First Year Mathematics B (Integration, Series, Discrete Maths & Modelling) (1 Viewer)

leehuan

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

What other method do you have in mind? (Induction helps takes care of it nicely if you want to prove it straight from the axioms.)

For some reason I kept thinking what was the problem with doing it component wise...

In that case, how could you prove this then?


As a reference, they proved like this


Also gonna take a stab at the axioms they used...
1. Existence of 0
2. Scaling factor of 1
3. arithmetic (or just existence of 0 in field of scalars)
4. Scalar distributive law
5. Scaling factor of 1
 
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InteGrand

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

For some reason I kept thinking what was the problem with doing it component wise...

In that case, how could you prove this then?


As a reference, they proved like this


Also gonna take a stab at the axioms they used...
1. Existence of 0
2. Scaling factor of 1
3. arithmetic (or just existence of 0 in field of scalars)
4. Scalar distributive law
5. Scaling factor of 1




We can't just do these component-wise because they are results about arbitrary vector spaces (not necessarily ones where the vectors are n-tuples).
 

RenegadeMx

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

For some reason I kept thinking what was the problem with doing it component wise...

In that case, how could you prove this then?


As a reference, they proved like this


Also gonna take a stab at the axioms they used...
1. Existence of 0
2. Scaling factor of 1
3. arithmetic (or just existence of 0 in field of scalars)
4. Scalar distributive law
5. Scaling factor of 1
man i feel sorry if they expect u to properly remember the axioms, for us we just had to use 2 or 3.
 

seanieg89

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

They really aren't hard to remember.
 

leehuan

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

The axioms are just annoying.

Actually knowing when and how to use them like there though is ...
 

Flop21

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

S = {x is an element of R^4 | (x1)-5(x3) = 2(x4)}


Find one non-zero element in S.


Do you just sub in random values for x1,x3,x4 (also where's x2)?
 

RenegadeMx

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

S = {x is an element of R^4 | (x1)-5(x3) = 2(x4)}


Find one non-zero element in S.


Do you just sub in random values for x1,x3,x4 (also where's x2)?
x=(2,0,0,1) x2 can be whatever u want doesnt affect the eqn
 

leehuan

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Don't mind if this question isn't finished off for me but can someone please set it up? Finding it hard to set everything out neatly here.

 

HeroicPandas

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Don't mind if this question isn't finished off for me but can someone please set it up? Finding it hard to set everything out neatly here.

Is there missing detail like Ax = 0 or Ax is an element of ___
 

leehuan

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Is there missing detail like Ax = 0 or Ax is an element of ___
Nope, and I know it can't be Ax=0 because that's a system of linear equations.

Pretty sure by assumption Ax is an element of R3 if the whole set is a subspace of R3
 

HeroicPandas

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Nope, and I know it can't be Ax=0 because that's a system of linear equations.

Pretty sure by assumption Ax is an element of R3 if the whole set is a subspace of R3
Woops, I did a mistake in dimension and thought that Ax is still 3x5 matrix
 

RenegadeMx

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Don't mind if this question isn't finished off for me but can someone please set it up? Finding it hard to set everything out neatly here.

i forgot the proper proof for these

U is subset of r3 which is known v.s <- not sure if u need to include this for first year, but im used to writing it anyway..

0 vector is obvious
Ax+Ay=A(x+y) y element of U etc i.e A(0)+A(0)=A(0+0) = 0
A*(Landa)(x)=(Landa) Ax landa is real, can be complex if u want A*Landa(0)-Landa A(0) =0
 
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InteGrand

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

Don't mind if this question isn't finished off for me but can someone please set it up? Finding it hard to set everything out neatly here.





 
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InteGrand

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

In other words, to show a set S is closed under addition, it means we have to show that if a and b are arbitrary elements of S, then so is a+b.

To show the set U is closed under scalar multiplication, it means we have to show that if c is an arbitrary scalar and v an arbitrary vector from U, then cv is also in U.
 

RenegadeMx

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

heres another one where u need to think more carefully compared to the easy stuff like 3x1+2x3=0 (if u want the practice)

 

Flop21

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

For this polynomial question, I get the same matrix but R1 and R3 swapped. Is this still okay, or is my method wrong?

 

InteGrand

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

For this polynomial question, I get the same matrix but R1 and R3 swapped. Is this still okay, or is my method wrong?

As long as you have the same rows, you'll end up at the same answer (because then you're starting off with the same set of simultaneous equations, just written in a different order, which clearly won't affect the solutions).
 

leehuan

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

heres another one where u need to think more carefully compared to the easy stuff like 3x1+2x3=0 (if u want the practice)

I'll go for it if I get the time
 

leehuan

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Re: MATH1231/1241/1251 SOS Thread

^Feelsbad delaying the exercise

Anyway



Is this just because the zero polynomial can't be in S?
 

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