is symmetric and f (x, x) = 0 for all x ∈ X.

(a) Denote u = u1 x1 + u2 x2 , v = v1 x1 + v2 x2 , then:


2,2
X
f (u, v) = ui vj f (xi , xj ) (20)
i,j=1,1

Since f is alternating, f (xi , xi ) = 0, i = 1, 2. We then have:

f (u, v) = u1 v2 f (x1 , x2 ) + u2 v1 f (x2 , x1 ) (21)

(b) According to definition, this is exactly alternating. I don’t know what he was thinking.

5. Let X be an n-dimensional vector space over a field K.

(a) Show how any k-linear form can be expressed as a sum of a symmetric and a skew-
symmetric one. Describe the differences in the cases of char K 6= 2 and char K = 2.
(b) Give an example of a non-alternating skew-symmetric mulitlinear form.
(c) Give an example of a non-zero alternating multilinear form such that f (x1 , . . . , xk ) =
0 for some set of linearly independent vectors x1 , . . . , xk .

(a) This is not true in general for k > 2. Just skip this Problem.

Math 8530 | Linear Algebra | Spring 2021 | M. Macauley

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