This document outlines the syllabus for a linear algebra course at UC Berkeley. The course will cover topics such as vector spaces, linear maps, eigenvalues and eigenvectors, inner product spaces, and operators on complex vector spaces. It will be taught by Professor Benoit Dherin and will meet MWF from 2-3pm, with discussion sections on Wednesdays. Grading will be based on homework, two midterms, and a final exam. The required textbook is Linear Algebra Done Right by Sheldon Axler.
This document outlines the syllabus for a linear algebra course at UC Berkeley. The course will cover topics such as vector spaces, linear maps, eigenvalues and eigenvectors, inner product spaces, and operators on complex vector spaces. It will be taught by Professor Benoit Dherin and will meet MWF from 2-3pm, with discussion sections on Wednesdays. Grading will be based on homework, two midterms, and a final exam. The required textbook is Linear Algebra Done Right by Sheldon Axler.
Syllabus Instructor: Benoit Dherin Oce: 791 Evans Hall Email: bdherin(at)berkeley(dot)edu Course Homepage: math.berkeley.edu/dherin/Math110_2013.html or on bspace 1 Course Info Starts: Wednesday, January 23, 2013 Location: 100 Lewis Lectures: MWF 23 p.m. Oce Hours: Mondays 810 a.m. or by appointment Prerequisites: Math 54 or a course with equivalent linear algebra content Textbook: Linear Algebra Done Right, by Sheldon Axler (Springer, 2nd ed.) CCN: 54151 Discussion Sections: Wednesdays, see Times and Places Grading Policies: 20% homework, 20% each midterm, 40% nal exam. If you miss one for any reason, it is eectively a 0 grade. You are allowed to replace one of the midterm grades with your nal exam grade, but there are no makeup midterm exams. Course Policies: There will be no makeup midterms or nal exams. No late homework will be accepted. Grades of Incomplete will be granted only for dire medical or personal emergencies that cause you to miss the nal, and only if your work up to that point has been satisfactory. Academic Honesty: You are expected to rely on your own knowledge and abil- ity and not to use unauthorized materials or represent the work of others as your own. 1 2 Exams Midterm 1: Wednesday, February 20, 2013 Midterm 2: Wednesday, March 20, 2013 Final Exam: Tuesday, May 14, 2013 3 Homework Homework assignments will be posted on this site and on bspace each Wednesday. They should be turned in to your GSI by the following Wednesday at the beginning of your discussion section. Each assignment will consist of a reading assignment and a series of exercises related to the reading. The exercises will at times be slightly ahead of the lecture in order to encourage self-study as well as discussions on Piazza, where you are encouraged to post and answer questions. 4 Description We will closely follow the textbook Linear Algebra Done Right, by Sheldon Axler (Springer 2nd ed.) Here is an outline of the topics we will encounter: Vector Spaces: Denition, Properties, Subspaces, Sums and Direct Sums Finite-Dimensional Vector Spaces: Span and Linear Independence, Base, Dimension Linear Maps: Denitions, Examples, Null Spaces and Ranges, Matrices, Invertibility Eigenvalues and Eigenvectors: Denitions, Invariant Subspaces, Upper- Triangular & Diagonal Matrices Inner-Product Spaces: Inner Products, Orthogonal Bases and Projec- tors, Linear Functional and Adjoints Operators on Inner-Product Spaces: Self-Adjoint, Normal, & Positive Operators, Spectral Theorem, Isometries, Polar & Singular-Value Decom- position Operators on Complex Vector Spaces: Generalized Eigenvectors, Char- acteristic Polynomial, Decomposition of an Operator, Square Roots, Mini- mal Polynomial, Jordan Form 2 Operators on Real Vector Spaces: Eigenvalues of Square Matrices, Block Upper-Triangular Matrices, Characteristic Polynomial, Jordan Form Trace and Determinant: Change of Basis, Trace, Determinant of an Operator, Determinant of a Matrix, Volume Math 110 is ideal as an upper-division entrance course: the basic concepts (vector spaces, linear maps, matrices, eigenvectors and eigenvalues, etc.) will have already been studied in a lower-division course (e.g., Math 54), but in a very concrete way and with an emphasis on computation. In Math 110, the focus is more on abstract denitions and formal proofs, with an emphasis on classication problems (which are ubiquitous in mathematics) and normal forms. The courses culminating point will then be the Jordan normal form theorem, which classies and gives a normal form for operators on a complex vector space. If time permits, we will make some excursions to more theoretical topics (ab- stract algebra, category theory, set theory, etc.) to familiarize students with the abstract way of doing mathematics, and possibly visit some more concrete topics (quantum mechanics, quantum computing, machine learning, PageRank, etc.) in order to get a sense of the sheer power of linear algebra in real-life applications. These excursions will be clearly indicated to the audience at the beginning of the lecture. They will not be part of the homework nor of the exam material. Their only purpose will be to (hopefully!) foster enthusiasm. A good additional resource is the article Down with Determinants, by Sheldon Axler, which summarizes the textbook content in only 18 pages. It can be found at http://www.axler.net/DwD.html 5 Summary Lecture 1 (01/23/2013): Introduction to the class: textbook, sections, grading, homework, Bspace, Piazza, etc. 3