A system of linear equations can be written as a matrix multiplication equation. For example:
The matrix equation can then be solved.
In general, a system of linear equations can be represented by the matrix equation:
Where M is a matrix of coefficients, X is a column vector of variables, and B is the right-hand side of each equation. This matrix equation can then be solved for the variables:
If M is singular, then there is no unique solution to the system.
The first column of a transformation matrix is the image of
For a rotation with angle
A reflection in the
For an enlargement with scale factor
For a stretch with scale factor
Shears preserve orientation and area.
For a shear with
There are three planes of reflection (needed for this course): the
There are three axes of rotation: about the three coordinate axis. The axis of rotation is not affected, so one of the matrix columns is a unit vector. The other matrix elements are populated by the standard 2D rotation matrix
Note that for rotations about the
For a matrix transformation in two dimensions:
For a matrix transformation in three dimensions:
For common 2D transformations:
A matrix M representing transformation A followed by transformation B is given by:
The inverse transformation is represented by the inverse matrix. For a combined transformation
An invariant point of a linear transformation maps to itself. The origin is an invariant point for all linear transformations. An invariant point of matrix M is defined as:
A line of invariant points is formed when there are infinitely many solutions of the form
An invariant line is a line where the image of any point on the line is also on the line. Lines of invariant points are a subset of invariant lines. Invariant lines can be found by considering the image of a general line