Primitive element theorem: Difference between revisions

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In [[mathematics]], a '''bilinear form''' on a [[vector space]] ''V'' is a [[bilinear map]]ping {{nowrap|''V'' × ''V'' → ''F''}}, where ''F'' is the [[field (mathematics)|field]] of [[scalar (mathematics)|scalar]]s. That is, a bilinear form is a function {{nowrap|''B'' : ''V'' × ''V'' → ''F''}} which is [[linear transformation|linear]] in each argument separately:
Hello, my name is Harvey. Years ago he moved to Kentucky. For years I've been working with regard to office worker. What he really enjoys doing is in order to smoke and yet never stop doing who's. See what's new on my website here: http://www.partybus.com/philadelphia/pa/united-states
* ''B''('''u''' + '''v''', '''w''') = ''B''('''u''', '''w''') + ''B''('''v''', '''w''')
* ''B''('''u''', '''v''' + '''w''') = ''B''('''u''', '''v''') + ''B''('''u''', '''w''')
* ''B''(λ'''u''', '''v''') = ''B''('''u''', λ'''v''') = λ''B''('''u''', '''v''')
The definition of a bilinear form can be extended to include [[module (mathematics)|module]]s over a [[commutative ring]], with linear maps replaced by [[module homomorphism]]s.  When ''F'' is the field of [[complex number]]s '''C''', one is often more interested in [[sesquilinear form]]s, which are similar to bilinear forms but are [[conjugate linear]] in one argument.
 
==Coordinate representation==
Let ''V'' ≅ ''F<sup>n</sup>'' be an ''n''-dimensional vector space with basis {'''e'''<sub>1</sub>, ..., '''e'''<sub>''n''</sub>}.  Define the ''n'' × ''n'' matrix ''A'' by ''A<sub>ij</sub>'' = ''B''('''e'''<sub>''i''</sub>, '''e'''<sub>''j''</sub>). If the ''n'' × 1 matrix ''x'' represents a vector '''v''' with respect to this basis, and analogously, ''y'' represents '''w''', then:
 
:<math>B(\mathbf{v}, \mathbf{w}) = x^\mathrm T Ay = \sum_{i,j=1}^n a_{ij} x_i y_j. </math>
 
Suppose {'''f'''<sub>1</sub>, ..., '''f'''<sub>''n''</sub>} is another basis for ''V'', such that:
 
: ['''f'''<sub>1</sub>, ..., '''f'''<sub>''n''</sub>] = ['''e'''<sub>1</sub>, ..., '''e'''<sub>''n''</sub>]''S''
 
where ''S'' ∈ GL(''n'', ''F''). Now the new matrix representation for the bilinear form is given by: ''S''<sup>T</sup>''AS''.
 
==Maps to the dual space==
Every bilinear form ''B'' on ''V'' defines a pair of linear maps from ''V'' to its [[dual space]] ''V*''. Define ''B''<sub>1</sub>, ''B''<sub>2</sub>: ''V'' → ''V*''  by
:''B''<sub>1</sub>('''v''')('''w''') = ''B''('''v''', '''w''')
:''B''<sub>2</sub>('''v''')('''w''') = ''B''('''w''', '''v''')
This is often denoted as
:''B''<sub>1</sub>('''v''') = ''B''('''v''', ⋅)
:''B''<sub>2</sub>('''v''') = ''B''(⋅, '''v''')
where the ( ⋅ ) indicates the slot into which the argument for the resulting [[linear functional]] is to be placed.
 
For a finite-dimensional vector space ''V'', if either of ''B''<sub>1</sub> or ''B''<sub>2</sub> is an isomorphism, then both are, and the bilinear form ''B'' is said to be [[Degenerate form|nondegenerate]].  More concretely, for a finite-dimensional vector space, non-degenerate means that every non-zero element pairs non-trivially with some other element:
:<math>B(x,y)=0\,</math> for all <math>y \in V</math> implies that ''x'' = 0 and
:<math>B(x,y)=0\,</math> for all <math>x \in V</math> implies that ''y'' = 0.
 
The corresponding notion for a module over a ring is that a bilinear form is '''{{visible anchor|unimodular}}''' if <math>V \to V^*</math> is an isomorphism. Given a finite dimensional module over a commutative ring, the pairing may be injective (hence "nondegenerate" in the above sense) but not unimodular. For example, over the integers, the pairing <math>B(x,y) = 2xy</math> is nondegenerate but not unimodular, as the induced map from ''V'' = '''Z''' to ''V*'' = '''Z''' is multiplication by 2.
 
