Canonical linear map

From Maths
Revision as of 05:54, 7 December 2016 by Alec (Talk | contribs) (Marking as stub, added reminder to add example)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
Stub grade: A*
This page is a stub
This page is a stub, so it contains little or minimal information and is on a to-do list for being expanded.The message provided is:

Definition

A canonical linear map, or natural linear map, is a linear map that can be stated independently of any basis.[1]

Examples

Identity

Given a vector space [ilmath](V,F)[/ilmath] (for some field [ilmath]F[/ilmath]) the linear map given by:

  • [math]1_V:V\rightarrow V[/math] given by [math]1_V:v\mapsto v[/math] is a canonical isomorphism from [ilmath]V[/ilmath] to itself.
    because it maps [ilmath]v[/ilmath] to [ilmath]v[/ilmath] irrespective of basis

Projection of direct sum

Consider the vector space [ilmath]V\oplus W[/ilmath] where [ilmath]\oplus[/ilmath] denotes the external direct sum of vector spaces. The projections defined by:

  • [math]1_V:V\oplus W\rightarrow V[/math] with [math]1_V:(v,w)\mapsto v[/math]
  • [math]P_V:V\oplus W\rightarrow V\oplus W[/math] with [math]P_V:(v,w)\mapsto (v,0_w)[/math]
  • [math]1_W:V\oplus W\rightarrow W[/math] with [math]1_W:(v,w)\mapsto w[/math]
  • [math]P_W:V\oplus W\rightarrow V\oplus W[/math] with [math]P_W:(v,w)\mapsto (0_v,w)[/math]

are all canonical linear maps

References

  1. Linear Algebra via Exterior Algebra - Sergei Wintzki