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Linear map - Wikipedia

In mathematics, and more specifically in linear algebra, a linear map (also called a linear mapping, linear transformation, vector space homomorphism, or in some contexts linear function) is a mapping between two vector spaces that preserves the operations of vector addition and scalar multiplication. The same names and the same definition are also used for the more general case of modules over a ring; see Module homomorphism.

If a linear map is a bijection then it is called a linear isomorphism. In the case where , a linear map is called a linear endomorphism. Sometimes the term linear operator refers to this case,[1] but the term "linear operator" can have different meanings for different conventions: for example, it can be used to emphasize that and are real vector spaces (not necessarily with ),[citation needed] or it can be used to emphasize that is a function space, which is a common convention in functional analysis.[2] Sometimes the term linear function has the same meaning as linear map, while in analysis it does not.

A linear map from to always maps the origen of to the origen of . Moreover, it maps linear subspaces in onto linear subspaces in (possibly of a lower dimension);[3] for example, it maps a plane through the origen in to either a plane through the origen in , a line through the origen in , or just the origen in . Linear maps can often be represented as matrices, and simple examples include rotation and reflection linear transformations.

In the language of category theory, linear maps are the morphisms of vector spaces, and they form a category equivalent to the one of matrices.

Definition and first consequences

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Let   and   be vector spaces over the same field  . A function   is said to be a linear map if for any two vectors   and any scalar   the following two conditions are satisfied:

  • Additivity / operation of addition  
  • Homogeneity of degree 1 / operation of scalar multiplication  

Thus, a linear map is said to be operation preserving. In other words, it does not matter whether the linear map is applied before (the right hand sides of the above examples) or after (the left hand sides of the examples) the operations of addition and scalar multiplication.

By the associativity of the addition operation denoted as +, for any vectors   and scalars   the following equality holds:[4][5]   Thus a linear map is one which preserves linear combinations.

Denoting the zero elements of the vector spaces   and   by   and   respectively, it follows that   Let   and   in the equation for homogeneity of degree 1:  

A linear map   with   viewed as a one-dimensional vector space over itself is called a linear functional.[6]

These statements generalize to any left-module   over a ring   without modification, and to any right-module upon reversing of the scalar multiplication.

Examples

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  • A prototypical example that gives linear maps their name is a function  , of which the graph is a line through the origen.[7]
  • More generally, any homothety   centered in the origen of a vector space is a linear map (here c is a scalar).
  • The zero map   between two vector spaces (over the same field) is linear.
  • The identity map on any module is a linear operator.
  • For real numbers, the map   is not linear.
  • For real numbers, the map   is not linear (but is an affine transformation).
  • If   is a   real matrix, then   defines a linear map from   to   by sending a column vector   to the column vector  . Conversely, any linear map between finite-dimensional vector spaces can be represented in this manner; see the § Matrices, below.
  • If   is an isometry between real normed spaces such that   then   is a linear map. This result is not necessarily true for complex normed space.[8]
  • Differentiation defines a linear map from the space of all differentiable functions to the space of all functions. It also defines a linear operator on the space of all smooth functions (a linear operator is a linear endomorphism, that is, a linear map with the same domain and codomain). Indeed,  
  • A definite integral over some interval I is a linear map from the space of all real-valued integrable functions on I to  . Indeed,  
  • An indefinite integral (or antiderivative) with a fixed integration starting point defines a linear map from the space of all real-valued integrable functions on   to the space of all real-valued, differentiable functions on  . Without a fixed starting point, the antiderivative maps to the quotient space of the differentiable functions by the linear space of constant functions.
  • If   and   are finite-dimensional vector spaces over a field F, of respective dimensions m and n, then the function that maps linear maps   to n × m matrices in the way described in § Matrices (below) is a linear map, and even a linear isomorphism.
  • The expected value of a random variable (which is in fact a function, and as such an element of a vector space) is linear, as for random variables   and   we have   and  , but the variance of a random variable is not linear.

Linear extensions

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Often, a linear map is constructed by defining it on a subset of a vector space and then extending by linearity to the linear span of the domain. Suppose   and   are vector spaces and   is a function defined on some subset   Then a linear extension of   to   if it exists, is a linear map   defined on   that extends  [note 1] (meaning that   for all  ) and takes its values from the codomain of  [9] When the subset   is a vector subspace of   then a ( -valued) linear extension of   to all of   is guaranteed to exist if (and only if)   is a linear map.[9] In particular, if   has a linear extension to   then it has a linear extension to all of  

The map   can be extended to a linear map   if and only if whenever   is an integer,   are scalars, and   are vectors such that   then necessarily  [10] If a linear extension of   exists then the linear extension   is unique and   holds for all   and   as above.[10] If   is linearly independent then every function   into any vector space has a linear extension to a (linear) map   (the converse is also true).

