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A vector space (or linear space) is the basic object of study in the branch of mathematics called linear algebra. If one considers geometrical vectors, and the operations one can perform upon these vectors such as addition of vectors, scalar multiplication, with some natural constraints such as closure of these operations, associativity of these and combinations of these operations, and so on, we arrive at a description of a mathematical structure which we call a vector space. The "vectors" need not be geometric vectors in the normal sense, but can be any mathematical object that satisfies the following vector space axioms. Polynomials of degree ≤n with real-valued coefficients form a vector space, for example. It is this abstract quality that makes it useful in many areas of modern mathematics.
Formal definitionA vector space over a field F (such as the field of real or of complex numbers) is a set V together with two operations:
which satisfy following axioms (for all a, b ∈ F and u, v, and w ∈ V):
The elements of V are called vectors and the elements of F are called scalars. In most applications the field of scalars is the real or complex numbers.
The concept of a vector space is entirely abstract, like the concepts of a group, ring, and field. To determine if a set V is a vector space, one only has to specify the set V, a field F, and define vector addition and scalar multiplication in V. Then, if V satisfies the above eight axioms, it is a vector space over the field F. Elementary propertiesThere are a number of properties that follow easily from the vector space axioms. These include:
ExamplesSee Examples of vector spaces for a list of standard examples. Subspaces and basesMain articles: Linear subspace, Basis Given a vector space V, any nonempty subset W of V which is closed under addition and scalar multiplication is called a subspace of V. It is easy to see that subspaces of V are vector spaces (over the same field) in their own right. The intersection of all subspaces containing a given set of vectors is called their span; if no vector can be removed without diminishing the span, the set is described as being linearly independent. A linearly independent set whose span is the whole space is called a basis. All bases for a given vector space have the same cardinality by the ultrafilter lemma (a weakened version of the axiom of choice). Using Zorn’s Lemma, it can be proved that every vector space has a basis, and vector spaces over a given field are fixed up to isomorphism by a single cardinal number (called the dimension of the vector space) representing the size of the basis. For instance, the real vector spaces are just R0, R1, R2, R3, …, R∞, …. As you would expect, the dimension of the real vector space R3 is three. A basis makes it possible to express every vector of the space as a unique combination of the field elements. Vector spaces are usually introduced from this coordinatised viewpoint. Given a translationally invariant and rescaling invariant topology over a vector space (preferably infinite-dimensional), the sum of an infinite sequence of vectors can be defined as the topological limit, if it exists. See topological vector space. Linear transformationsMain article: Linear transformation Given two vector spaces V and W over the same field F, one can define linear transformations or “linear maps” from V to W. These are maps from V to W which are compatible with the relevant structure—i.e., they preserve sums and scalar products. The set of all linear maps from V to W, denoted L(V, W), is also a vector space over F. When bases for both V and W are given, linear maps can be expressed in terms of components as matrices. An isomorphism is a linear map that is one-to-one and onto. If there exists an isomorphism between V and W, we call the two spaces isomorphic; they are then essentially identical. The vector spaces over a fixed field F, together with the linear maps, form a category. Generalizations and additional structuresIt is common to study vector spaces with certain additional structures. This is often necessary for recovering ordinary notions from geometry. Some of these additional structures include:
The definition of a vector space makes perfectly good sense if one replaces the field of scalars F by a general ring R. The resulting structure is called a module over R. In other words, a vector space is nothing but a module over a field. See also
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