An example asks me to define
T
:
M
2
×<!-- × -->
2
</m
homosepian9wlgl
Answered question
2022-06-03
An example asks me to define by . Compute is the standard ordered basis of matrices. To find the transformation I performed the transformation on all four elements of , for example and so on. Basically the matrices are all the same before and after the transformation. Accordingly, the textbook's answer is that you arrange all the results into a matrix:
I don't understand this what means, and I've been trying to. How can this be the transformation on if we're not even able to multiply the basis by it? What I mean is, we can't multiply this transformation matrix by anything in α since one is a and one is a Also, why doesn't this mean that any arbitrary matrix can be raised to the power of t by simply multiplying by this matrix? (As per the previous paragraph, it can't, but it should).
Answer & Explanation
ran1suel23
Beginner2022-06-04Added 3 answers
You need to distinguish here between the space that the matrices operate on and the space of the matrices themselves. The former is two-dimensional, the latter is four-dimensional.A matrix is a representation of a linear transformation with respect to bases of the domain and target of the transformation. If the linear transformation is an endomorphism, a linear map from a space to itself, the corresponding matrix is square, and one typically uses the same basis for the space in its two roles as domain and target.The standard basis of the space of matrices that you're using has four basis elements and spans the four-dimensional space of matrices. A linear transformation has been defined on that space – the four-dimensional space of matrices, not the two-dimensional space that they operate on.Representing that linear transformation as a matrix with respect to the standard basis (both for the domain and the target) yields a matrix. That's not a mismatch because the vectors and matrices that will be multiplied by this matrix aren't elements of ; they're the vectors of coefficients in an expansion of the matrix they represent in the standard basis. As an example, the matrix has coefficients 2, 3, 4 and 5, respectively, in the standard basis, so with respect to that basis it's represented by the column vector Its transpose
is represented by the column vector
And sure enough we have
Thus this matrix really does represent the linear transformation T, transposition, in this basis.
Amirah Hayden
Beginner2022-06-05Added 1 answers
Just to make sure our definition of matrix representation is the same: Let be a basis for , and let be a linear map. Then matrix representation is defined as follows:
The matrix representation obeys the following formula: for every , , where is the coordinate vector of v with respect to the basis . So now, to answer your question, it's true that is a matrix in your example, but you don't multiply it onto the matrices; you multiply it onto the matrices after they have been converted into column vectors via the coordinate mapping. Since matrices form a 4-dimensional space, then this coordinate mapping turns a matrix into an element of