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Course: Precalculus > Unit 7
Lesson 5: Properties of matrix addition & scalar multiplicationProperties of matrix scalar multiplication
Learn about the properties of matrix scalar multiplication (like the distributive property) and how they relate to real number multiplication.
In the table below, and are matrices of equal dimensions, and are scalars, and is a zero matrix.
Property | Example |
---|---|
Associative property of multiplication | |
Distributive properties | |
Multiplicative identity property | |
Multiplicative properties of zero | |
Closure property of multiplication |
This article explores these properties.
Matrices and scalar multiplication
A matrix is a rectangular arrangement of numbers into rows and columns.
When we work with matrices, we refer to real numbers as scalars.
The term scalar multiplication refers to the product of a real number and a matrix. In scalar multiplication, each entry in the matrix is multiplied by the given scalar.
If any of this is new to you, you should check out the following articles before you proceed:
Dimensions considerations
Notice that a scalar times a matrix is another matrix. In general, a scalar multiple of a matrix will be another matrix of the same dimension. This is what is meant by the closure property of scalar multiplication!
Matrix scalar multiplication & real number multiplication
Because scalar multiplication relies heavily on real number multiplication, many of the multiplication properties that we know to be true with real numbers are also true in scalar multiplication.
Let's take a look at each property individually.
Associative property of multiplication:
This property states that if a matrix is multiplied by two scalars, you can multiply the scalars together first, and then multiply by the matrix. Or you can multiply the matrix by one scalar, and then the resulting matrix by the other.
The following example illustrates this property for , , and .
In each column we simplified one side of the identity into a single matrix. Notice that these two matrices are equal because of the associative property of multiplication for real numbers. For example, .
This shows that the original expressions must be equivalent as well!
Distributive properties:
This property states that a scalar can be distributed over matrix addition.
Here's an example where , , and :
If we compare the last matrix in each column, we see that these are equivalent because of the distributive property for real numbers. For example, .
Thus the original two expressions must be equivalent as well!
This property states that a matrix can be distributed over scalar addition.
Here's an example where , , and :
Once again, we see that the last matrix in each column are equivalent because of the distributive property for real numbers, making the original expressions equivalent as desired!
Multiplicative identity property:
This property says that when you multiply any matrix by the scalar , the result is simply the original matrix .
So, for example, if , then we have:
Notice that because for any real number , the scalar will always be the multiplicative identity in scalar multiplication!
Multiplicative properties of zero:
This property states that in scalar multiplication, times any matrix is the zero matrix.
This is true because of the multiplicative properties of zero in the real number system. If is a real number, we know . The following example illustrates this.
This property states that any scalar times a zero matrix is the same zero matrix.
Again, this property is true because of the multiplicative properties of zero in the real number system. Here's an example where and is the zero matrix.
Check your understanding
Now that you are familiar with all of the scalar multiplication properties, let's see if you can use them to determine equivalent matrix expressions.
For the problems below, let and be matrices and let and be scalars.
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