matt grime said:
Let b be the form on R^n given by B(v,w) = 0 for all W. The kernel is then all of R^n. Referred to the standard basis the form given by A = diag{1,1,1,1...1,0,0..,0} with p ones and q zeros has q-dimensional kernel. (you don't need to learn anything about rings or modules, it's simple (bi)linear algebra).
Okay, if you're willing, I'm able. Of the above, "= 0" was about all I understood. I just "learned" today what a vector space is (for shame;), so I will have to look up all of this and get past the language barrier.
Matrix A has only p 1s, and all the rest of the elements, (p*q)-p, are 0s.
The "n" in R^n and "q" in q-dimensional refer to the number of rows in the matrix.
If both of those statements are correct, I kind of get what you're saying. Even if "n" and "q" refer to "n*n" and "q*q" matrices I still kind of get what you're saying. (Which shows how much I get it.)
The biggest problem I have now is that I can't figure out how to transform a ?linear map? into a matrix- or whatever gets transformed into a matrix.
I see the relationship between
1)the ordered pair (x, y) from the cartesian product of the two domain vector spaces, say X and Y, AND the (row, column) coordinates of the matrix.
2)the value of the function at (x, y) AND the element at (row, column).
But my grasp of everything else is so tenuous, I can't get much of anywhere. For instance, I read that the range must be the base field of the two vector spaces, and I can recall the definitions, but the statement has no significance yet- it's of no consequence. Perhaps that's my biggest problem.
I'm still working
Rachel