===== Linear Algebra - Math 304 ===== === Fall 2022 - Course Coordinator: Alex Feingold === ^Sec^Instructor^Office^Email(*)^Meets^Room| |1|Luke Elliott|WH-107|[[luke@math.binghamton.edu|Elliott]]|MWF:8:00-9:30|WH-G002| |2|Luke Elliott|WH-107|[[luke@math.binghamton.edu|Elliott]]|MWF:9:40-11:10|WH-G002| |3|Quincy Loney|WH-332|[[quincy+304@math.binghamton.edu|Loney]]|MWF:11:20-12:50|WH-G002| |4|Quincy Loney|WH-332|[[quincy+304@math.binghamton.edu|Loney]]|MWF:1:10-2:40|WH-G002| |5|[[http://people.math.binghamton.edu/alex/Math304-5_Fall2022.html|Alex Feingold]]|WH-115|[[alex@math.binghamton.edu|Feingold]]|MWF:2:50-4:20|WH-G002| |6|Michael Gottstein|WH-304|[[gottstein@math.binghamton.edu|Gottstein]]|MWF:4:40-6:10|WH-G002| (*): To send an email to your instructor, click on the link in the Email column of the table. If a section has its own detailed syllabus webpage, a link to that page will be provided under the Instructor column of the table above. Below is a partial syllabus with information for all sections that you should know. Your instructor may have a more detailed syllabus about how your section will be run. === Health and Safety Procedures Due to COVID Pandemic === Binghamton University follows the recommendations of public health experts to protect the health of students, faculty, staff and the community at large. Safeguarding public health depends on each of us strictly following requirements as they are instituted and for as long as they remain in force. Health and safety standards will be enforced in this course. Current rules make face coverings optional, but when they are worn, they should completely cover **both the nose and mouth** while indoors (unless they are eating or alone in a private space like an office). A face shield is not an acceptable substitute. Classroom safety requirements will continue to be based on guidance from public health authorities and will be uniformly applied across campus. If these requirements change, a campus-wide announcement will be made to inform the University. === Textbook === ``Linear Algebra" by Jim Hefferon, Fourth Edition, available as a free download here: [[http://joshua.smcvt.edu/linearalgebra/book.pdf|Linear Algebra by Jim Hefferon]]. One can buy a cheap printed version and access more free resources at the [[https://hefferon.net/linearalgebra/index.html|textbook's official website]]. Here are also some additional books that students and instructors may find helpful. [[http://linear.ups.edu/download/fcla-3.50-tablet.pdf|A First Course in Linear Algebra by Robert A. Beezer]] [[http://www.numbertheory.org/book/mp103.pdf|Elementary Linear Algebra by K.R. Matthews]] [[https://www.math.ucdavis.edu/~linear/linear-guest.pdf|Linear Algebra by D. Cherney, T. Denton, R. Thomas, and A. Waldron]] There are also resources for Linear Algebra on the internet, which may supplement the textbook and homework. For example, the following link takes you to a free website with exercises and feedback on your answers: [[http://www.mathmatize.com|MathMatize by Jonathan Herman]] === Approximate Exam Schedule (Each section instructor will decide when it is appropriate to give Exams 1, 2, 3.) === Exam 1: The week of Sept. 26, 2022. Exam 2: The week of Oct. 31, 2022. Exam 3: The week of Dec. 5, 2022. Final Exam: Common exam for all sections, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2022, 3:15 - 5:15 PM, LH-001. **Anyone with a final exam conflict must contact their instructor to make an arrangement.** === Grades === The course total will be determined as follows: Quizzes: 20% (Quizzes should be given approximately once per week except in weeks when an exam is given.) Exam 1: 15% Exam 2: 15% Exam 3: 15% Final Exam: 30% Homework assignments: [[https://webwork.math.binghamton.edu/webwork2/304Fall2022/|WebWork Homework]] (common for all sections): 5% Quizzes are important for students to keep up with the progress of the course and to provide timely feedback on how the material is being absorbed. By ``Assessment Day" enough quizzes should have been taken to evaluate each student's progress and make a risk assessment for early warning about problems. At the end of the course, your grade in the course will be determined by your instructor based on your course total and the following approximate scale. (Borderline cases will be decided by other factors such as attendance or participation.) A 90%, A- 85%, B+ 80%, B 75%, B- 70%, C+ 65%, C 55%, C- 50%, D 45% === Homework === Online homework will be done using WebWork. The server address is https://webwork.math.binghamton.edu/webwork2/304Fall2022/ For students, your WebWork account username is the pre@ portion of your binghamton.edu e-mail account. Your initial password is the same as the username. For example, if your Binghamton e-mail account is xyzw77@binghamton.edu then your username is: xyzw77 and your initial temporary password is: xyzw77 **Make sure to change your password as soon as possible to a secure password, and save that choice where it will not be lost.