Linear algebra, find a basis for the quotient space

Karl Karlsson
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Homework Statement
Let V = C[x] be the vector space of all polynomials in x with complex coefficients and let ##W = \{p(x) ∈ V: p (1) = p (−1) = 0\}##.

Determine a basis for V/W
Relevant Equations
V = C[x]
##W = \{p(x) ∈ V: p (1) = p (−1) = 0\}##.
Let V = C[x] be the vector space of all polynomials in x with complex coefficients and let ##W = \{p(x) ∈ V: p (1) = p (−1) = 0\}##.

Determine a basis for V/W

The solution of this problem that i found did the following:
sol.png

Why do they choose the basis to be {1+W, x + W} at the end? I mean since
##dim(ker(L)) + dim (im(L)) = dim(V), dim(ker(L)) = dim(W)## and then ##dim(im(L))=2 = dim(V) - dim(W)## that means ##dim(W) \rightarrow \infty## because there is an infinite number of linearly independent polynomials that satisfy p(1)=p(-1)=0. Can't I just choose W to be a basis for V/W?

Thanks in advance!
 

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I think there's some confusion. W in the vector space V/W is a single vector, and is the zero vector. Recall V/W is the space of sets of the form x+W for some x, where is x-y is in W then x+W = y + W.

This is what they mean when they write 1+W and x+W.

If you really want the whole set W to be your sweet of basis (which doesn't even work, since they don't even span the space in question) you would have many linearly dependent vectors and you wouldn't have a basis.

As you observed some of the vector spaces have infinite dimensions, so your formula for the dimension of the image and kernel don't actually make sense. I can't read what is written in the solution but it looks like they take a different approach to show V/W has 2 dimensions
 
##p(1)=0## means ##(x-1)\,|\,p(x)## and ##p(-1)=0## gives ##(x+1)\,|\,p(x)##, so we have ##(x^2-1)\,|\,p(x)##. Now ##V/W = \mathbb{C}[x]/(x^2-1)\cdot\mathbb{C}[x]##, which means we can reduce any polynomial ##p(x)## to one of degree at most ##1## by writing ##q(x)=f(x)\cdot (x^2-1)+ g(x)\, , \,\deg g \leq 1.## Thus we have ##\pi(p)=g## if ##\pi : V\longrightarrow V/W## is the canonical projection. Since ##g(x)## is of degree zero or one, we can use ##[ g]=1## and ##[g]=x## as representatives of the equivalence classes. You cannot use dimension formulas, as ##\infty## isn't a number.
 
Alternatively, since x^{2k} - 1 and x^{2k+1} - x vanish at x = \pm 1 and are non-zero if k \geq 1 one can write <br /> \begin{align*}<br /> \sum_{n \geq 0} a_nx^n &amp;= a_0 + a_1 x + \sum_{k \geq 1} a_{2k}x^{2k} + \sum_{k \geq 1} a_{2k+1} x^{2k+1} \\<br /> &amp;= \left(a_0 + \sum_{k \geq 1} a_{2k}\right) + x\left( a_1 + \sum_{k \geq 1} a_{2k+1}\right)<br /> + \sum_{k \geq 1} a_{2k} (x^{2k} - 1) + \sum_{k \geq 1} a_{2k+1} (x^{2k + 1} - x)\end{align*} which is a polynomial of degree at most 1 plus a polynomial in W.
 
Office_Shredder said:
I think there's some confusion. W in the vector space V/W is a single vector, and is the zero vector. Recall V/W is the space of sets of the form x+W for some x, where is x-y is in W then x+W = y + W.

This is what they mean when they write 1+W and x+W.

If you really want the whole set W to be your sweet of basis (which doesn't even work, since they don't even span the space in question) you would have many linearly dependent vectors and you wouldn't have a basis.

