Determine if a Euclidean vector can be written as a linear combination of a given set of Euclidean vectors by solving an appropriate vector equation.
Subsection2.1.1Warm Up
Activity2.1.1.
Discuss which of the vectors \(\vec{u}=\left[\begin{array}{c} 1 \\ -1 \\ 2 \end{array}\right]\) and \(\vec{v}=\left[\begin{array}{c} 0 \\ 3 \\ -1 \end{array}\right]\) is a solution to the given vector equation:
There are other kinds of vector spaces as well (e.g. polynomials, matrices), which we will investigate in Section 3.5. But understanding the structure of Euclidean vectors on their own will be beneficial, even when we turn our attention to other kinds of vectors.
Likewise, when we multiply a vector by a real number, as in \(-3 \left[\begin{array}{c} 1 \\ -1 \\ 2 \end{array}\right]=\left[\begin{array}{c} -3 \\ 3 \\ -6 \end{array}\right]\text{,}\) we refer to this real number as a scalar.
Definition2.1.3.
A linear combination of a set of vectors \(\{\vec v_1,\vec v_2,\dots,\vec v_n\}\) is given by \(c_1\vec v_1+c_2\vec v_2+\dots+c_n\vec v_n\) for any choice of scalar multiples \(c_1,c_2,\dots,c_n\text{.}\)
For example, we can say \(\left[\begin{array}{c}3 \\0 \\ 5\end{array}\right]\) is a linear combination of the vectors \(\left[\begin{array}{c} 1 \\ -1 \\ 2 \end{array}\right]\) and \(\left[\begin{array}{c} 1 \\ 2 \\ 1 \end{array}\right]\) since
Sketch a representation of all the vectors belonging to
\begin{equation*}
\vspan\left\{\left[\begin{array}{c}1\\2\end{array}\right],
\left[\begin{array}{c}-1\\1\end{array}\right]\right\}=
\setBuilder{a\left[\begin{array}{c}1\\2\end{array}\right]+
b\left[\begin{array}{c}-1\\1\end{array}\right]}{a, b \in \IR}
\end{equation*}
in the \(xy\) plane. What best describes this sketch?
A line
A plane
A parabola
A circle
Activity2.1.8.
Sketch a representation of all the vectors belonging to \(\vspan\left\{\left[\begin{array}{c}6\\-4\end{array}\right],
\left[\begin{array}{c}-3\\2\end{array}\right]\right\}\) in the \(xy\) plane. What best describes this sketch?
A line
A plane
A parabola
A cube
Activity2.1.9.
Consider the following questions to discover whether a Euclidean vector belongs to a span.
(a)
The Euclidean vector \(\left[\begin{array}{c}-1\\-6\\1\end{array}\right]\) belongs to \(\vspan\left\{\left[\begin{array}{c}1\\0\\-3\end{array}\right],
\left[\begin{array}{c}-1\\-3\\2\end{array}\right]\right\}\) exactly when there exists a solution to which of these vector equations?
Use technology to find \(\RREF\) of the corresponding augmented matrix, and then use that matrix to find the solution set of the vector equation.
(c)
Given this solution set, does \(\left[\begin{array}{c}-1\\-6\\1\end{array}\right]\) belong to \(\vspan\left\{\left[\begin{array}{c}1\\0\\-3\end{array}\right],
\left[\begin{array}{c}-1\\-3\\2\end{array}\right]\right\}\text{?}\)
Observation2.1.10.
The following are all equivalent statements:
The vector \(\vec{b}\) belongs to \(\vspan\{\vec v_1,\dots,\vec v_n\}\text{.}\)
The vector \(\vec{b}\) is a linear combination of the vectors \(\vec v_1,\dots,\vec v_n\text{.}\)
The vector equation \(x_1 \vec{v}_1+\cdots+x_n \vec{v}_n=\vec{b}\) is consistent.
The linear system corresponding to \(\left[\vec v_1\,\dots\,\vec v_n \,|\, \vec b\right]\) is consistent.
\(\RREF\left[\vec v_1\,\dots\,\vec v_n \,|\, \vec b\right]\) doesn’t have a row \([0\,\cdots\,0\,|\,1]\) representing the contradiction \(0=1\text{.}\)
Activity2.1.11.
