In algebra, a primordial element is a particular kind of a vector in a vector space.
Definition
Let
be a vector space over a field
and let
be an
-indexed basis of vectors for
By the definition of a basis, every vector
can be expressed uniquely as
for some
-indexed family of scalars
where all but finitely many
are zero.
Let
denote the set of all indices for which the expression of
has a nonzero coefficient.
Given a subspace
of
a nonzero vector
is said to be primordial if it has both of the following two properties:[1]
is minimal among the sets
where
and
for some index 
References
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| Linear equations | | |
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| Matrices |
- Matrix
- Matrix addition
- Matrix multiplication
- Basis transformation matrix
- Characteristic polynomial
- Spectrum
- Trace
- Eigenvalue, eigenvector and eigenspace
- Cayley–Hamilton theorem
- Jordan normal form
- Weyr canonical form
- Rank
- Inverse, Pseudoinverse
- Adjugate, Transpose
- Dot product
- Symmetric matrix, Skew-symmetric matrix
- Orthogonal matrix, Unitary matrix
- Hermitian matrix, Antihermitian matrix
- Positive-(semi)definite
- Pfaffian
- Projection
- Spectral theorem
- Perron–Frobenius theorem
- Diagonal matrix, Triangular matrix, Tridiagonal matrix
- Block matrix
- Sparse matrix
- Hessenberg matrix, Hessian matrix
- Vandermonde matrix
- Stochastic matrix, Toeplitz matrix, Circulant matrix, Hankel matrix
- (0,1)-matrix
- List of matrices
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| Matrix decompositions | |
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| Relations and computations | |
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| Vector spaces | |
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| Structures | |
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| Multilinear algebra | |
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| Affine and projective | |
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| Numerical linear algebra | |
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