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Scalar (mathematics)

 

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Scalar (mathematics)



 
 
In linear algebra
Linear algebra

Linear algebra is the branch of mathematics concerned with the study of Euclidean vectors, vector spaces , linear maps , and system of linear equations....
, real number
Real number

In mathematics, the real numbers may be described informally in several different ways. The real numbers include both rational numbers, such as 42 and −23/129, and irrational numbers, such as pi and the square root of two; or, a real number can be given by an infinite decimal representation, such as 2.4871773339...., where the digits co...
s are called scalars and relate to vectors in a vector space
Vector space

File:Vector addition ans scaling.pngA vector space is a mathematical structure formed by a collection of vectors: objects that may be Vector addition together and Scalar multiplication by numbers, called scalar s in this context....
 through the operation of scalar multiplication
Scalar multiplication

In mathematics, scalar multiplication is one of the basic operations defining a vector space in linear algebra . Note that scalar multiplication is different from scalar product which is an inner product between two vectors....
, in which a vector can be multiplied by a number to produce another vector.

More generally, a vector space may be defined by using any field
Field (mathematics)

In abstract algebra, a field is an algebraic structure with notions of addition, subtraction, multiplication and division , satisfying certain axioms....
 instead of the real numbers, such as the complex number
Complex number

In mathematics, the complex numbers are an extension of the real numbers obtained by adjoining an imaginary unit, denoted i, which satisfies:...
s. Then the scalars of that vector space will be the elements of the associated field.

Also, a scalar product operation (not to be confused with scalar multiplication
Scalar multiplication

In mathematics, scalar multiplication is one of the basic operations defining a vector space in linear algebra . Note that scalar multiplication is different from scalar product which is an inner product between two vectors....
) may be defined on a vector space, allowing two vectors to be multiplied to produce a scalar.






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In linear algebra
Linear algebra

Linear algebra is the branch of mathematics concerned with the study of Euclidean vectors, vector spaces , linear maps , and system of linear equations....
, real number
Real number

In mathematics, the real numbers may be described informally in several different ways. The real numbers include both rational numbers, such as 42 and −23/129, and irrational numbers, such as pi and the square root of two; or, a real number can be given by an infinite decimal representation, such as 2.4871773339...., where the digits co...
s are called scalars and relate to vectors in a vector space
Vector space

File:Vector addition ans scaling.pngA vector space is a mathematical structure formed by a collection of vectors: objects that may be Vector addition together and Scalar multiplication by numbers, called scalar s in this context....
 through the operation of scalar multiplication
Scalar multiplication

In mathematics, scalar multiplication is one of the basic operations defining a vector space in linear algebra . Note that scalar multiplication is different from scalar product which is an inner product between two vectors....
, in which a vector can be multiplied by a number to produce another vector.

More generally, a vector space may be defined by using any field
Field (mathematics)

In abstract algebra, a field is an algebraic structure with notions of addition, subtraction, multiplication and division , satisfying certain axioms....
 instead of the real numbers, such as the complex number
Complex number

In mathematics, the complex numbers are an extension of the real numbers obtained by adjoining an imaginary unit, denoted i, which satisfies:...
s. Then the scalars of that vector space will be the elements of the associated field.

Also, a scalar product operation (not to be confused with scalar multiplication
Scalar multiplication

In mathematics, scalar multiplication is one of the basic operations defining a vector space in linear algebra . Note that scalar multiplication is different from scalar product which is an inner product between two vectors....
) may be defined on a vector space, allowing two vectors to be multiplied to produce a scalar. A vector space equipped with a scalar product is called an inner product space
Inner product space

In mathematics, an inner product space is a vector space with the additional Mathematical structure of inner product. This additional structure associates each pair of vectors in the space with a Scalar quantity known as the inner product of the vectors....
.

The real component of a quaternion
Quaternion

Quaternions, in mathematics, are a non-commutative number system that extends the complex numbers. The quaternions were first described by Irish mathematician Sir William Rowan Hamilton in 1843 and applied to mechanics in three-dimensional space....
 is also called its scalar part.

The term is also sometimes used informally to mean a vector, matrix
Matrix (mathematics)

In mathematics, a matrix is a rectangular array of numbers, as shown at the right. In addition to a number of elementary, entrywise operations such as matrix addition a key notion is matrix multiplication....
, tensor
Tensor

A tensor is an object which extends the notion of Scalar , Vector , and Matrix . The term has slightly different meanings in mathematics and physics....
, or other usually "compound" value that is actually reduced to a single component. Thus, for example, the product of a 1×n matrix and an n×1 matrix, which is formally a 1×1 matrix, is often said to be a scalar.

