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"This is the "main" book in Kenny Felder's "Advanced Algebra II" series. This text was created with a focus on 'doing' and 'understanding' algebra concepts rather than simply hearing about them in […]"

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Inside Collection:

Collection by: Kenny M. Felder. E-mail the author

# Sample Test: Matrices II

Module by: Kenny M. Felder. E-mail the author

Summary: This module provides a second sample test related to matrices.

## Exercise 1

Suppose A A, B B, C C, D D, and E E are matrices. Solve the following equation for C C.

A B C = D E ABC=DE

### Solution

• Multiply both sides by A-1A-1 in front: A-1 ABC = A-1 DEA-1ABC=A-1DE
• But A-1 A = IA-1A=I: IBC = A-1 DEIBC=A-1DE
• But IB = BIB=B: BC = A-1 DEBC=A-1DE
• Multiply both sides by B-1B-1 in front: B-1 BC = B-1 A-1 DEB-1BC=B-1A-1DE
• But B-1 B = IB-1B=I: IC = B-1 A-1 DEIC=B-1A-1DE
• But IC = CIC=C: C = B-1 A-1 DEC=B-1A-1DE

That is the solution. Note that solving this uses both the definition of an inverse matrix (A-1 A = IA-1A=I) and the definition of the identity matrix (IB = BIB=B). Note also that it matters which side you multiply on: DEA-1 B-1DEA-1B-1 would not be correct.

Incidentally, it may help to think of this in analogy to numerical equations. Suppose I gave you the equation:

3x = 123x=12

You might say “I would divide both sides by 3.” But what if I told you there is no such thing as division, only multiplication? Hopefully you would say “No problem, I will multiply both sides by 1313.” You multiply both sides by the inverse of 3 because 1313 times 3 is 1, and 1 times xx is xx, so the 1313 makes the 3 go away. Multiplying by A-1A-1 to get rid of AA is exactly like that.

## Exercise 2

Here are two equations and two unknowns.

6 m + 2 n = -2 6m+2n=-2

-3 - n = 1 -3-n=1

• a. Rewrite this problem as a matrix equation.
• b. Solve. What are m m and n n?

### Solution

a. Rewrite this problem as a matrix equation.

62316231 size 12{ left [ matrix { 6 {} # 2 {} ## - 3 {} # - 1{} } right ]} {}mnmn size 12{ left [ matrix { m {} ## n } right ]} {}= 2121 size 12{ left [ matrix { - 2 {} ## 1 } right ]} {}

(*I urge you to confirm this for yourself. Multiply the two matrices on the left, then set the resulting matrix equal to the matrix on the right, and confirm that you get the two equations we started with.)

b. Solve. What are m m and n n?

If you think of that previous equation as AX = AAX=A, then it solves out as X = A–1 AX=A–1A. So you can type the first matrix into your calculator as AA and the second as BB, then type A-1BA-1B and you get...

an error! Singular matrix! What happened? I can answer that question on two levels.

First, matrix AA, thus defined, has a determinant of 0. (You can confirm this easily, with or without the calculator.) Hence, it has no inverse.

Second, these two equations are actually the same equation—as you can see if you multiply the bottom equation by –2. They cannot be solved, because they have an infinite number of solutions.

## Exercise 3

Solve the following equations for a a, b b, c c, and d d.

2 a + 3 b - 5 c + 7 d = 8 2a+3b-5c+7d=8

3 a - 4 b + 6 c + 8 d = 10 3a-4b+6c+8d=10

10 a + c + 6 d = 3 10a+c+6d=3

a - b - c - d = 69 a-b-c-d=69

### Solution

This is where you really, really need a calculator. Again, think of this as A = BA=B, where...

A=A= 2357346810016111123573468100161111 size 12{ left [ matrix { 2 {} # 3 {} # - 5 {} # 7 {} ## 3 {} # - 4 {} # 6 {} # 8 {} ## "10" {} # 0 {} # 1 {} # 6 {} ## 1 {} # - 1 {} # - 1 {} # - 1{} } right ]} {}, X=X= abcdabcd size 12{ left [ matrix { a {} ## b {} ## c {} ## d } right ]} {}, and B=B= 810369810369 size 12{ left [ matrix { 8 {} ## "10" {} ## 3 {} ## "69" } right ]} {}

Then the solution is X = A-1 BX=A-1B, which comes out on the calculator:

X=X= 3.34539.56425.2200.8713.34539.56425.2200.871 size 12{ left [ matrix { 3 "." "345" {} ## - "39" "." "564" {} ## - "25" "." "220" {} ## - 0 "." "871" } right ]} {}

Since this equals the XX I defined earlier, that means a = 3.345a=3.345, b = –39.564b=–39.564,c = –25.220c=–25.220, and d = –0.871d=–0.871.