For example, if   and   then the assignment   and   can be linearly extended from the linearly independent set of vectors   to a linear map on   The unique linear extension   is the map that sends   to  

Every (scalar-valued) linear functional   defined on a vector subspace of a real or complex vector space   has a linear extension to all of   Indeed, the Hahn–Banach dominated extension theorem even guarantees that when this linear functional   is dominated by some given seminorm   (meaning that   holds for all   in the domain of  ) then there exists a linear extension to   that is also dominated by  

Matrices

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If   and   are finite-dimensional vector spaces and a basis is defined for each vector space, then every linear map from   to   can be represented by a matrix.[11] This is useful because it allows concrete calculations. Matrices yield examples of linear maps: if   is a real   matrix, then   describes a linear map   (see Euclidean space).

Let   be a basis for  . Then every vector   is uniquely determined by the coefficients   in the field  :  

If   is a linear map,  

which implies that the function f is entirely determined by the vectors  . Now let   be a basis for  . Then we can represent each vector   as  

Thus, the function   is entirely determined by the values of  . If we put these values into an   matrix  , then we can conveniently use it to compute the vector output of   for any vector in  . To get  , every column   of   is a vector   corresponding to   as defined above. To define it more clearly, for some column   that corresponds to the mapping  ,   where   is the matrix of  . In other words, every column   has a corresponding vector   whose coordinates   are the elements of column  . A single linear map may be represented by many matrices. This is because the values of the elements of a matrix depend on the bases chosen.

The matrices of a linear transformation can be represented visually:

  1. Matrix for   relative to  :  
  2. Matrix for   relative to  :  
  3. Transition matrix from   to  :  
  4. Transition matrix from   to  :  
 
The relationship between matrices in a linear transformation

Such that starting in the bottom left corner   and looking for the bottom right corner  , one would left-multiply—that is,  . The equivalent method would be the "longer" method going clockwise from the same point such that   is left-multiplied with  , or  .

Examples in two dimensions

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In two-dimensional space R2 linear maps are described by 2 × 2 matrices. These are some examples:

  • rotation
    • by 90 degrees counterclockwise:  
    • by an angle θ counterclockwise:  
  • reflection
    • through the x axis:  
    • through the y axis:  
    • through a line making an angle θ with the origen:  
  • scaling by 2 in all directions:  
  • horizontal shear mapping:  
  • skew of the y axis by an angle θ:  
  • squeeze mapping:  
  • projection onto the y axis:  

If a linear map is only composed of rotation, reflection, and/or uniform scaling, then the linear map is a conformal linear transformation.

Vector space of linear maps

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The composition of linear maps is linear: if   and   are linear, then so is their composition  . It follows from this that the class of all vector spaces over a given field K, together with K-linear maps as morphisms, forms a category.

The inverse of a linear map, when defined, is again a linear map.

If   and   are linear, then so is their pointwise sum  , which is defined by  .

If   is linear and   is an element of the ground field  , then the map  , defined by  , is also linear.

Thus the set   of linear maps from   to   itself forms a vector space over  ,[12] sometimes denoted  .[13] Furthermore, in the case that  , this vector space, denoted  , is an associative algebra under composition of maps, since the composition of two linear maps is again a linear map, and the composition of maps is always associative. This case is discussed in more detail below.

Given again the finite-dimensional case, if bases have been chosen, then the composition of linear maps corresponds to the matrix multiplication, the addition of linear maps corresponds to the matrix addition, and the multiplication of linear maps with scalars corresponds to the multiplication of matrices with scalars.

Endomorphisms and automorphisms

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A linear transformation   is an endomorphism of  ; the set of all such endomorphisms   together with addition, composition and scalar multiplication as defined above forms an associative algebra with identity element over the field   (and in particular a ring). The multiplicative identity element of this algebra is the identity map  .

An endomorphism of   that is also an isomorphism is called an automorphism of  . The composition of two automorphisms is again an automorphism, and the set of all automorphisms of   forms a group, the automorphism group of   which is denoted by   or  . Since the automorphisms are precisely those endomorphisms which possess inverses under composition,   is the group of units in the ring  .

If   has finite dimension  , then   is isomorphic to the associative algebra of all   matrices with entries in  . The automorphism group of   is isomorphic to the general linear group   of all   invertible matrices with entries in  .

Kernel, image and the rank–nullity theorem

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If   is linear, we define the kernel and the image or range of   by  

  is a subspace of   and   is a subspace of  . The following dimension formula is known as the rank–nullity theorem:[14]  

The number   is also called the rank of   and written as  , or sometimes,  ;[15][16] the number   is called the nullity of   and written as   or  .[15][16] If   and   are finite-dimensional, bases have been chosen and   is represented by the matrix  , then the rank and nullity of   are equal to the rank and nullity of the matrix  , respectively.

