5.11 Direct sums
Our treatment of vector spaces has alternated between the fairly concrete examples of R2 and R3 and the more abstract definition presented in section 5.2. I continue going back and forth with the fundamental idea of the direct sum of two vector spaces over the same field F. direct sum vector space$direct sum ⊕ (direct sum)
In a vague and neither concrete nor abstract sense, a direct sum is when you push two vector spaces together. It’s one of the ways you can construct a new vector space from existing ones.
Let V and W be two vector spaces of dimensions n and m over F. If we write v = (v1, v2, …, vn) and w = (w1, w2, …, wm), then
in the direct sum vector space V ⊕ W. It has dimension n + m.
All the requirements regarding addition and scalar multiplication follow directly from this definition because we perform those operations coordinate by coordinate. We’...