Cramer's Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations
Cramer's Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations
Cramer's Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations
In this lecture, we shall apply the theory discussed in the last two lectures to obtain
important theoretical formulas and a geometric interpretation of the determinant.
Theorem 1 (Crammer’s Rule): Let A be an invertible n n matrix. For any b in Rn, the
unique solution x of Ax = b has entries given by
det Ai (b)
xi , i 1, 2,..., n (1)
det A
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
3 2 x1 6
5 4 x 8
2
where
3 2 x 6
A , x 1 &b
5 4 x2 8
3 2
det A 12 10 2
5 4
6 2 3 6
A1 (b) , A2 (b)
8 4 5 8
Solution: Here
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
3s 2 4 4 2 3s 4
A , b , A1 (b) , A2 (b)
6 s 1 1 s 6 1
Since det A 3s 2 12 3( s 2)( s 2)
the system has a unique solution when
det A 0
3( s 2)( s 2) 0
s2 4 0
s 2
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
2 1 3 1 1 1 3
Solution: Here A 1 2 1 , b 2 , A1 2 2 1
3 2 2 3 3 2 2
2 1 3 2 1 1
A2 1 2 1 , A3 1 2 2
3 3 2 3 2 3
D det A 2 6 1 (5) 3(4) 5
D1 det A1b 1 6 2 8 3(5) 7
D2 det A2b 2 (7) 1 (5) 3(3) 0
D3 det A3b 2 (2) 1 ( 3) 1( 4) 3
D1 7 D D 3
So x1 , x2 2 0, x3 3
D 5 D D 5
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
6 0 2 1 6 2 1 0 6
A1 30 4 6 , A2 3 30 6
A3 3 4 30
8 2 3 1 8 3 1 2 8
Therefore,
det( A1b) 40 10 det( A2b) 72 18
x1 , x2
det( A) 44 11 det( A) 44 11
det( A3b) 152 38
x3
det( A) 44 11
Note: For any n n matrix A and any b in Rn, let Ai(b) be the matrix obtained from A by
replacing ith column by the vector b.
Ai (b) a1 ... b ... an
ith column
Formula for A–1 :
Cramer’s rule leads easily to a general formula for the inverse of n n matrix A. The
jth column of A-1 is a vector x that satisfies Ax = ej
where ej is the jth column of the identity matrix, and the ith entry of x is the (i, j)-entry of
A-1. By Cramer’s rule,
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
(1,1) entry of A x
1
11
det A1 (e1 )
det A
C
11
det A 13
5
3
(1, 2) entry of A1 x12 detdetA1 (Ae2 ) det
C21
A 13
1 3 2 3 2 1
C21 14, C22 7, C23 7
4 2 1 2 1 4
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
1 3 2 3 2 1
C31 4, C32 1, C33 3
1 1 1 1 1 1
The adjoint matrix is the transpose of the matrix of cofactors. [For instance, C12 goes in
the (2, 1) position.] Thus
C11 C21 C31 2 14 4
adjA C12 C22 C32 3 7 1
C13 C23 C33 5 7 3
We could compute det A directly, but the following computation provides a check on the
calculations above and produces det A:
2 14 4 2 1 3 14 0 0
(adjA). A 3 7 1 1 1 1 0 14 0 14 I
5 7 3 1 4 2 0 0 14
Since (adj A) A = 14 I, Theorem 2 shows that det A = 14 and
2 14 4 2 /14 14 /14 4 /14
A1 3 7 1 3 /14 7 /14 1/14
1
14
5 7 3 5 /14 7 /14 3 /14
Example 6: Calculate the area of the parallelogram determined by the points (-2, -2),
(0, 3), (4, -1) and (6, 4).