If ''V'' is finite-dimensional then one can identify ''V'' with its double dual ''V**''. One can then show that ''B''<sub>2</sub> is the [[transpose]] of the linear map ''B''<sub>1</sub> (if ''V'' is infinite-dimensional then  ''B''<sub>2</sub> is the transpose of ''B''<sub>1</sub> restricted to the image of ''V'' in ''V**''). Given ''B'' one can define the ''transpose'' of ''B'' to be the bilinear form given by
:''B*''('''v''', '''w''') = ''B''('''w''', '''v''').
 
The ''left radical'' and ''right radical'' of the form ''B'' are the [[kernel (algebra)|kernel]]s of ''B''<sub>1</sub> and ''B''<sub>2</sub> respectively;<ref>{{harvnb|Jacobson|2009}} p.346</ref> they are the vectors orthogonal to the whole space on the left and on the right.<ref>{{cite book | title=Principal Structures and Methods of Representation Theory | series=Translations of Mathematical Monographs | first=Dmitriĭ Petrovich | last=Zhelobenko | publisher=[[American Mathematical Society]] | year=2006 | isbn=0-8218-3731-1 | page=11 }}</ref>
 
If ''V'' is finite-dimensional then the [[rank (linear algebra)|rank]] of ''B''<sub>1</sub> is equal to the rank of ''B''<sub>2</sub>. If this number is equal to dim(''V'') then ''B''<sub>1</sub> and ''B''<sub>2</sub> are linear isomorphisms from ''V'' to ''V*''.  In this case ''B'' is nondegenerate.  By the [[rank–nullity theorem]], this is equivalent to the condition that the left and equivalently right radicals be trivial.  In fact, for finite dimensional spaces, this is often taken as the ''definition'' of nondegeneracy: 
 
<blockquote>'''Definition:''' ''B'' is nondegenerate if and only if ''B''('''v''', '''w''') = 0 for all '''w''' implies '''v''' = '''0'''.</blockquote>
 
Given any linear map ''A'' : ''V'' → ''V*'' one can obtain a bilinear form ''B'' on ''V'' via
:''B''('''v''', '''w''') = ''A''('''v''')('''w''').
This form will be nondegenerate if and only if ''A'' is an isomorphism.
 
If ''V'' is [[finite-dimensional]] then, relative to some [[basis (linear algebra)|basis]] for ''V'', a bilinear form is degenerate if and only if the [[determinant]] of the associated matrix is zero. Likewise, a nondegenerate form is one for which the determinant of the associated matrix is non-zero (the matrix is [[non-singular matrix|non-singular]]). These statements are independent of the chosen basis. For a module over a ring, a unimodular form is one for which the determinant of the associate matrix is a unit (for example 1), hence the term; note that a form whose matrix is non-zero but not a unit will be nondegenerate but not unimodular, for example <math>B(x,y) = 2xy</math> over the integers.
 
==Symmetric, skew-symmetric and alternating forms==
We define a form to be
*'''[[Symmetric bilinear form|symmetric]]''' if ''B''('''v''', '''w''') = ''B''('''w''', '''v''') for all '''v''', '''w''' in ''V'';
*'''[[Alternating form|alternating]]''' if ''B''('''v''', '''v''') = 0 for all '''v''' in ''V'';
*'''skew-symmetric''' if ''B''('''v''', '''w''') = −''B''('''w''', '''v''') for all '''v''', '''w''' in ''V'';
 
<blockquote>'''Proposition:''' Every alternating form is skew-symmetric.  </blockquote>
 
<blockquote> '''Proof:''' This can be seen by expanding ''B''('''v'''+'''w''', '''v'''+'''w'''). </blockquote>
 
If the [[characteristic (algebra)|characteristic]] of ''F'' is not 2 then the converse is also true: every skew-symmetric form is alternating. If, however, char(''F'') = 2 then a skew-symmetric form is the same as a symmetric form and there exist symmetric/skew-symmetric forms which are not alternating.
 
A bilinear form is symmetric (resp. skew-symmetric) [[if and only if]] its coordinate matrix (relative to any basis) is [[Symmetric matrix|symmetric]] (resp. [[Skew-symmetric matrix|skew-symmetric]]). A bilinear form is alternating if and only if its coordinate matrix is skew-symmetric and the diagonal entries are all zero (which follows from skew-symmetry when char(''F'') ≠ 2).
 
A bilinear form is symmetric if and only if the maps ''B''<sub>1</sub>, ''B''<sub>2</sub>: ''V'' → ''V*''  are equal, and skew-symmetric if and only if they are negatives of one another. If char(''F'') ≠ 2 then one can decompose a bilinear form into a symmetric and a skew-symmetric part as follows
:<math>B^{\pm} = \frac{1}{2} (B \pm B^*)</math>
where ''B*'' is the transpose of ''B'' (defined above).
 
Also if char(''F'') ≠ 2 then one can define a [[quadratic form]] in terms of its associated symmetric form. One can likewise define quadratic forms corresponding to skew-symmetric forms, [[Hermitian form]]s, and [[skew-Hermitian form]]s; the general concept is [[ε-quadratic form]].
 
