Mo logo [home] [lexicon] [problems] [tests] [courses] [auxiliaries] [notes] [staff] german flag

Mathematics-Online course: Linear Algebra - Matrices - Linear Maps

The dimensions of Image and Kernel


[previous page] [next page] [table of contents][page overview]

Let $ \alpha: V\longmapsto W$ be a linear map and let $ \operatorname{dim} V<\infty$. Then the following holds true:
(i)
$ \operatorname{Ker}(\alpha)$ is a subspace of $ V$.
(ii)
$ \operatorname{Im}(\alpha)$ is a subspace of $ W$.
(iii)
$ \operatorname{dim} V =
\operatorname{dim}\operatorname{Ker}(\alpha) +
\operatorname{dim}\operatorname{Im}(\alpha)$


(temporary unavailable)

To illustrate the dimension formula, let us consider the $ k$-th derivative on the space of polynomials of degree $ \le n$.

At first, let $ k=1$ and $ n=2$. For the space of polynomials of degree $ \le 2$ the monomials $ \{1,x,x^2\}$ form a basis. Hence, the space has the dimension 3.

For $ p(x)=a_0+a_1x+a_2x^2$ the polynomial $ p'(x)=a_1+2a_2x$ has degree $ \le 1$. Thus, the image space has dimension 2.

The derivative of a constant vanishes, and the constants form a one-dimensional subspace. Hence, the kernel of the mapping has dimension 1 and the dimension formula is satisfied by $ 3=1+2$.

In general a polynomial has the form

$\displaystyle p(x)=\sum_{\ell =0}^n a_\ell x^\ell
$

and its $ k$-th derivative has the form

$\displaystyle p^{(k)}(x)=\sum_{\ell =k}^n \frac{\ell !}{(\ell -k)!}a_\ell x^{\ell -k}\,.
$

Hence, the image is a polynomial of degree $ \le n-k$ and polynomials of degree $ <k$ are nullified. Thus, the dimension formula reads as follows:

$\displaystyle n+1=\underbrace{((n-k)+1)}_{\dim \operatorname{Im}} + \underbrace{k}_{\dim \operatorname{Ker}}\,.
$


  automatically generated 4/21/2005