MATRICES AND VECTOR SPACES
may be thought of as ‘transforming’ one geometrical entity (i.e. a vector) into
another.
If we now introduce a basisei,i=1, 2 ,...,N, into our vector space then theaction ofAon each of the basis vectors is to produce a linear combination of
the latter; this may be written as
Aej=∑Ni=1Aijei, (8.23)whereAijis theith component of the vectorAejin this basis; collectively the
numbersAijare called the components of the linear operator in theei-basis.In
this basiswe can express the relationy=Axin component form as
y=∑Ni=1yiei=A∑Nj=1xjej=∑Nj=1xj∑Ni=1Aijei,and hence, in purely component form, in this basis we have
yi=∑Nj=1Aijxj. (8.24)If we had chosen a different basise′i, in which the components ofx,yandA
arex′i,y′iandA′ijrespectively then the geometrical relationshipy=Axwould be
represented in this new basis by
y′i=∑Nj=1A′ijx′j.We have so far assumed that the vectoryis in the same vector space asx.If,however,ybelongs to a different vector space, which may in general be
M-dimensional (M=N) then the above analysis needs a slight modification. By
introducing a basis setfi,i=1, 2 ,...,M, into the vector space to whichybelongs
we may generalise (8.23) as
Aej=∑Mi=1Aijfi,where the componentsAijof the linear operatorArelate to both of the basesej
andfi.