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The Linear Algebra a Beginning Graduate Student Ought to Know
Jonathan S. Golan
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No disponible.
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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | 2007 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-1-4020-5494-5
ISBN electrónico
978-1-4020-5495-2
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2007
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer 2007
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
Notation and terminology
Jonathan S. Golan
Sets will be denoted by braces, { }, between which we will either enumerate the elements of the set or give a rule for determining whether something is an element of the set or not, as in {x | p(x)} , which is read “the set of all x such that p(x) ”.
Pp. 1-3
Fields
Jonathan S. Golan
The way of mathematical thought is twofold: the mathematician first proceeds inductively from the particular to the general and then deductively from the general to the particular. Moreover, throughout its development, mathematics has shown two aspects - the conceptual and the computational - the symphonic interleaving of which forms one of the major aspects of the subject’s aesthetic.
Palabras clave: Complex Number; Nonzero Element; Identity Element; Integral Domain; Mathematical Thought.
Pp. 5-16
Vector spaces over a field
Jonathan S. Golan
If n > 1 is an integer and if F is a field, it is natural to define addition on the set Fn componentwise:
Pp. 17-32
Algebras over a field
Jonathan S. Golan
In general, a vector space does not carry with it the notion of multiplying two vectors in the space to produce a third vector. However, sometimes such multiplication may be possible.
Pp. 33-48
Linear independence and dimension
Jonathan S. Golan
In this chapter we will see how a restricted group of vectors in a vector space over a field can dictate the structure of the entire space, and we will deduce far-ranging conclusions from this.
Palabras clave: Vector Space; Nonempty Subset; Maximal Element; Minimal Element; Division Algebra.
Pp. 49-78
Linear transformations
Jonathan S. Golan
Let V and W be vector spaces over a field F . A function α : V → W is a linear transformation ^1 or homomorphism if and only if for all.
Pp. 79-98
The endomorphism algebra of a vector space
Jonathan S. Golan
Let V be a vector space over a field F . A linear transformation a from V to itself is called an endomorphism of V . We will denote the set of all endomorphisms of V by End(V ).
Pp. 99-116
Representation of linear transformations by matrices
Jonathan S. Golan
In this chapter we show how we can study linear transformations between finitely-generated vector spaces by studying matrices^1. Let V and W be finitely-generated vector spaces over a field F , where dim( V ) = n and dim( W ) = k .
Pp. 117-130
The algebra of square matrices
Jonathan S. Golan
We are now going to concentrate on the algebraic structure of sets of the form M _nxn( K ), where n is a positive integer and ( K , •) is an associative unital algebra over a field F .
Palabras clave: Positive Integer; Diagonal Matrice; Nonsingular Matrix; Elementary Matrice; Scalar Matrice.
Pp. 131-168
Systems of linear equations
Jonathan S. Golan
The classical problem of linear algebra is to find all solutions (if any exist) to a system of linear equations in n unknowns of the form
Palabras clave: Linear Equation; Condition Number; Solution Space; Gaussian Elimination; Column Space.
Pp. 169-198