It’s that easy...and it’s also very, very dangerous. Because if you make one tiny little mistake (such as not noticing the “0bb” in the third equation, or mistyping one little number on the calculator), you get a completely wrong answer, and no credit. So what can you do about this? Here are a few tips.

• Even on a problem like this, you can show me your work. Show me your AA and your BB and tell me you typed A-1BA-1B into your calculator. Then I can see exactly what went wrong.
• After you type in the matrices, always check them: just ask the calculator to dump out matrix AA and matrix BB and match them against the original equation.
• If you have time after you’re done with everything else, come back and check the answers! Type: 3.345 STO → A to put that number into memory aa (numerical memory, not matrix memory: the green letters, remember?). Do the same for BB, CC, and DD. Then type: 2A+3B–5D+7D and make sure you get approximately 8; and so on for the other three equations. If they all work, you know you got it right!

## Exercise 4

| 2 2n 5 4 | | 2 2n 5 4 size 12{ lline matrix { - 2 {} # 2n {} ## 5 {} # - 4{} } rline } {} |

• a. Find the determinant.
• b. Find the determinant |2654||2654 size 12{ lline matrix { - 2 {} # 6 {} ## 5 {} # - 4{} } rline } {}| by plugging the appropriate value for nn into your answer to part (a). Show your work!
• c. Find the determinant |2654||2654 size 12{ lline matrix { - 2 {} # 6 {} ## 5 {} # - 4{} } rline } {}| on your calculator. Did it come out as you expected?

### Solution

a. Find the determinant.

( –2 ) ( –4 ) - ( 2 n ) ( 5 ) = 8 10 n (–2)(–4)-(2n)(5)=810n

b. Find the determinant |2654||2654 size 12{ lline matrix { - 2 {} # 6 {} ## 5 {} # - 4{} } rline } {}| by plugging the appropriate value for nn into your answer to part (a). Show your work!

xxxNote that since we are using 6 where we had 2n before, n=3. 8-10(3)=–22.

c. Find the determinant |2654||2654 size 12{ lline matrix { - 2 {} # 6 {} ## 5 {} # - 4{} } rline } {}| on your calculator. Did it come out as you expected?

Hopefully it does. If it doesn’t, don’t say it did—find your mistake!

## Exercise 5

| 0 3 6 -2 4 x 2 8 12 | | 0 3 6 -2 4 x 2 8 12 |

• a. Find the determinant.
• b. Check your answer by finding the determinant of that same matrix when x = 10 x=10 on your calculator. Does it come out the way your equation predicted? Show your work!

### Solution

a. Find the determinant.

I’m not going to do the whole drawing of the “expansion by minors” here, but you can find just such a drawing in your book. But if you do it right, you end up with:

0 ( 2 8 x ) 3 ( –1 - 2 x ) + 6 ( –16 8 ) = 3 + 6 x + 6 ( –24 ) = 6 x 141 0(28x)3(–1-2x)+6(–168)=3+6x+6(–24)=6x141

b. Check your answer by finding the determinant of that same matrix when x = 10 x=10 on your calculator. Does it come out the way your equation predicted? Show your work!

Our solution above predicts an answer of 60 141 = –81 60141=–81. Once again, try it on the calculator: if you don’t get that, find your mistake!

## Exercise 6

Find the determinant | 4 2 -5 6 2 -3 9 13 -23 42 13 0 14 3 35 2 | | 4 2 -5 6 2 -3 9 13 -23 42 13 0 14 3 35 2 |

### Solution

Strictly a calculator problem: just be careful, and make sure to dump out the matrix to make sure you typed it right. Note that you will have to scroll to the right to see the whole thing! I get 168,555.6667, or 168,555⅔.

## Exercise 7

Write a 2×2 matrix that has no inverse. No two of the four numbers should be the same.

### Solution

The key here is knowing that there is no inverse when the determinant, ad - bcad-bc, is zero. So there are many possible solutions, such as:

1 2 3 6 1 2 3 6 size 12{ left [ matrix { 1 {} # 2 {} ## 3 {} # 6{} } right ]} {}

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