Solution:
Let A(-2,-2), B(0,3), C(4,-1) and D(6,4). Fixing one point say A(-2,-2) and find the
adjacent lengths of parallelogram which are given by the column vectors as follows;
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
0 (2) 2
AB
3 (2) 5
4 (2) 6
AC
1 (2) 1
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
2 6
vectors = det 2 30 28 28
5 1
Linear Transformations:
Determinants can be used to describe an important geometric property of linear
transformations in the plane and in R3. If T is a linear transformation and S is a set in the
domain of T, let T (S) denote the set of images of points in S. We are interested in how
the area (or volume) of T (S) compares with the area (or volume) of the original set S.
For convenience, when S is a region bounded by a parallelogram, we also refer to S as a
parallelogram.
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
Example 7: Let a and b be positive numbers. Find the area of the region E bounded by
x2 x 2
the ellipse whose equation is 12 22 1 .
a b
Solution: We claim that E is the image of the unit disk D under the linear transformation
a 0
A:D→E determined by the matrix A , given as
0 b
u x
Au = x where u = 1 D , x = 1 E .
u2 x2
a 0 u1 x1
0 b u2 x2
au1 x
Now Au = x 1 then
bu2 x2
au1 x1 and bu2 x2
x x
u1 1 and u2 2
a b
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
Since u D (in the circular disk),it follows that the distance of u from origin will be less
than unity i-e
u12 0 u22 0 1
2 2
x x x x
1 2 1 u1 1 , u2 2
a b a b
Hence by the generalization of theorem 4,
{area of ellipse} = {area of A(D)} (here T A)
= |det A|. {area of D}
= ab. (1)2 = ab
u2
x2
D E
1 u1 a x1
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
1 5
Example 8: Let S be the parallelogram determined by the vectors b1 and b2 ,
3 1
1 1
and let A . Compute the area of image of S under the mapping x Ax .
0 2
1 5
Solution: The area of S is det 14 , and det A = 2. By theorem 4, the area of
3 1
image of S under the mapping x Ax is |det A|. {area of S} = 2.14 = 28
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
Exercises:
Use Cramer’s Rule to compute the solutions of the systems in exercises 1 and 2.
2x1 + x2 =7 2x1 + x2 + x3 = 4
1. -3x1 + x3 = -8 2. -x1 + 2x3 = 2
x2 + 2x3 = -3 3x1 + x2 + 3x3 = -2
In exercises 3-6, determine the values of the parameter s for which the system has a
unique solution, and describe the solution.
In exercises 7 and 8, compute the adjoint of the given matrix, and then find the inverse of
the matrix.
3 5 4 3 0 0
7. 1 0 1 8. -1 1 0
2 1 1 -2 3 2
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
In exercises 9 and 10, find the area of the parallelogram whose vertices are listed.
9. (0, 0), (5, 2), (6, 4), (11, 6) 10. (-1, 0), (0, 5), (1, -4), (2, 1)
11. Find the volume of the parallelepiped with one vertex at the origin and adjacent
vertices at (1, 0, -2), (1, 2, 4), (7, 1, 0).
12. Find the volume of the parallelepiped with one vertex at the origin and adjacent
vertices at (1, 4, 0), (-2, -5, 2), (-1, 2, -1).
-2 -2
13. Let S be the parallelogram determined by the vectors b1 = and b2 = , and
3 5
6 -2
let A = . Compute the area of the image of S under the mapping x Ax .
-3 2
4 0
14. Let S be the parallelogram determined by the vectors b1 = and b2 = , and
-7
1
7 2
let A = . Compute the area of the image of S under the mapping x Ax .
1 1
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Cramer’s Rule, Volume, and Linear Transformations UAF
a 0 0
A 0 b 0 , where a, b, c are positive numbers. Let S be the unit ball, whose
0 0 c
bounding surface has the equation x12 x2 2 x3 2 1 .
x12 x2 2 x3 2
a. Show that T (S) is bounded by the ellipsoid with the equation 2 1.
a2 b2 c
b. Use the fact that the volume of the unit ball is 4π / 3 to determine the volume of the
region bounded by the ellipsoid in part (a).
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