==Reflexivity and orthogonality==
<blockquote>'''Definition:''' A bilinear form ''B'' : ''V'' × ''V'' → ''F'' is called '''reflexive''' if ''B''('''v''', '''w''') = 0 implies ''B''('''w''', '''v''') = 0 for all '''v''', '''w''' in ''V''.</blockquote>
 
<blockquote>'''Definition:''' Let ''B'' : ''V'' × ''V'' → ''F'' be a reflexive bilinear form. '''v''', '''w''' in ''V'' are '''orthogonal with respect to ''B''''' if and only if ''B''('''v''', '''w''') = 0 or ''B''('''w''', '''v''') = 0.</blockquote>
 
A form ''B'' is reflexive if and only if it is either symmetric or alternating.<ref>{{harvnb|Grove|1997}}</ref>  In the absence of reflexivity we have to distinguish left and right orthogonality. In a reflexive space the left and right radicals agree and are termed the ''kernel'' or the ''radical'' of the bilinear form: the subspace of all vectors orthogonal with every other vector.  A vector '''v''', with matrix representation ''x'', is in the radical of a bilinear form with matrix representation ''A'', if and only if ''Ax'' = 0 ↔ ''x''<sup>T</sup>''A'' = 0. The radical is always a subspace of ''V''.  It is trivial if and only if the matrix ''A'' is nonsingular, and thus if and only if the bilinear form is nondegenerate.
 
Suppose ''W'' is a subspace.  Define the ''[[orthogonal complement]]''<ref>Adkins & Weintraub (1992) p.359</ref>
 
:<math>W^{\perp}=\{\mathbf{v}| B(\mathbf{v}, \mathbf{w})=0\ \forall \mathbf{w}\in W\} \ . </math>
 
For a non-degenerate form on a finite dimensional space, the map ''W'' ↔ ''W''<sup>⊥</sup> is bijective, and the dimension of ''W''<sup>⊥</sup> is dim(''V'') − dim(''W'').
 
==Different spaces==
Much of the theory is available for a [[bilinear mapping]] to the base field
 
:''B'' : ''V'' × ''W'' → ''F''.
 
In this situation we still have induced linear mappings from ''V'' to ''W*'', and from ''W'' to ''V*''. It may happen that these mappings are isomorphisms; assuming finite dimensions, if one is an isomorphism, the other must be. When this occurs, ''B'' is said to be a '''perfect pairing'''.
 
In finite dimensions, this is equivalent to the pairing being nondegenerate (the spaces necessarily having the same dimensions). For modules (instead of vector spaces), just as how a nondegenerate form is weaker than a unimodular form, a nondegenerate pairing is a weaker notion than a perfect pairing. A pairing can be nondegenerate without being a perfect pairing, for instance {{nowrap|'''Z''' × '''Z''' → '''Z'''}} via {{nowrap|(''x'',''y'') ↦ 2''xy''}} is nondegenerate, but induces multiplication by 2 on the map {{nowrap|'''Z''' → '''Z'''*}}.
 
Terminology varies in coverage of bilinear forms. For example, F. Reese Harvey discusses "eight types of inner product".<ref>Harvey p. 22</ref> To define them he uses diagonal matrices ''A<sub>ij</sub>'' having only +1 or −1 for non-zero elements. Some of the "inner products" are [[symplectic vector space|symplectic forms]] and some are [[sesquilinear form]]s or [[sesquilinear form#Hermitian form|Hermitian forms]]. Rather than a general field ''F'', the instances with real numbers '''R''', complex numbers '''C''', and [[quaternions]] '''H''' are spelled out. The bilinear form
 
:<math>\sum_{k=1}^p  x_k y_k  - \sum_{k=p+1}^n  x_k y_k </math>
 
is called the '''real symmetric case''' and labeled R(''p'', ''q''), where ''p'' + ''q'' = ''n''.  Then he articulates the connection to traditional terminology:
:Some of the real symmetric cases are very important. The positive definite case R(''n'', 0) is called ''Euclidean space'', while the case of a single minus, R(''n''−1, 1) is called ''Lorentzian space''. If ''n'' = 4, then Lorentzian space is also called [[Minkowski space]] or ''Minkowski spacetime''. The special case R(''p'', ''p'') will be referred to as the ''split-case''.<ref>Harvey p 23</ref>
 
==Relation to tensor products==
By the [[universal property]] of the [[tensor product]], bilinear forms on ''V'' are in 1-to-1 correspondence with linear maps ''V'' ⊗ ''V'' → ''F''. If ''B'' is a bilinear form on ''V'' the corresponding linear map is given by
:'''v''' ⊗ '''w''' ↦ ''B''('''v''', '''w''')
The set of all linear maps ''V'' ⊗ ''V'' → ''F'' is the [[dual space]] of ''V'' ⊗ ''V'', so bilinear forms may be thought of as elements of
:(''V'' ⊗ ''V'')* ≅ ''V*'' ⊗ ''V*''
Likewise, symmetric bilinear forms may be thought of as elements of Sym<sup>2</sup>(''V*'') (the second [[symmetric power]] of ''V*''), and alternating bilinear forms as elements of Λ<sup>2</sup>''V*'' (the second [[exterior power]] of ''V*'').
 
