Encyclopedia > Bilinear transformation

  Article Content

Bilinear operator

Redirected from Bilinear transformation

In mathematics, given three vector spaces V, W and X over the same base field F, a bilinear operator is a function B: VxW -> X such that for any w in W, v |-> B(v, w) is a linear operator from V to X, and for any v in V, w |-> B(v, w) is a linear operator from W to X. In other words, if we hold fixed the first entry to the bilinear operator, while letting the second entry vary, the result is a linear operator, and similarly if we hold fixed the second entry.

The definition works without any changes if instead of vector spaces we use modules over a commutative ring R. It also can be easily generalized to n-ary functions, where the proper term is multilinear.

For the case of a non-commutative base ring R and a right module MR and a left module RN, we can define a bilinear operator B: MxN -> T, where T is a commutative group, such that for any n in N, m |-> B(m, n) is a group homomorphism, and for any m in M, n |-> B(m, n) is a group homomorphism, and which also satisfies

B(mr, n) = B(m, rn)

for all m in M, n in N and r in R.

Examples

One often thinks of a bilinear operator as a generalized "multiplication" which satisfies the distributive law.

  • Matrix multiplication is a bilinear map M(m,n) x M(n,p) -> M(m,p).
  • If a vector space V over the real numbers R carries an inner product, then the inner product is a bilinear operator V x V -> R.
  • In general, for a vector space V over a field F, a bilinear form on V is the same as a bilinear operator V x V -> F.
  • If V is a vector space with dual space V*, then the application operator, b(f, v) = f(v) is a bilinear operator from V*xV to the base field.
  • Let V and W be vector spaces over the same base field F. If f is a member of V* and g a member of W*, then b(v, w) = f(v)g(w) defines a bilinear operator V x W -> F.
  • The cross product in R3 is a bilinear operator R3 x R3 -> R3.
  • Let B: VxW->X be a bilinear operator, and L: U->W be a linear operator, then (v, u) -> B(v, Lu) is a bilinear operator on VxU
  • The operator B: VxW -> X where B(v, w) = 0 for all v in V and w in W is bilinear



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Digital Rights Management

... of preventing enforcement of laws against fraud and other wrongdoing. Since DRM is unlikely to be so used by individuals, only corporate skullduggery is likely to be ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 33.5 ms