Suppose that \(T\colon V\to W\) is a linear transformation.
(a)
What is the definition of \(\ker T\text{?}\) How does it relate to the codomain of \(T\text{?}\)
(b)
What is definition of \(\Im T\text{?}\) How does it relate to the codomain of \(T\text{?}\)
Subsection4.1.2Class Activities
Observation4.1.2.
If \(T: \IR^n \rightarrow \IR^m\) and \(S: \IR^m \rightarrow \IR^k\) are linear maps, then the composition map \(S\circ T\) computed as \((S \circ T)(\vec{v})=S(T(\vec{v}))\) is a linear map from \(\IR^n \rightarrow \IR^k\text{.}\)
Activity4.1.3.
Let \(T: \IR^3 \rightarrow \IR^2\) be defined by the \(2\times 3\) standard matrix \(B\) and \(S: \IR^2 \rightarrow \IR^4\) be defined by the \(4\times 2\) standard matrix \(A\text{:}\)
Use \((S \circ T)(\vec{e}_1),(S \circ T)(\vec{e}_2),(S \circ T)(\vec{e}_3)\) to write the standard matrix for \(S \circ T\text{.}\)
Definition4.1.4.
We define the product \(AB\) of a \(m \times n\) matrix \(A\) and a \(n \times k\) matrix \(B\) to be the \(m \times k\) standard matrix of the composition map of the two corresponding linear functions.
For the previous activity, \(T\) was a map \(\IR^3 \rightarrow \IR^2\text{,}\) and \(S\) was a map \(\IR^2 \rightarrow \IR^4\text{,}\) so \(S \circ T\) gave a map \(\IR^3 \rightarrow \IR^4\) with a \(4\times 3\) standard matrix:
Let \(S: \IR^3 \rightarrow \IR^2\) be given by the matrix \(A=\left[\begin{array}{ccc} -4 & -2 & 3 \\ 0 & 1 & 1 \end{array}\right]\) and \(T: \IR^2 \rightarrow \IR^3\) be given by the matrix \(B=\left[\begin{array}{cc} 2 & 3 \\ 1 & -1 \\ 0 & -1 \end{array}\right]\text{.}\)
(a)
Write the dimensions (rows \(\times\) columns) for \(A\text{,}\)\(B\text{,}\)\(AB\text{,}\) and \(BA\text{.}\)
(b)
Find the standard matrix \(AB\) of \(S \circ T\text{.}\)
(c)
Find the standard matrix \(BA\) of \(T \circ S\text{.}\)
Activity4.1.6.
Consider the following three matrices.
\begin{equation*}
A = \left[\begin{array}{ccc}1&0&-3\\3&2&1\end{array}\right]
\hspace{2em}
B = \left[\begin{array}{ccccc}2&2&1&0&1\\1&1&1&-1&0\\0&0&3&2&1\\-1&5&7&2&1\end{array}\right]
\hspace{2em}
C = \left[\begin{array}{cc}2&2\\0&-1\\3&1\\4&0\end{array}\right]
\end{equation*}
(a)
Find the domain and codomain of each of the three linear maps corresponding to \(A\text{,}\)\(B\text{,}\) and \(C\text{.}\)
(b)
Only one of the matrix products \(AB,AC,BA,BC,CA,CB\) can actually be computed. Compute it.
Explain which two can be multiplied and why. Then show how to find their product.
Activity4.1.9.
Let \(T\left(\left[\begin{array}{c}x\\y \end{array}\right]\right)=
\left[\begin{array}{c} x+2y \\ y \\ 3x +5y \\ -x-2y \end{array}\right]\) In Fact 3.2.11 we adopted the notation
Verify that \(\left[\begin{array}{cc} 1 & 2 \\ 0 & 1 \\ 3 & 5 \\ -1 & -2 \end{array}\right]
\left[\begin{array}{c}x\\y \end{array}\right] =
\left[\begin{array}{c} x+2y \\ y \\ 3x +5y \\ -x-2y \end{array}\right]\) in terms of matrix multiplication.
Subsection4.1.3Individual Practice
Activity4.1.10.
Given two \(n\times n\) matrices \(A\) and \(B\text{,}\) explain why the sentence "Multiply the matrices \(A\) and \(B \) together." is ambiguous. How could you re-write the sentence in order to eliminate the ambiguity?
Construct 3 examples of matrix multiplication, with all matrix dimensions at least 2.
Where \(A\) and \(B\) are not square, but \(AB\) is square.
Where \(AB = BA\text{.}\)
Where \(AB \neq BA\text{.}\)
Exploration4.1.13.
Use the included map in this problem.
An adjacency matrix for this map is a matrix that has the number of roads from city \(i\) to city \(j\) in the \((i,j)\) entry of the matrix. A road is a path of length exactly 1. All \((i,i)\)entries are 0. Write the adjacency matrix for this map, with the cities in alphabetical order.
What does the square of this matrix tell you about the map? The cube? The \(n\)-th power?