==On normed vector spaces==
<blockquote>'''Definition:''' A bilinear form on a [[normed vector space]]  (''V'', ‖·‖ ) is '''bounded''', if there is a constant ''C'' such that for all '''u''', '''v''' ∈ ''V''
:<math>B(\mathbf{u}, \mathbf{v}) \le C \|\mathbf{u}\| \|\mathbf{v}\|.</math></blockquote>
 
<blockquote>'''Definition:''' A bilinear form on a normed vector space  (''V'', ‖·‖ ) is '''elliptic''', or [[Coercive_function#Coercive_operators_and_forms|coercive]], if there is a constant ''c'' > 0 such that for all '''u''' ∈ ''V''
:<math>B(\mathbf{u}, \mathbf{u}) \ge c \|\mathbf{u}\|^2.</math></blockquote>
 
==See also==
*[[Bilinear operator]]
*[[Multilinear form]]
*[[Quadratic form]]
*[[Inner product space]]
*[[positive semi-definite|Positive semi definite]]
*[[Sesquilinear form]]
 
==Notes==
{{reflist}}
 
==References==
* {{cite book | last=Jacobson | first=Nathan | title=Basic Algebra | volume=I | edition=2nd | year=2009 | isbn=978-0-486-47189-1 }}
* {{cite book | last1=Adkins | first1=William A. | last2=Weintraub | first2=Steven H. | title=Algebra: An Approach via Module Theory | series=[[Graduate Texts in Mathematics]] | volume=136 | publisher=[[Springer-Verlag]] | year=1992 | isbn=3-540-97839-9 | zbl=0768.00003  }}
* {{cite book | first=Bruce | last=Cooperstein | year=2010 | title=Advanced Linear Algebra | chapter=Ch 8: Bilinear Forms and Maps | pages=249&ndash;88 | publisher=[[CRC Press]] | isbn=978-1-4398-2966-0 }}
* {{cite book | last=Grove | first=Larry C. | title=Groups and characters | year=1997 | publisher=Wiley-Interscience | isbn=978-0-471-16340-4}}
* {{cite book | last1=Halmos | first1=Paul R. | author1-link=Paul R. Halmos | title=Finite-dimensional vector spaces | series=Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics | publisher=[[Springer-Verlag]] | location=Berlin, New York | isbn=978-0-387-90093-3 | year=1974 | zbl=0288.15002 }}
* Harvey, F. Reese (1990) ''Spinors and calibrations'', Ch 2:The Eight Types of Inner Product Spaces, pp 19–40, [[Academic Press]], ISBN 0-12-329650-1 .
* M. Hazewinkel ed. (1988) [[Encyclopedia of Mathematics]], v.1, p.&nbsp;390, [[Kluwer Academic Publishers]]
* {{cite book | first1=J. | last1=Milnor | author1-link=John Milnor| first2=D. | last2=Husemoller | title=Symmetric Bilinear Forms | series=[[Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete]] | volume=73 | publisher=[[Springer-Verlag]] | year=1973 | isbn=3-540-06009-X | zbl=0292.10016 }}
* {{cite book | last=Shilov | first=Georgi E. | title=Linear Algebra | editor-last=Silverman | editor-first=Richard A. | year=1977 | publisher=Dover | isbn=0-486-63518-X}}
* {{cite book  | last = Shafarevich  | first = I. R. | authorlink = Igor Shafarevich | coauthors = A. O. Remizov | title = Linear Algebra and Geometry | publisher = [[Springer Science+Business Media|Springer]] | year = 2012 | url = http://www.springer.com/mathematics/algebra/book/978-3-642-30993-9 | isbn = 978-3-642-30993-9}}
 
==External links==
* {{springer|title=Bilinear form|id=p/b016250}}
*{{planetmath reference|id=1612|title=Bilinear form}}
 
{{Functional Analysis}}
 
{{PlanetMath attribution|id=7553|title=Unimodular}}
 
[[Category:Bilinear forms]]

Revision as of 18:35, 14 February 2014

Hello, my name is Harvey. Years ago he moved to Kentucky. For years I've been working with regard to office worker. What he really enjoys doing is in order to smoke and yet never stop doing who's. See what's new on my website here: http://www.partybus.com/philadelphia/pa/united-states