Change of basis

Summary

In mathematics, an ordered basis of a vector space of finite dimension n allows representing uniquely any element of the vector space by a coordinate vector, which is a sequence of n scalars called coordinates. If two different bases are considered, the coordinate vector that represents a vector v on one basis is, in general, different from the coordinate vector that represents v on the other basis. A change of basis consists of converting every assertion expressed in terms of coordinates relative to one basis into an assertion expressed in terms of coordinates relative to the other basis.[1][2][3]

A linear combination of one basis of vectors (purple) obtains new vectors (red). If they are linearly independent, these form a new basis. The linear combinations relating the first basis to the other extend to a linear transformation, called the change of basis.
A vector represented by two different bases (purple and red arrows).

Such a conversion results from the change-of-basis formula which expresses the coordinates relative to one basis in terms of coordinates relative to the other basis. Using matrices, this formula can be written

where "old" and "new" refer respectively to the initially defined basis and the other basis, and are the column vectors of the coordinates of the same vector on the two bases, and is the change-of-basis matrix (also called transition matrix), which is the matrix whose columns are the coordinates of the new basis vectors on the old basis.

This article deals mainly with finite-dimensional vector spaces. However, many of the principles are also valid for infinite-dimensional vector spaces.

Change of basis formula

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Let   be a basis of a finite-dimensional vector space V over a field F.[a]

For j = 1, ..., n, one can define a vector wj by its coordinates   over  

 

Let

 

be the matrix whose jth column is formed by the coordinates of wj. (Here and in what follows, the index i refers always to the rows of A and the   while the index j refers always to the columns of A and the   such a convention is useful for avoiding errors in explicit computations.)

Setting   one has that   is a basis of V if and only if the matrix A is invertible, or equivalently if it has a nonzero determinant. In this case, A is said to be the change-of-basis matrix from the basis   to the basis  

Given a vector   let   be the coordinates of   over   and   its coordinates over   that is

 

(One could take the same summation index for the two sums, but choosing systematically the indexes i for the old basis and j for the new one makes clearer the formulas that follows, and helps avoiding errors in proofs and explicit computations.)

The change-of-basis formula expresses the coordinates over the old basis in terms of the coordinates over the new basis. With above notation, it is

 

In terms of matrices, the change of basis formula is

 

where   and   are the column vectors of the coordinates of z over   and   respectively.

Proof: Using the above definition of the change-of basis matrix, one has

 

As   the change-of-basis formula results from the uniqueness of the decomposition of a vector over a basis.

Example

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Consider the Euclidean vector space   Its standard basis consists of the vectors   and   If one rotates them by an angle of t, one gets a new basis formed by   and  

So, the change-of-basis matrix is  

The change-of-basis formula asserts that, if   are the new coordinates of a vector   then one has

 

That is,

 

This may be verified by writing

 

In terms of linear maps

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Normally, a matrix represents a linear map, and the product of a matrix and a column vector represents the function application of the corresponding linear map to the vector whose coordinates form the column vector. The change-of-basis formula is a specific case of this general principle, although this is not immediately clear from its definition and proof.

When one says that a matrix represents a linear map, one refers implicitly to bases of implied vector spaces, and to the fact that the choice of a basis induces an isomorphism between a vector space and Fn, where F is the field of scalars. When only one basis is considered for each vector space, it is worth to leave this isomorphism implicit, and to work up to an isomorphism. As several bases of the same vector space are considered here, a more accurate wording is required.

Let F be a field, the set   of the n-tuples is a F-vector space whose addition and scalar multiplication are defined component-wise. Its standard basis is the basis that has as its ith element the tuple with all components equal to 0 except the ith that is 1.

A basis   of a F-vector space V defines a linear isomorphism   by

 

Conversely, such a linear isomorphism defines a basis, which is the image by   of the standard basis of  

Let   be the "old basis" of a change of basis, and   the associated isomorphism. Given a change-of basis matrix A, one could consider it the matrix of an endomorphism   of   Finally, define

 

(where   denotes function composition), and

 

A straightforward verification shows that this definition of   is the same as that of the preceding section.

Now, by composing the equation   with   on the left and   on the right, one gets

 

It follows that, for   one has

 

which is the change-of-basis formula expressed in terms of linear maps instead of coordinates.

Function defined on a vector space

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A function that has a vector space as its domain is commonly specified as a multivariate function whose variables are the coordinates on some basis of the vector on which the function is applied.

When the basis is changed, the expression of the function is changed. This change can be computed by substituting the "old" coordinates for their expressions in terms of the "new" coordinates. More precisely, if f(x) is the expression of the function in terms of the old coordinates, and if x = Ay is the change-of-base formula, then f(Ay) is the expression of the same function in terms of the new coordinates.

