Are These Subsets of R3 Subspaces?

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Homework Statement


Which of the following subsets of R3 are subspaces? The set of all vectors of the form (a,b,c) where a, b, and c are...


Homework Equations


1. integers
2. rational numbers

The Attempt at a Solution


I think neither are subspaces. IIRC, the scalar just needs to be from R3 and not, for example, an integer for 1 or a rational number for 2.

So for number 1, I can multiply the integers of vector (a,b,c) by some non-integer k, ending up with (ka,kb,kc) outside the subset, and thus not a subspace.

For number 2, I can multiply the rational numbers of vector (a,b,c) some some irrational number (say, ∏) and end up with (∏a, ∏b, ∏c), all outside the subset and thus not a subspace.

Or am I totally wrong?
 
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MoreDrinks said:
Or am I totally wrong?
No, you are totally correct. The indicated sets are not subspaces of ##\mathbb{R}^3##, for the reasons you stated.
 
MoreDrinks said:
the scalar just needs to be from R3
Correction: the scalars are elements of ##\mathbb{R}##, not ##\mathbb{R}^3##.
 
jbunniii said:
Correction: the scalars are elements of ##\mathbb{R}##, not ##\mathbb{R}^3##.

If we're dealing with complex space, can scalars be complex?

Thanks for the help!
 
MoreDrinks said:
If we're dealing with complex space, can scalars be complex?

Thanks for the help!
They can, but then it wouldn't be ##\mathbb{R}^3## anymore. It would be ##\mathbb{C}^3##.
 
jbunniii said:
They can, but then it wouldn't be ##\mathbb{R}^3## anymore. It would be ##\mathbb{C}^3##.

True, thanks! Would the correct term be that we're working in the "field" of R^3 or just R^3 space when talking about this?
 
MoreDrinks said:
True, thanks! Would the correct term be that we're working in the "field" of R^3 or just R^3 space when talking about this?
To be precise, a vector space consists of an abelian group of vectors and a field of scalars, along with some rules governing the multiplication of a vector by a scalar.

So if we want to be precise, we would say that we are working in the vector space in which the vectors are elements of ##\mathbb{R}^3## and the scalars are elements of ##\mathbb{R}##, with the usual rules of multiplication.

However, for brevity we typically say that we are working in the vector space ##\mathbb{R}^3##, and unless stated otherwise, it is understood that the scalar field is ##\mathbb{R}##.

Similarly, we may say that we are working in the vector space ##\mathbb{C}^3##, where the assumption is that unless stated otherwise, the scalar field is ##\mathbb{C}##.
 
jbunniii said:
To be precise, a vector space consists of an abelian group of vectors and a field of scalars, along with some rules governing the multiplication of a vector by a scalar.

So if we want to be precise, we would say that we are working in the vector space in which the vectors are elements of ##\mathbb{R}^3## and the scalars are elements of ##\mathbb{R}##, with the usual rules of multiplication.

However, for brevity we typically say that we are working in the vector space ##\mathbb{R}^3##, and unless stated otherwise, it is understood that the scalar field is ##\mathbb{R}##.

Similarly, we may say that we are working in the vector space ##\mathbb{C}^3##, where the assumption is that unless stated otherwise, the scalar field is ##\mathbb{C}##.

Thank you, that clears up a lot.
 
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