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Worksheet 3

Due 10/20

  1. During the October 13th lecture, I wrote down many statements equivalent to "SS is a linearly independent set". Do the same for "SS is a spanning set". The answer is in the notes but see what you can do from memory.

  2. Let T:R2R3T:\mathbb{R}^2 \to \mathbb{R}^3 be a linear transformation. We know that there exists a matrix AA such that T(x)=AxT(x)=Ax.

    • Suppose we know that T(1,0)=(2,3,4)T(1,0)=(2,3,4) and T(0,1)=(1,2,1)T(0,1)=(-1,2,1). Can we determine AA? If so, what is it? If not, why not?

    • Suppose instead we know that T(1,0)=(2,3,4)T(1,0)=(2,3,4) and T(2,0)=(4,6,8)T(2,0)=(4,6,8). Can we determine AA? If so, what is it? If not, why not?

    • Suppose instead we know that T(1,0)=(2,3,4)T(1,0)=(2,3,4) and T(1,1)=(1,2,1)T(1,1)=(-1,2,1). Can we determine AA? If so, what is it? If not, why not?

    • Suppose instead we know that T(x)=uT(x)=u and T(y)=vT(y)=v. Under what conditions on xx and yy, can we determine AA?

  3. Come up with a linear transform that is:

    • One-to-one and onto

    • One-to-one but not onto

    • Onto but not one-to-one

    • Not one-to-one nor onto

  4. Is differentiation a linear transformation? The answer is yes. I just want you to think about why this is true.

  5. Do a full exam from the exam archive here under test like conditions.