The Perpendicular Subspace of R^n: What is it and How is it Defined?

Shambles
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Homework Statement



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The Attempt at a Solution



The terminology in this question confuses me into what I am actually trying to solve. It seems to me that S-perp would naturally be a subspace of real column vectors based on the fact that we specify that S\neq0. It goes on to mention that S-perp is nonempty which seems obvious in the fact that S is not empty and it asks to show that any scalar multiples of vectors within the subset of S-perp will continue to be elements of S-perp.

So I've reached the thought that either
1) This question is ridiculously simply that intends for me to re-state the obvious or
2) I've missed something completely and it actually requires a long proof. Any insights?
 
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Here's an example that might give you some insight. Consider R2, and S = {(x, y) | y = 0}. Sperp = {(x, y) | x = 0}. Each element of Sperp in this example is orthogonal to each element of S, and further, it can be shown that Sperp of this example is a subspace of R2.

Your problem is similar. You need to show that your Sperp is a subspace of Rn, which means you need to show the following:
  1. Sperp contains the 0 vector.
  2. If u and v are in Sperp, then u + v is also in Sperp.
  3. If u is in Sperp and c is a scalar, then cu is in Sperp.
 
Thank you for your assistance. I believe I have constructed a response that is adequate by proving the vectors x,u,v to be elements of S-perp by continually showing that the dot product of the vectors with y (being an element of S) to equal 0 showing orthogonality showing them to be an element of S-perp.
 
Shambles said:
Thank you for your assistance. I believe I have constructed a response that is adequate by proving the vectors x,u,v to be elements of S-perp by continually showing that the dot product of the vectors with y (being an element of S) to equal 0 showing orthogonality showing them to be an element of S-perp.
That's not going to cut it. All you have shown (based on your description) is that the vectors x, u, and v are in Sperp; you haven't shown that Sperp is a subspace of Rn. To do that, you need to show the three things I listed in my previous post.
 
Shambles, do you know what a subspace is, or more precisely, how it is defined? That seems to be the problem.
 
There are two things I don't understand about this problem. First, when finding the nth root of a number, there should in theory be n solutions. However, the formula produces n+1 roots. Here is how. The first root is simply ##\left(r\right)^{\left(\frac{1}{n}\right)}##. Then you multiply this first root by n additional expressions given by the formula, as you go through k=0,1,...n-1. So you end up with n+1 roots, which cannot be correct. Let me illustrate what I mean. For this...
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