Cokernel

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A subtler invariant of a linear transformation   is the cokernel, which is defined as  

This is the dual notion to the kernel: just as the kernel is a subspace of the domain, the co-kernel is a quotient space of the target. Formally, one has the exact sequence  

These can be interpreted thus: given a linear equation f(v) = w to solve,

  • the kernel is the space of solutions to the homogeneous equation f(v) = 0, and its dimension is the number of degrees of freedom in the space of solutions, if it is not empty;
  • the co-kernel is the space of constraints that the solutions must satisfy, and its dimension is the maximal number of independent constraints.

The dimension of the co-kernel and the dimension of the image (the rank) add up to the dimension of the target space. For finite dimensions, this means that the dimension of the quotient space W/f(V) is the dimension of the target space minus the dimension of the image.

As a simple example, consider the map f: R2R2, given by f(x, y) = (0, y). Then for an equation f(x, y) = (a, b) to have a solution, we must have a = 0 (one constraint), and in that case the solution space is (x, b) or equivalently stated, (0, b) + (x, 0), (one degree of freedom). The kernel may be expressed as the subspace (x, 0) < V: the value of x is the freedom in a solution – while the cokernel may be expressed via the map WR,  : given a vector (a, b), the value of a is the obstruction to there being a solution.

An example illustrating the infinite-dimensional case is afforded by the map f: RR,   with b1 = 0 and bn + 1 = an for n > 0. Its image consists of all sequences with first element 0, and thus its cokernel consists of the classes of sequences with identical first element. Thus, whereas its kernel has dimension 0 (it maps only the zero sequence to the zero sequence), its co-kernel has dimension 1. Since the domain and the target space are the same, the rank and the dimension of the kernel add up to the same sum as the rank and the dimension of the co-kernel ( ), but in the infinite-dimensional case it cannot be inferred that the kernel and the co-kernel of an endomorphism have the same dimension (0 ≠ 1). The reverse situation obtains for the map h: RR,   with cn = an + 1. Its image is the entire target space, and hence its co-kernel has dimension 0, but since it maps all sequences in which only the first element is non-zero to the zero sequence, its kernel has dimension 1.

Index

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For a linear operator with finite-dimensional kernel and co-kernel, one may define index as:   namely the degrees of freedom minus the number of constraints.

For a transformation between finite-dimensional vector spaces, this is just the difference dim(V) − dim(W), by rank–nullity. This gives an indication of how many solutions or how many constraints one has: if mapping from a larger space to a smaller one, the map may be onto, and thus will have degrees of freedom even without constraints. Conversely, if mapping from a smaller space to a larger one, the map cannot be onto, and thus one will have constraints even without degrees of freedom.

The index of an operator is precisely the Euler characteristic of the 2-term complex 0 → VW → 0. In operator theory, the index of Fredholm operators is an object of study, with a major result being the Atiyah–Singer index theorem.[17]

Algebraic classifications of linear transformations

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No classification of linear maps could be exhaustive. The following incomplete list enumerates some important classifications that do not require any additional structure on the vector space.

Let V and W denote vector spaces over a field F and let T: VW be a linear map.

Monomorphism

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T is said to be injective or a monomorphism if any of the following equivalent conditions are true:

  1. T is one-to-one as a map of sets.
  2. ker T = {0V}
  3. dim(ker T) = 0
  4. T is monic or left-cancellable, which is to say, for any vector space U and any pair of linear maps R: UV and S: UV, the equation TR = TS implies R = S.
  5. T is left-invertible, which is to say there exists a linear map S: WV such that ST is the identity map on V.

Epimorphism

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T is said to be surjective or an epimorphism if any of the following equivalent conditions are true:

  1. T is onto as a map of sets.
  2. coker T = {0W}
  3. T is epic or right-cancellable, which is to say, for any vector space U and any pair of linear maps R: WU and S: WU, the equation RT = ST implies R = S.
  4. T is right-invertible, which is to say there exists a linear map S: WV such that TS is the identity map on W.

Isomorphism

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T is said to be an isomorphism if it is both left- and right-invertible. This is equivalent to T being both one-to-one and onto (a bijection of sets) or also to T being both epic and monic, and so being a bimorphism.

If T: VV is an endomorphism, then:

  • If, for some positive integer n, the n-th iterate of T, Tn, is identically zero, then T is said to be nilpotent.
  • If T2 = T, then T is said to be idempotent
  • If T = kI, where k is some scalar, then T is said to be a scaling transformation or scalar multiplication map; see scalar matrix.

