Suppose there was a basis for and a certain number of dimensions for subspace #W# in #RR^4#. Why is the number of dimensions #2#?
#W = {<< 4s - t, s, t, s >> | s,t in RR}#
For instance, apparently,
#{<< 0,1,4,1 >>,<< 1,1,3,1 >>}#
is a valid set, and it happens to be of dimension #2# in #RR^4# . Does a basis for #RR^n# have to have #n# vectors?
For instance, apparently,
#{<< 0,1,4,1 >>,<< 1,1,3,1 >>}#
is a valid set, and it happens to be of dimension
2 Answers
4 dimensions minus 2 constraints = 2 dimensions
Explanation:
The 3rd and the 4th coordinates are the only independent ones. The first two can be expressed in terms of the last two.
The dimension of a subspace is decided by its bases, and not by the dimension of any vector space it is a subspace of.
Explanation:
The dimension of a vector space is defined by the number of vectors in a basis of that space (for infinite dimensional spaces, it is defined by the cardinality of a basis). Note that this definition is consistent as we can prove that any basis of a vector space will have the same number of vectors as any other basis.
In the case of
is a basis for
In the case of
From this, we have that
Note that the dimension of a vector space is not dependent on the whether its vectors may exist in other vector spaces of larger dimension. The only relation is that if