(Given only for problems that are not straightforward computation; contact
the instructor if you still have questions about the others.)
Section 2.1 problem 1
A transformation T : R
3 → R
3
is linear only if it satisfies T(~0) = ~0. The
transformation is not linear. For x1 = x2 = x3 = 0 we get y2 = 2, not y0 = 0.
However, the transformation can be written
T(~x) =
0 2 0
0 1 0
0 2 0
x1
x2
x3
+
0
2
0
.
Outside of algebra, adding a constant vector still counts as “linear”.
Section 2.1 problem 1
A linear transformation T : R
3 → R
3 must satisfy T(α · ~x) = α · ~x for all α ∈ R.
But here
2T(
1
0
1
) = 2
−1
1
1
=
−2
2
2
which is not the same as
T(2
1
0
1
) = T(
2
0
2
) =
−2
4
2
.
Note: alternatively one could check that another property of linear transformations,
T(~x + ~y) = T(~x) + T(~y),
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