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Mathematica Tutor

Part 10: Row operations on matrices

  1. Unassign your variables again, and ask Mathematica to solve

    x + 4y + 3z = 10

    2x + y - z = -1

    3x - y - 4z = 11


  2. What happens in Step 1? What do you think it means? To check this out, we need Mathematica's linear algebra commands. Enter the augmented matrix for our current problem as
    A={{1,4,3,10},{2,1,-1,-1},{3,-1,-4,11}};
    A // MatrixForm
    This tells Mathematica to construct a matrix and fill its entries from the following vectors of numbers, reading across the first row, then the second, then the third. The "MatrixForm" command tells Mathematica to print out A as a matrix rather than as a list of vectors.

  3. First let's see how to row reduce a step at a time. Then we will see that a single command will do the whole job. Try the following sequence of commands:
    A1 = A;
    A1 // MatrixForm
    A1[[2]] = -2*A1[[1]] + A1[[2]];
    A1 // MatrixForm
    A1[[3]] = -3*A1[[1]] + A1[[3]];
    A1 // MatrixForm
    A1[[2]] = (-1/7)*A1[[2]];
    A1 // MatrixForm
    Got the idea? The double square brackets allow you to work with one row of the matrix at a time. Finish the row reduction, or at least take it far enough to decide what went wrong when you asked Mathematica to solve the system of equations.

    (The third type of row operation is swapping two rows. You may not need it for this problem, but if you do, it works like this:
    A2 = A;
    A2 // MatrixForm
    temp = A2[[2]];
    A2[[2]] = A2[[3]];
    A2[[3]]=temp;
    A2 // MatrixForm
    See if you can figure out what this does!)

  4. Finally, let's go directly to the reduced row echelon form of in one step:
    RowReduce[A];
    % // MatrixForm
    This should show you in another way that our linear system is inconsistent.

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