The term scalar matrix is used to denote a matrix of the form kI where k is a scalar and I is the identity matrix
Identity matrix

In linear algebra, the identity matrix or unit matrix of size n is the n-by-n square matrix with ones on the main diagonal and zeros elsewhere....
.

Etymology

The word scalar derives from the English word "scale" for a range of numbers, which in turn is derived from scala (Latin for "ladder"). According to a citation in the Oxford English Dictionary
Oxford English Dictionary

The Oxford English Dictionary , published by the Oxford University Press , is a comprehensive dictionary of the English language. Two fully-bound print editions of the OED have been published under its current name, in 1928 and 1989; as of December 2008 the dictionary's current editors have completed a quarter of the third edition....
 the first recorded usage of the term was by W. R. Hamilton
William Rowan Hamilton

Sir William Rowan Hamilton was an Ireland physicist, astronomer, and mathematician, who made important contributions to classical mechanics, optics, and algebra....
 in 1846, to refer to the real part of a quaternion
Quaternion

Quaternions, in mathematics, are a non-commutative number system that extends the complex numbers. The quaternions were first described by Irish mathematician Sir William Rowan Hamilton in 1843 and applied to mechanics in three-dimensional space....
:

The algebraically real part may receive, according to the question in which it occurs, all values contained on the one scale of progression of numbers from negative to positive infinity; we shall call it therefore the scalar part.


Definitions and properties


Scalars of vector spaces

A vector space
Vector space

File:Vector addition ans scaling.pngA vector space is a mathematical structure formed by a collection of vectors: objects that may be Vector addition together and Scalar multiplication by numbers, called scalar s in this context....
 is defined as a set of vectors, a set of scalars, and a scalar multiplication
Scalar multiplication

In mathematics, scalar multiplication is one of the basic operations defining a vector space in linear algebra . Note that scalar multiplication is different from scalar product which is an inner product between two vectors....
 operation that takes a scalar k and a vector v to another vector kv. For example, in a coordinate space
Coordinate space

In mathematics, specifically in linear algebra, the coordinate space, Fn, is the prototypical example of an n-dimensional vector space over a field F....
, the scalar multiplication yields . In a (linear) function space
Function space

In mathematics, a function space is a Set of function s of a given kind from a set X to a set Y. It is called a space because in many applications, it is a topological space or a vector space or both....
,
is the function x k(ƒ(x)).

The scalars can be taken from any field, including the rational
Rational number

In mathematics, a rational number is a number which can be expressed as a quotient of two integers. Non-integer rational numbers are usually written as the vulgar fraction , where b is not 0 ....
, algebraic
Algebraic number

In mathematics, an algebraic number is a complex number that is a root of a non-zero polynomial in one variable with rational number coefficients....
, real, and complex numbers, as well as finite field
Finite field

In abstract algebra, a finite field or Galois field is a field that contains only finitely many elements. Finite fields are important in number theory, algebraic geometry, Galois theory, cryptography, and coding theory....
s.

Scalars as vector components

According to a fundamental theorem of linear algebra, every vector space has a basis
Basis (linear algebra)

In linear algebra, a basis is a set of vectors that, in a linear combination, can represent every vector in a given vector space or free module, and such that no element of the set can be represented as a linear combination of the others....
. It follows that every vector space over a scalar field
K is isomorphic
Isomorphism

In abstract algebra, an isomorphism is a bijection map f such that both f and its inverse function f −1 are homomorphisms, i.e., structure-preserving mappings....
 to a coordinate vector space where the coordinates are elements of
K. For example, every real vector space of dimension
Dimension (vector space)

In mathematics, the dimension of a vector space V is the cardinal number of a basis of V. It is sometimes called Hamel dimension or algebraic dimension to distinguish it from other types of dimension....
 
n is isomorphic to n-dimensional real space
Rn.