Consider this claim about a vector equation:
\(\left[\begin{array}{c} -6 \\ 2 \\ -6 \end{array}\right]\)is a linear combination of the vectors \(\left[\begin{array}{c} 1 \\ 0 \\ 2 \end{array}\right] , \left[\begin{array}{c} 3 \\ 0 \\ 6 \end{array}\right] , \left[\begin{array}{c} 2 \\ 0 \\ 4 \end{array}\right] , \text{ and } \left[\begin{array}{c} -4 \\ 1 \\ -5 \end{array}\right]\text{.}\)
(a)
Write a statement involving the solutions of a vector equation that’s equivalent to this claim.
(b)
Explain why the statement you wrote is true.
(c)
Since your statement was true, use the solution set to describe a linear combination of \(\left[\begin{array}{c} 1 \\ 0 \\ 2 \end{array}\right] , \left[\begin{array}{c} 3 \\ 0 \\ 6 \end{array}\right] , \left[\begin{array}{c} 2 \\ 0 \\ 4 \end{array}\right] , \text{ and } \left[\begin{array}{c} -4 \\ 1 \\ -5 \end{array}\right]\) that equals \(\left[\begin{array}{c} -6 \\ 2 \\ -6 \end{array}\right]\text{.}\)
Write a statement involving the solutions of a vector equation that’s equivalent to this claim.
(b)
Explain why the statement you wrote is false, to conclude that the vector does not belong to the span.
Subsection2.1.3Individual Practice
Activity2.1.13.
Before next class, find some time to do the following:
(a)
Without referring to your activity book, write down the definition of a linear combination of vectors.
(b)
Let \(\vec{u}=\left[\begin{array}{c} 1 \\ 2 \\0 \end{array}\right]\) and \(\vec{v}=\left[\begin{array}{c} -1 \\ 3 \\ 0\end{array}\right]\text{.}\) Write down an example \(\vec{w_1}=\left[\begin{array}{c} \unknown \\ \unknown \\ \unknown\end{array}\right]\) of a linear combination of \(\vec{u},\vec{v}\text{.}\) Then write down an example \(\vec{w_2}=\left[\begin{array}{c} \unknown \\ \unknown \\ \unknown\end{array}\right]\) that is not a linear combination of \(\vec{u},\vec{v}\text{.}\)
(c)
Draw a rough sketch of the vectors \(\vec{u}=\left[\begin{array}{c} 1 \\ 2 \\0 \end{array}\right]\text{,}\)\(\vec{v}=\left[\begin{array}{c} -1 \\ 3 \\ 0\end{array}\right]\text{,}\)\(\vec{w_1}=\left[\begin{array}{c} \unknown \\ \unknown \\ \unknown\end{array}\right]\text{,}\) and \(\vec{w_2}=\left[\begin{array}{c} \unknown \\ \unknown \\ \unknown\end{array}\right]\) in \(\IR^3\text{.}\)
Suppose \(S = \{\vec{v_1},\ldots, \vec{v_n}\}\) is a set of vectors. Show that \(\vec{v_0}\) is a linear combination of members of \(S\text{,}\) if an only if there are a set of scalars \(\{c_0,c_1,\ldots, c_n\}\) such that \(\vec{z} = c_0\vec{v_0} + \cdots + c_n\vec{v_n}.\) We can do this in a few parts. I’ve used bullets here to indicate all that needs to be done. This is an "if and only if" proof, so it needs two parts.
First, assume that \(\vec{0} = c_0\vec{v_0} + \cdots + c_n\vec{v_n}\) has a solution, with \(c_0 \neq 0\text{.}\) Show that \(\vec{v_0}\) is a linear combination of elements of \(S\text{.}\)
Next, assume that \(\vec{v_0}\) is a linear combination of elements of \(S\text{.}\) Can you find the appropriate \(\{c_0,c_1,\ldots, c_n\}\) to make the equation \(\vec{z} = c_0\vec{v_0} + \cdots + c_n\vec{v_n}\) true?
In either of your proofs above, does the case when \(\vec{v_0} = \vec{z}\) change your thinking? Explain why or why not.