Lecture 11 LADE
Lecture 11 LADE
▶ S is linearly independent;
▶ S spans V .
Example 1.
Consider vector space R2 over R. Then show that
is a basis for R2 :
Step 1: S is linearly independent:
Step 2: S spans R2 :
Take any vector (a, b) in R2 . Then we can write
Hence S is a basis of R2 .
Example 2: Standard Basis
is a standard basis.
α(u + v) + βv = 0 =⇒ αu + (α + β)v = 0
=⇒ α + β = 0 and β = 0
=⇒ α = β = 0.
Step 2. {u + v, v} spans V :
Take any x in V .
So x = αu + αv − αv + βv
So x = α(u + v) + (β − α)v
Exercise (Tutorial: Chapter 3: 11(b))
{u + v + w, v + w, w}
is also a basis of V
Property of Basis: (Theorem 4.4.1, p.198)
u = c1 v1 + c2 v2 + · · · + cn vn (ci ∈ R).
Example: For R2 , the set {(1, 0), (0, 1), (1, 1)} is NOT a basis.
u = c1 v1 + c2 v2 + · · · + cn vn (ci ∈ R).
The tuple
(c1 , c2 , . . . , cn )
is called coordinates of v relative to basis S.
Example 0:
(1, 1)
(1, 0)
Solving it, we get: (c1 , c2 ) = (3, 2) are the coordinates of (3, 2).
Example 1:
▶ We saw: {u, v} = {(1, 0), (0, 1)} is a basis for R2 .
(0, 1)
(1, 0)
Solving it, we get: (c1 , c2 ) = (2, 3) are the coordinates of (3, 2).
Summary of three examples:
{(1, 0), (0, 1)} {(1, 1), (0, 1)} {(0, 1), (1, 0)}
Coordinates of (3, 2)
One can easily get various bases for the vector space R2 :
Then
{u, v}
is a basis for R2 !
A basis for R3 :
One can similarly get many bases for the vector space R3 :