Scalar product

A scalar product space
Inner product space

In mathematics, an inner product space is a vector space with the additional Mathematical structure of inner product. This additional structure associates each pair of vectors in the space with a Scalar quantity known as the inner product of the vectors....
 is a vector space
V with an additional scalar product (or inner product) operation which allows two vectors to be multiplied to produce a number. The result is usually defined to be a member of Vs scalar field. Since the inner product of a vector and itself has to be non-negative, a scalar product space can be defined only over fields that support the notion of sign
Negative and non-negative numbers

A negative number is a real number that is inequality 0 , such as -3. A positive number is a real number that is greater than zero, such as 2....
. This excludes finite fields, for instance.

The existence of the scalar product makes it possible to carry geometric intuition over from Euclidean space
Euclidean space

Around 300 Before Christ, the Ancient Greece mathematician Euclid undertook a study of relationships among distances and angles, first in a plane and then in space....
 by providing a well-defined notion of the angle
Angle

In geometry and trigonometry, an angle is the figure formed by two Ray sharing a common endpoint, called the vertex of the angle . The magnitude of the angle is the "amount of rotation" that separates the two rays, and can be measured by considering the length of circular arc swept out when one ray is rotated about the vertex to coincide...
 between two vectors, and in particular a way of expressing when two vectors are orthogonal. Most scalar product spaces can also be considered normed vector space
Normed vector space

In mathematics, with 2- or 3-dimensional Vector s with real number-valued entries, the idea of the "length" of a vector is intuitive and can easily be extended to any Vector space Rn....
s in a natural way.

Scalars in normed vector spaces

Alternatively, a vector space V can be equipped with a norm
Norm (mathematics)

In linear algebra, functional analysis and related areas of mathematics, a norm is a function that assigns a strictly positive length or size to all vectors in a vector space, other than the zero vector....
 function that assigns to every vector v in V a scalar ||v||. By definition, multiplying v by a scalar k also multiplies its norm by |k|. If ||v|| is interpreted as the length of v, this operation can be described as scaling the length of v by k. A vector space equipped with a norm is called a normed vector space
Normed vector space

In mathematics, with 2- or 3-dimensional Vector s with real number-valued entries, the idea of the "length" of a vector is intuitive and can easily be extended to any Vector space Rn....
 (or normed linear space).

The norm is usually defined to be an element of V's scalar field K, which restricts the latter to fields that support the notion of sign. Moreover, if V has dimension 2 or more, K must be closed under square root, as well as the four arithmetic operations; thus the rational numbers Q are excluded, but the surd field is acceptable. For this reason, not every scalar product space is a normed vector space.

Scalars in modules

When the requirement that the set of scalars form a field is relaxed so that it need only form a ring
Ring (mathematics)

In mathematics, a ring is a type of algebraic structure. There is some variation among mathematicians as to exactly what properties a ring is required to have, as described in detail below....
 (so that, for example, the division of scalars need not be defined), the resulting more general algebraic structure is called a module
Module (mathematics)

In abstract algebra, the concept of a module over a ring is a generalization of the notion of vector space, where instead of requiring the scalar to lie in a field , the "scalars" may lie in an arbitrary ring....
.

In this case the "scalars" may be complicated objects. For instance, if R is a ring, the vectors of the product space Rn can be made into a module with the n×n matrices with entries from R as the scalars. Another example comes from manifold theory
Manifold

In mathematics, more specifically topology, a manifold is a topological space in which every point has a neighborhood which "resembles" Euclidean space....
, where the space of sections of the tangent bundle
Tangent bundle

In mathematics, the tangent bundle of a differentiable manifold M, denoted by T or just TM, is the disjoint unionThe disjoint union assures that for any two points x1 and x2 of manifold M the tangent spaces T1 and T2 have no common vector....
 forms a module over the algebra
Algebra

Algebra is a branch of mathematics concerning the study of structure , relation , and quantity. Together with geometry, mathematical analysis, combinatorics, and number theory, algebra is one of the main branches of mathematics....
 of real functions on the manifold.

Scaling transformation

The scalar multiplication of vector spaces and modules is a special case of scaling
Scaling

Scaling may refer to:* Scaling , a linear transformation that enlarges or diminishes objects* Scaling , a network's ability to function as the number of people or computers on the network increases....
, a kind of linear transformation
Linear transformation

In mathematics, a linear map is a function between two vector spaces that preserves the operations of vector addition and scalar multiplication....
.

See also

  • Scalar (physics)
    Scalar (physics)

    In physics, a scalar is a simple physical quantity that is not changed by coordinate system rotations or translations , or by Lorentz transformations or space-time translations ....