Recent Articles



































Hamel dimension



         


In mathematics, the dimension of a vector space V is the cardinality (i.e. the number of vectors) of a basis of V. It is sometimes called Hamel dimension to distinguish it from other types of dimension. All bases of a vector space have equal cardinality (see dimension theorem for vector spaces) and so the Hamel dimension of a vector space is uniquely defined. The dimension of the vectorspace V over the field F is written as dimF(V).

We say V is finite-dimensional if the dimension of V is finite.

[Top]

Examples

The vector space R3 has {(1,0,0), (0,1,0), (0,0,1)} as a basis, and therefore we have dimR(R3) = 3. More generally, dimR(Rn) = n. And more generally still, dimF(Fn) = n.

The complex numbers C are a real vector space; we have dimR(C) = 2 and dimC(C) = 1. So the Hamel dimension depends on the base field.

The only vector space with dimension 0 is {0}, the vector space consisting only of its zero element.

[Top]

Facts

If W is a linear subspace of V, then dim(W) ≤ dim(V).

To show that two finite-dimensional vector spaces are equal, one often uses the following criterion: if V is a finite-dimensional vector space and W is a linear subspace of V with dim(W) = dim(V), then W = V.

Any two vectorspaces over F having the same dimension are isomorphic. Any bijective map between their bases can be uniquely extended to a bijective linear map between the vector spaces. If B is some set, a vectorspace with dimension |B| over F can be constructed as follows: take the set F(B) of all functions f : BF such that f(b) = 0 for all but finitely many b in B. These functions can be added and multiplied with elements of F, and we obtain the desired F-vectorspace.

An important result about dimensions related to a linear transformation is given by the rank-nullity theorem.

If F/K is a field extension, then F is in particular a vector space over K. Furthermore, every F-vector space V is also a K-vector space. The dimensions are related by the formula

dimK(V) = dimK(F) dimF(V).

In particular, every complex vector space of dimension n is a real vector space of dimension 2n.

Some simple formulae relate the Hamel dimension of a vector space with the cardinality of the base field and the cardinality of the space itself. If V is a vector space over a field F then, denoting the Hamel dimension of V by dimV, we have:

If dimV is finite, then |V| = |F|dimV.
If dimV is infinite, then |V| = max(|F|, dimV).
[Top]

Generalizations

The length of a module and the rank of an abelian group both have several properties similar to the Hamel dimension of vector spaces.





  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License