As you observed some of the vector spaces have infinite dimensions, so your formula for the dimension of the image and kernel don't actually make sense. I can't read what is written in the solution but it looks like they take a different approach to show V/W has 2 dimensions
pasmith said:
Alternatively, since x^{2k} - 1 and x^{2k+1} - x vanish at x = \pm 1 and are non-zero if k \geq 1 one can write <br /> \begin{align*}<br /> \sum_{n \geq 0} a_nx^n &amp;= a_0 + a_1 x + \sum_{k \geq 1} a_{2k}x^{2k} + \sum_{k \geq 1} a_{2k+1} x^{2k+1} \\<br /> &amp;= \left(a_0 + \sum_{k \geq 1} a_{2k}\right) + x\left( a_1 + \sum_{k \geq 1} a_{2k+1}\right)<br /> + \sum_{k \geq 1} a_{2k} (x^{2k} - 1) + \sum_{k \geq 1} a_{2k+1} (x^{2k + 1} - x)\end{align*} which is a polynomial of degree at most 1 plus a polynomial in W.
Hi Office_Shredder! Thanks that is just the type of solution i was looking for :)
 
fresh_42 said:
##p(1)=0## means ##(x-1)\,|\,p(x)## and ##p(-1)=0## gives ##(x+1)\,|\,p(x)##, so we have ##(x^2-1)\,|\,p(x)##. Now ##V/W = \mathbb{C}[x]/(x^2-1)\cdot\mathbb{C}[x]##, which means we can reduce any polynomial ##p(x)## to one of degree at most ##1## by writing ##q(x)=f(x)\cdot (x^2-1)+ g(x)\, , \,\deg g \leq 1.## Thus we have ##\pi(p)=g## if ##\pi : V\longrightarrow V/W## is the canonical projection. Since ##g(x)## is of degree zero or one, we can use ##[ g]=1## and ##[g]=x## as representatives of the equivalence classes. You cannot use dimension formulas, as ##\infty## isn't a number.
Hi fresh_42! Thanks for another great solution that was easy to follow!
 
Hi just for clarification. Does the basis ##\{1+W, x + W\}## for V/W refer to all multiples of x+W and 1+W meaning for example 2x + 7+ W is also within the basis above?
 
Karl Karlsson said:
Hi just for clarification. Does the basis ##\{1+W, x + W\}## for V/W refer to all multiples of x+W and 1+W meaning for example 2x + 7+ W is also within the basis above?
2x + 7 + W is not a basis vector. It is within the space spanned by the basis, since 2x + 7 + W = 2(x + W) + 7(1 + W) since if p \in W then 9p \in W.
 
Karl Karlsson said:
Hi just for clarification. Does the basis ##\{1+W, x + W\}## for V/W refer to all multiples of x+W and 1+W meaning for example 2x + 7+ W is also within the basis above?
All linear combinations: ##\mathbb{C}\cdot (1+W) + \mathbb{C}\cdot (x+W)##.
 
  • #10
The answer ##\{1+W,x+W\}## to this problem {W+1,W+x} spans all of V, right? If this problem instead would have been the exact same but V was the vector space of all polynomials of degree n (n+1 vectors). Wouldn't the solution have been exactly the same? And then ##dim(V/W) = dim(V)-dim(W) = 2##, but clearly the basis ##V/W = \{1+W,x+W\}## has more then just two linearly independent vectors since W contains n-1 linearly independent vectors, right?
 
  • #11
Karl Karlsson said:
The answer ##\{1+W,x+W\}## to this problem {W+1,W+x} spans all of V, right?
No. It spans ##V/W## not ##V=\mathbb{C}[x].##
If this problem instead would have been the exact same but V was the vector space of all polynomials of degree n (n+1 vectors). Wouldn't the solution have been exactly the same?
Yes, the resulting quotient would be the same, i.e. an isomorphic copy to be exact, namely isomorphic to all linear polynomials.
And then ##dim(V/W) = dim(V)-dim(W) = 2##, but clearly the basis ##V/W = \{1+W,x+W\}## has more then just two linearly independent vectors since W contains n-1 linearly independent vectors, right?
No. ##W## is the zero vector in ##V/W##. There is no resolution of ##W## into elements of ##V## anymore.

Test the concept with ##V=\mathbb{Z}## and ##W= 12\mathbb{Z}## instead. It isn't a vector space, only a ring and an ideal, but it helps to understand quotient building. What are the generators of ##V/W = \mathbb{Z}/12\cdot\mathbb{Z}## and how can you represent them most conveniently?
 
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