Math 260, Fall 2017, Assignment 9
From cartan.math.umb.edu
Revision as of 20:41, 2 November 2017 by Steven.Jackson (talk | contribs) (Created page with "__NOTOC__ ''The moving power of mathematical invention is not reasoning but the imagination.'' : - Augustus de Morgan ==Read:== # Section 3.4. # Section 5.1 (you may omit t...")
The moving power of mathematical invention is not reasoning but the imagination.
- - Augustus de Morgan
Read:[edit]
- Section 3.4.
- Section 5.1 (you may omit the material on correlation if you wish).
Carefully define the following terms, then give one example and one non-example of each:[edit]
- Linear transformation (from a subspace $S$ to a subspace $U$).
- $[\vec{x}]_{\mathcal{B}}$ (i.e. the coordinate vector of $\vec{x}$ with respect to the basis $\mathcal{B}$).
- $S_{\mathcal{B}\rightarrow\mathcal{C}}$ (i.e. the change-of-basis matrix from basis $\mathcal{B}$ to basis $\mathcal{C}$.
- $[T]_{\mathcal{B},\mathcal{D}}$ (i.e. the matrix of a linear transofrmation $T:S\rightarrow U$ with respect to basis $\mathcal{B}$ for $S$ and basis $\mathcal{D}$ for $U$.
- Orthonormal set.
Carefully state the following theorems (you do not need to prove them):[edit]
- Theorem concerning uniqueness of coordinates.
- Linearity of coordinates.
- Transformation law for vectors.
- Transformation law for matrices.
- Theorem characterizing orthonormality in terms of dot products.
- Formula giving $[\vec{x}]_{\mathcal{B}}$ in terms of dot products, when $\mathcal{B}$ is orthonormal.
- Formula for the components of $\vec{x}$ parallel and perpendicular to a subspace $S$, in terms of an orthonormal basis $\mathcal{B}=(\vec{u}_1,\dots,\vec{u}_k)$ for $S$.
Carefully describe the following algorithms:[edit]
- Algorithm to compute $[\vec{x}]_{\mathcal{B}}$.
- Algorithm to compute $S_{\mathcal{B}\rightarrow\mathcal{C}}$.
Solve the following problems:[edit]
- Section 3.4, problems 1, 5, 7, 9, and 17.
- Let $\mathcal{A}=(\vec{e}_1,\vec{e}_2)$ denote the "standard" basis for $\mathbb{R}^2$. For the data given in each of problems 19, 21, and 23 in section 3.4, let $\mathcal{B}=(\vec{v}_1,\vec{v}_2)$. Compute the change-of-basis matrices $S_{\mathcal{B}\rightarrow\mathcal{A}}$ and $S_{\mathcal{A}\rightarrow\mathcal{B}}$. How are these matrices related? Finally, for the transformation $T(\vec{x})=A\vec{x}$, compute the matrix $[T]_{\mathcal{B},\mathcal{B}}$.
- Section 5.1, problem 27 (see example 4 on page 206 for one method).