Vector Spaces: Ms. Do Thi Phuong Thao Fall 2012
Vector Spaces: Ms. Do Thi Phuong Thao Fall 2012
2
, . . . ,
n
in S and scalars c
1
, c
2
, . . . , c
n
in
F, not all of which are 0, such that:
c
1
1
+ c
2
2
+ +c
n
n
= 0
A set which is not linearly dependent is called
linearly independent.
Example of linearly dependent
Example of linearly independent
Some consequences of definition
Any set which contains a linearly
dependent set is linearly dependent.
Any subset of a linearly independent set is
linearly independent.
Any set which contains the 0 vector is
linearly dependent; for 1 * 0 = 0.
A set X of vectors is linearly independent if
and only if each finite subset of S is
linearly independent, i.e., if and only if for
any distinct vectors
1
,
2
, . . . ,
n
, of X,
c
1
1
+ c
2
2
+ +c
n
n
= 0 implies each c
i
= 0
Basis and dimension
A basis of a vector space V is defined as a
subset of vectors in that are linearly
independent and span vector space V.
The space V is finite-dimensional if it has
a finite basis.
We define the dimension of a finite-
dimensional vector spaces as the number of
elements in a basis for V . We shall denote
the dimension of space V by dimV.
Theorem
Let V be a vector space which is
spanned by a finite set of vectors
1
,
2
. . ,
n
. Then any independent set of vectors in
V is finite and contains no more than n
elements.
Summary of Vector space 1
Vector spaces
Subspaces
Span
Linearly
independent
Basis and
dimensions
Thats all for today.
Thank you for your attention.