Travis091
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The definition (taken from Robert Gilmore's: Lie groups, Lie algebras, and some of their applications):
We have two vector spaces V_1 and V_2 with bases \{e_i\} and \{f_i\}. A basis for the direct product space V_1\otimes V_2 can be taken as \{e_i\otimes f_j\}. So an element w of this space would look like (summation convention):
w=A^{ij}e_i\otimes f_j
For the direct sum space V_1\oplus V_2, we take as basis: \{e_1,e_2,...;f_1,f_2,...\}.
\end of stuff from Gilmore
My question:
If we take V_1 to be the x-axis, and V_2 to be the y-axis, we can say that the tensor product space is the y=x line. Since any element would look like: w=A\;\;\hat{x}\otimes \hat{y} whereas the direct sum space is spanned by \{\hat{x},\hat{y}\}, i.e. it consists of the entire R^2.
but it seems weird to me that the tensor product space in this example has a smaller dimension than the direct sum space. Obviously I have a misconception, where is it?
Thanks!
We have two vector spaces V_1 and V_2 with bases \{e_i\} and \{f_i\}. A basis for the direct product space V_1\otimes V_2 can be taken as \{e_i\otimes f_j\}. So an element w of this space would look like (summation convention):
w=A^{ij}e_i\otimes f_j
For the direct sum space V_1\oplus V_2, we take as basis: \{e_1,e_2,...;f_1,f_2,...\}.
\end of stuff from Gilmore
My question:
If we take V_1 to be the x-axis, and V_2 to be the y-axis, we can say that the tensor product space is the y=x line. Since any element would look like: w=A\;\;\hat{x}\otimes \hat{y} whereas the direct sum space is spanned by \{\hat{x},\hat{y}\}, i.e. it consists of the entire R^2.
but it seems weird to me that the tensor product space in this example has a smaller dimension than the direct sum space. Obviously I have a misconception, where is it?
Thanks!
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