The fact that the change-of-basis formula expresses the old coordinates in terms of the new one may seem unnatural, but appears as useful, as no matrix inversion is needed here.

As the change-of-basis formula involves only linear functions, many function properties are kept by a change of basis. This allows defining these properties as properties of functions of a variable vector that are not related to any specific basis. So, a function whose domain is a vector space or a subset of it is

if the multivariate function that represents it on some basis—and thus on every basis—has the same property.

This is specially useful in the theory of manifolds, as this allows extending the concepts of continuous, differentiable, smooth and analytic functions to functions that are defined on a manifold.

Linear maps

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Consider a linear map T: WV from a vector space W of dimension n to a vector space V of dimension m. It is represented on "old" bases of V and W by a m×n matrix M. A change of bases is defined by an m×m change-of-basis matrix P for V, and an n×n change-of-basis matrix Q for W.

On the "new" bases, the matrix of T is

 

This is a straightforward consequence of the change-of-basis formula.

Endomorphisms

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Endomorphisms are linear maps from a vector space V to itself. For a change of basis, the formula of the preceding section applies, with the same change-of-basis matrix on both sides of the formula. That is, if M is the square matrix of an endomorphism of V over an "old" basis, and P is a change-of-basis matrix, then the matrix of the endomorphism on the "new" basis is

 

As every invertible matrix can be used as a change-of-basis matrix, this implies that two matrices are similar if and only if they represent the same endomorphism on two different bases.

Bilinear forms

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A bilinear form on a vector space V over a field F is a function V × V → F which is linear in both arguments. That is, B : V × V → F is bilinear if the maps   and   are linear for every fixed  

The matrix B of a bilinear form B on a basis   (the "old" basis in what follows) is the matrix whose entry of the ith row and jth column is  . It follows that if v and w are the column vectors of the coordinates of two vectors v and w, one has

 

where   denotes the transpose of the matrix v.

If P is a change of basis matrix, then a straightforward computation shows that the matrix of the bilinear form on the new basis is

 

A symmetric bilinear form is a bilinear form B such that   for every v and w in V. It follows that the matrix of B on any basis is symmetric. This implies that the property of being a symmetric matrix must be kept by the above change-of-base formula. One can also check this by noting that the transpose of a matrix product is the product of the transposes computed in the reverse order. In particular,

 

and the two members of this equation equal   if the matrix B is symmetric.

If the characteristic of the ground field F is not two, then for every symmetric bilinear form there is a basis for which the matrix is diagonal. Moreover, the resulting nonzero entries on the diagonal are defined up to the multiplication by a square. So, if the ground field is the field   of the real numbers, these nonzero entries can be chosen to be either 1 or –1. Sylvester's law of inertia is a theorem that asserts that the numbers of 1 and of –1 depends only on the bilinear form, and not of the change of basis.

Symmetric bilinear forms over the reals are often encountered in geometry and physics, typically in the study of quadrics and of the inertia of a rigid body. In these cases, orthonormal bases are specially useful; this means that one generally prefer to restrict changes of basis to those that have an orthogonal change-of-base matrix, that is, a matrix such that   Such matrices have the fundamental property that the change-of-base formula is the same for a symmetric bilinear form and the endomorphism that is represented by the same symmetric matrix. The Spectral theorem asserts that, given such a symmetric matrix, there is an orthogonal change of basis such that the resulting matrix (of both the bilinear form and the endomorphism) is a diagonal matrix with the eigenvalues of the initial matrix on the diagonal. It follows that, over the reals, if the matrix of an endomorphism is symmetric, then it is diagonalizable.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Although a basis is generally defined as a set of vectors (for example, as a spanning set that is linearly independent), the tuple notation is convenient here, since the indexing by the first positive integers makes the basis an ordered basis.

References

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  1. ^ Anton (1987, pp. 221–237)
  2. ^ Beauregard & Fraleigh (1973, pp. 240–243)
  3. ^ Nering (1970, pp. 50–52)

Bibliography

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  • Anton, Howard (1987), Elementary Linear Algebra (5th ed.), New York: Wiley, ISBN 0-471-84819-0
  • Beauregard, Raymond A.; Fraleigh, John B. (1973), A First Course In Linear Algebra: with Optional Introduction to Groups, Rings, and Fields, Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, ISBN 0-395-14017-X
  • Nering, Evar D. (1970), Linear Algebra and Matrix Theory (2nd ed.), New York: Wiley, LCCN 76091646
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  • MIT Linear Algebra Lecture on Change of Basis, from MIT OpenCourseWare
  • Khan Academy Lecture on Change of Basis, from Khan Academy