In mathematics, a bilinear map is a function combining elements of two vector spaces to yield an element of a third vector space, and is linear in each of its arguments. Matrix multiplication is an example.
A bilinear map can also be defined for modules. For that, see the article pairing.
Let
V,W
X
F
w\inW
Bw
V
X,
v\inV
Bv
W
X.
Such a map
B
λ\inF
B(λv,w)=B(v,λw)=λB(v,w).
B
v1,v2\inV
w1,w2\inW,
B(v1+v2,w)=B(v1,w)+B(v2,w)
B(v,w1+w2)=B(v,w1)+B(v,w2).
If
V=W
v,w\inV,
The definition works without any changes if instead of vector spaces over a field F, we use modules over a commutative ring R. It generalizes to n-ary functions, where the proper term is multilinear.
For non-commutative rings R and S, a left R-module M and a right S-module N, a bilinear map is a map with T an -bimodule, and for which any n in N, is an R-module homomorphism, and for any m in M, is an S-module homomorphism. This satisfies
B(r ⋅ m, n) = r ⋅ B(m, n)
B(m, n ⋅ s) = B(m, n) ⋅ s
for all m in M, n in N, r in R and s in S, as well as B being additive in each argument.
An immediate consequence of the definition is that whenever or . This may be seen by writing the zero vector 0V as (and similarly for 0W) and moving the scalar 0 "outside", in front of B, by linearity.
The set of all bilinear maps is a linear subspace of the space (viz. vector space, module) of all maps from into X.
If V, W, X are finite-dimensional, then so is . For
X=F,
\R
V x V\to\R.
\R3
\R3 x \R3\to\R3.
B:V x W\toX
L:U\toW
Suppose
X,Y,
Z
b:X x Y\toZ
x\inX,
Y\toZ
y\mapstob(x,y)
y\inY,
X\toZ
x\mapstob(x,y)
Many separately continuous bilinear that are not continuous satisfy an additional property: hypocontinuity. All continuous bilinear maps are hypocontinuous.
Many bilinear maps that occur in practice are separately continuous but not all are continuous. We list here sufficient conditions for a separately continuous bilinear map to be continuous.
b:X x Y\toZ
X,Y,andZ
b:X x Y\toZ
See also: Topology of uniform convergence.
Let
X,Y,andZ
C:L(X;Y) x L(Y;Z)\toL(X;Z)
C(u,v):=v\circu.
C
Give all three spaces of linear maps one of the following topologies:
E
L(Y;Z)
C\vertL(X;:L(X;Y) x E\toL(X;Z)
Y
\left(ui\right)
infty | |
i=1 |
u
L(X;Y)
\left(vi\right)
infty | |
i=1 |
v
L(Y;Z),
\left(vi\circui\right)
infty | |
i=1 |
v\circu
L(Y;Z).