Solbing equation A(u)=B(v) for square matrices A and B

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on solving the equation A(u) = B(v) for square matrices A and B, where A and B are n x n matrices and u and v are n-dimensional vectors. It is established that a unique solution for u exists if and only if the determinant of matrix A (det(A)) is non-zero, indicating that A is invertible. In such cases, the solution can be expressed as u = A-1B(v). This conclusion clarifies the conditions necessary for determining u as a function of v.

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ivl
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Dear all,

this is perhaps a trivial question, so I apologise in advance. Any help is greatly appreciated nonetheless.

==The Equation==
The equation under consideration is:

A(u)=B(v)

where A and B are n times n matrices, while u and v are n-dimensional vectors.

==The Question==
From the above equation, I would like to determine u as a function of v.
Question: is the only way of determining u as a function of v to require that A is invertible?
In other words, is it correct to say that the only way of solving the above equation for u is u=A^{-1}B(v) ?

Thanks a lot,
IVL
 
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ivl said:
Dear all,

this is perhaps a trivial question, so I apologise in advance. Any help is greatly appreciated nonetheless.

==The Equation==
The equation under consideration is:

A(u)=B(v)

where A and B are n times n matrices, while u and v are n-dimensional vectors.

==The Question==
From the above equation, I would like to determine u as a function of v.
Question: is the only way of determining u as a function of v to require that A is invertible?
In other words, is it correct to say that the only way of solving the above equation for u is u=A^{-1}B(v) ?

Thanks a lot,
IVL



Well, more than "saying that the only way...", I'd say that requiring A to be invertible is the only way to guarantee that there's a solution to your problem, otherwise we'd have to look at each case in particular.

DonAntonio
 
Thanks for your reply, DonAntonio.

You are right, my question was a bit too vague. But you understood what I meant.

Perhaps a more meaningful way to put the question would be:

-given two n times n matrices, A and B
-let u and v be two n-dimensional vectors

A(u)=B(v)

For each choice of v, the above equation has a UNIQUE solution u if and only if det(A) is non-zero.

Correct?

Thanks
IVL
 
There is a unique solution if and only if A is invertible and in that case u= A-1Bv.
 
Thanks everybody,

glad to see things got clearer in my head. Problem solved.

Cheers
IVL
 

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