Let P be the set of polynomials in x of degree at most 3 P
Solution
(a). let p(x) and q(x) be 2 arbitrary elements of P and let k be an arbitrary scalar. Then D(p(x)+q(x)) = (p(x)+q(x))’ = p’(x)+q’(x) = D(p(x))+D(q(x)). Thus D preserves vector addition.Also, D(kp(x)) = (k(p(x))’ = kp’(x). Hence D preserves scalar multiplication also. Therefore, D is a linear transformation.
(b) Ker(D) = {p(x): D(p(x)) =0}. Further, D(p(x)) = p’(x). Hence, if D(p(x)) =0, then p’(x)= 0 and then p(x) = k, a constant. Thus, Ker(D) is span{1}.
Range(D)={q(x):q(x)=D(p(x) for some p(x) in P}. Further, if p(x) = ax3+bx2+cx+d, thenD(p(x)= p’(x)=3ax2+2bx+c. This means that every element of polynomials in x, of degree at most 2 will have a pre-image in P under D. Hence Range (D) = P2, the set of all polynomials in x, of degree at most 2.
![Let P be the set of polynomials in x of degree at most 3: P = {ax^3 + bx^2 + cx + d | a, b, c, d elementof R]. We can add such polynomials together and multipl Let P be the set of polynomials in x of degree at most 3: P = {ax^3 + bx^2 + cx + d | a, b, c, d elementof R]. We can add such polynomials together and multipl](/WebImages/46/let-p-be-the-set-of-polynomials-in-x-of-degree-at-most-3-p-1144130-1761614418-0.webp)