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Final office hours, review problems, etc.
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Scott Morrison  
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 More options May 16 2005, 2:06 am
From: Scott Morrison <scott.morri...@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 15 May 2005 23:06:51 -0700
Local: Mon, May 16 2005 2:06 am
Subject: Final office hours, review problems, etc.
Hi everyone!

Just a reminder that I'm holding a review sesion/extended office hour
tomorrow, at 6-8pm. It will be in 51 Hildebrand.
(http://www.berkeley.edu/map/maps/BC56.html)

I'll also have office hours on Tuesday, 3:00-4:30 (continuing later if
desired), in 1015 Evans.

I just wrote up some (obscure, difficult) problems you might like to
look at. They're at

http://math.berkeley.edu/~scott/teaching/2005-110-F-rev-scott.pdf

Remember you can find Chu-Wee's and John's fine review problems online at:

http://math.berkeley.edu/~limchuwe/110/final_review.pdf
http://math.berkeley.edu/~jvoight/110/2005-110-F-rev.pdf
http://math.berkeley.edu/~jvoight/110/2005-110-F-rev-solns.pdf

Study hard, but not too hard, and good luck on Wednesday!
Scott


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Discussion subject changed to "Hints + errata" by Chu-Wee Lim
Chu-Wee Lim  
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 More options May 17 2005, 2:01 am
From: Chu-Wee Lim <limch...@Math.Berkeley.EDU>
Date: Mon, 16 May 2005 23:01:02 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Tues, May 17 2005 2:01 am
Subject: Hints + errata
Hi everyone.

Due to some requests, I'm putting up hints to my review problems.
Sorry, I really don't have time to type out full solutions to all
the problems.

Also, take note that Q20 is wrong: no such M exists. This is
interesting, but not an easy fact to show.

-CW


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Scott Morrison  
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 More options May 17 2005, 2:28 am
From: Scott Morrison <scott.morri...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 16 May 2005 23:28:25 -0700
Local: Tues, May 17 2005 2:28 am
Subject: Re: Hints + errata
Hehe... I'd just written some hints for some of Chu-Wee's problems as
well. I think they haven't been made entirely redundant by Chu-Wee's
hints, so I'll post them here:

Apologies about all the strange notation; it's LaTeX, pretty much, and
not too hard to understand :-)

Problem 7), second part.

You might write A = V D V^{-1}, for some diagonal D. Then p(A) = V
p(D) V^{-1}. Certainly p(D) will still be diagonal, so call its
diagonal entries x and y. Now expand out p(A), and see what you can
say about x and y when p(A) is upper triangular.

Problem 11)

a) Easy over the complex numbers; just use the Cayley-Hamilton
theorem. Also easy if you believe in Jordan Canonical Form.

b) You need the binomial formula here; for commuting quantities A
and B, (A+B)^k = \Sum_{i=0}^k \binomial{k}{i} A^i B^{k-i}. Say A^n =
0, and B^m = 0. Can you choose k large enough so either i >= n or
k-i >= m, no matter what i is?

Problem 12)

Remember that A satisfies its own characteristic equation, so A^2 =
x A + y I, for some values of x and y. You can use this to write any
polynomial in A as a linear function of A.

Problem 16)

This is a quadratic form; find the associated symmetric bilinear
form, and diagonalise it. Hopefully you'll find all the diagonal
entries are positive.

Problem 17)

a) If you're willing to use Jordan canonical form, this is easy;
observe that the JCF of a unipotent matrix is exactly the identity
plus the JCF of a nilpotent matrix. ***

b) and c) should be easily answerable from your solutions for
Problem 11).

Problem 19)

Say (I+AB)x = 0. Can you produce an element of the kernel of I+BA?
(Clue; there's one and only one sensible way of producing an element
of F^n from an element of F^m, in this context.)

Problem 22) Suppose AB=BA, and both A and B are diagonalisable.

Say x is an eigenvector for A with eigenvalue \lambda. Then ABx =
BAx = \lambda Bx, so Bx is also an eigenvector for A with eigenvalue
\lambda. Thus E_\lambda is a B-invariant subspace. However we know
what B-invariant subspaces look like; they are spanned by
eigenvectors of B. It works the other way round as well; eigenspaces
for B are A-invariant as well. Now let's define E_{\lambda,\mu} to
be the set of simultaneous eigenvectors; vectors x so Ax = \lambda
x, and Bx = \mu x. By the above argument, the entire vector space is
in fact a direct sum of these E_{\lambda, \mu} subspaces (work this
step out carefully!). The result follows (explain exactly why!).

On 16/05/05, Chu-Wee Lim <limch...@math.berkeley.edu> wrote:


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Chu-Wee Lim  
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 More options May 17 2005, 3:36 am
From: Chu-Wee Lim <limch...@Math.Berkeley.EDU>
Date: Tue, 17 May 2005 00:36:49 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Tues, May 17 2005 3:36 am
Subject: Re: Hints + errata

Argh, forgot to provide the link for my hints:

http://math.berkeley.edu/~limchuwe/110/final_review_hints.pdf

Thanks, Scott, for pointing out that in Q11, the field should be
the complex field.

Here's a random question which popped in my mind (haven't gotten
around to thinking about it, so I don't have the answer yet):

Given two real matrices which are similar over thc complex
numbers, are they similar over the real numbers? I.e. if A and
B are square matrices, such that QBQ^-1 = A for some complex
invertible Q, can we pick our Q to be real?

-CW


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None  
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 More options May 17 2005, 6:40 pm
From: "None" <bpgr...@berkeley.edu>
Date: Tue, 17 May 2005 15:40:07 -0700
Local: Tues, May 17 2005 6:40 pm
Subject: Re: Hints + errata
I was having a little difficulty reading some of the notation in scotts
post, so I ran it through latex and typeset it in a pdf form, which
makes all of the fomula's and notation appear like usual.  I thought
other people might not be able to understand what all of the latex
notation is if you haven't seen it before (forgive me if that is not
the case), so I thought I would share the typeset version. You can find
it here:

http://www.geocities.com/bnezla/hints.pdf


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