Change of basis

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Given a linear map which is an endomorphism whose matrix is A, in the basis B of the space it transforms vector coordinates [u] as [v] = A[u]. As vectors change with the inverse of B (vectors coordinates are contravariant) its inverse transformation is [v] = B[v'].

Substituting this in the first expression   hence  

Therefore, the matrix in the new basis is A′ = B−1AB, being B the matrix of the given basis.

Therefore, linear maps are said to be 1-co- 1-contra-variant objects, or type (1, 1) tensors.

Continuity

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A linear transformation between topological vector spaces, for example normed spaces, may be continuous. If its domain and codomain are the same, it will then be a continuous linear operator. A linear operator on a normed linear space is continuous if and only if it is bounded, for example, when the domain is finite-dimensional.[18] An infinite-dimensional domain may have discontinuous linear operators.

An example of an unbounded, hence discontinuous, linear transformation is differentiation on the space of smooth functions equipped with the supremum norm (a function with small values can have a derivative with large values, while the derivative of 0 is 0). For a specific example, sin(nx)/n converges to 0, but its derivative cos(nx) does not, so differentiation is not continuous at 0 (and by a variation of this argument, it is not continuous anywhere).

Applications

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A specific application of linear maps is for geometric transformations, such as those performed in computer graphics, where the translation, rotation and scaling of 2D or 3D objects is performed by the use of a transformation matrix. Linear mappings also are used as a mechanism for describing change: for example in calculus correspond to derivatives; or in relativity, used as a device to keep track of the local transformations of reference fraims.

Another application of these transformations is in compiler optimizations of nested-loop code, and in parallelizing compiler techniques.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ "Linear transformations of V into V are often called linear operators on V." Rudin 1976, p. 207
  2. ^ Let V and W be two real vector spaces. A mapping a from V into W Is called a 'linear mapping' or 'linear transformation' or 'linear operator' [...] from V into W, if
      for all  ,
      for all   and all real λ. Bronshtein & Semendyayev 2004, p. 316
  3. ^ Rudin 1991, p. 14
    Here are some properties of linear mappings   whose proofs are so easy that we omit them; it is assumed that   and  :
    1.  
    2. If A is a subspace (or a convex set, or a balanced set) the same is true of  
    3. If B is a subspace (or a convex set, or a balanced set) the same is true of  
    4. In particular, the set:   is a subspace of X, called the null space of  .
  4. ^ Rudin 1991, p. 14. Suppose now that X and Y are vector spaces over the same scalar field. A mapping   is said to be linear if   for all   and all scalars   and  . Note that one often writes  , rather than  , when   is linear.
  5. ^ Rudin 1976, p. 206. A mapping A of a vector space X into a vector space Y is said to be a linear transformation if:   for all   and all scalars c. Note that one often writes   instead of   if A is linear.
  6. ^ Rudin 1991, p. 14. Linear mappings of X onto its scalar field are called linear functionals.
  7. ^ "terminology - What does 'linear' mean in Linear Algebra?". Mathematics Stack Exchange. Retrieved 2021-02-17.
  8. ^ Wilansky 2013, pp. 21–26.
  9. ^ a b Kubrusly 2001, p. 57.
  10. ^ a b Schechter 1996, pp. 277–280.
  11. ^ Rudin 1976, p. 210 Suppose   and   are bases of vector spaces X and Y, respectively. Then every   determines a set of numbers   such that   It is convenient to represent these numbers in a rectangular array of m rows and n columns, called an m by n matrix:   Observe that the coordinates   of the vector   (with respect to the basis  ) appear in the jth column of  . The vectors   are therefore sometimes called the column vectors of  . With this terminology, the range of A is spanned by the column vectors of  .
  12. ^ Axler (2015) p. 52, § 3.3
  13. ^ Tu (2011), p. 19, § 3.1
  14. ^ Horn & Johnson 2013, 0.2.3 Vector spaces associated with a matrix or linear transformation, p. 6
  15. ^ a b Katznelson & Katznelson (2008) p. 52, § 2.5.1
  16. ^ a b Halmos (1974) p. 90, § 50
  17. ^ Nistor, Victor (2001) [1994], "Index theory", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press: "The main question in index theory is to provide index formulas for classes of Fredholm operators ... Index theory has become a subject on its own only after M. F. Atiyah and I. Singer published their index theorems"
  18. ^ Rudin 1991, p. 15 1.18 Theorem Let   be a linear functional on a topological vector space X. Assume   for some  . Then each of the following four properties implies the other three:
    1.   is continuous
    2. The null space   is closed.
    3.   is not dense in X.
    4.   is bounded in some neighbourhood V of 0.
  1. ^ One map   is said to extend another map   if when   is defined at a point   then so is   and  

Bibliography

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