** **Important:** Besides the WebWork homework sets, you should do problems from the book, either selected by your instructor or as listed below. This part of the homework will not be graded, but it could be important to your success in the course. === Expected workload === You are expected to spend about 12.5 hours per week on average for this class, including in-class lectures, watching instructional videos, solving homework problems (graded and ungraded), reviewing the material, and preparing for the tests. Expect the work load to be higher than average in the weeks before the exams. === Expected behavior in class === During classes all students are expected to participate in a way that maximizes their learning and minimizes disruptions for their classmates. If you have any concerns, limitations, or circumstances, please communicate with your instructor to find the most appropriate solution. === Academic Code of Honor === For all graded assignments and exams, you are not allowed to use any help not explicitly authorized by your instructor. This includes, but is not limited to, problem-solving websites, notes, help from other people, etc. All instances of academic dishonesty will be investigated, penalized, and referred to the appropriate University officials for maximal possible punishment. **Cheating will not be tolerated.** === Getting Help === If you fall behind in class, or need extra help to learn the material, talk to your instructor as soon as you can. They should be able to help you and also point you to other resources. We also encourage you to talk to your classmates, and, in particular, to form informal study groups to prepare for the exams. === Disability Information === If you have a disability for which you are or may be requesting an accommodation, please contact both your instructor and the Services for Students with Disabilities office (119 University Union, 607-777-2686) as early in the term as possible. Note: extended time for the examinations may require special scheduling. ==== Suggested problems from our textbooks ==== The table below contains suggested problems from sections of our textbooks (Heffron or Matthews) in the format "Chapter:Section.Subsection.ProblemNumber". Your instructor may suggest other problems or exercises. **These problems are for practice only and are not to be turned in.** There will be graded homework assignments given through WebWork which should be done in the order indicated by your instructor. The order in which material is presented in class meetings will be determined by your instructor, and may not precisely follow the order in our textbooks. ^ Topics ^ Text ^ Problems ^ |Introduction, preview, examples; linear combination | Ch. 1, I.1 | 1:I.1.17,19,21 | |Gaussian elimination (reduction) | Ch. 1, I.1 | 1:I.1.22,24,27,32 | |(Augmented) matrix of a system, solution set | Ch. 1, I.2 | 1:I.2.15,16,17,18,21,25 | |Basic logic: statements, connectives, quantifiers | Appendix | | |Set theory, general functions | Appendix | | |Homogeneous and non-homogeneous systems (no formal induction in Lemma 3.6)| Ch. 1, I.3 |1:I.3.15,17,18,20,21,24| |Points, vectors, lines, planes | Ch. 1, II.1 | 1:II.1.1,2,3,4,7 | |Distance, dot product, angles, Cauchy-Schwarz and Triangle Inequalities|Ch. 1, II.2 |1:II.2.11,12,14,16,17,21,22| |Gauss-Jordan reduction, reduced row echelon form |Ch. 1, III.1 | 1:III.1.8,9,10,12,13,14,15| |Linear combination lemma, uniqueness of RREF (no proofs of 2.5, 2.6) | Ch. 1, III.2 | 1:III.2.11,14,20,21,24| |Matrix operations, including the transpose. Linear system as a matrix equation|Matthews 2.1|3:III.1.13,14,15,16| |Linear maps (transformations) given by matrices | Matthews 2.2 | 3:III.1.19; 3:III.2.12,17,30| |Vector spaces: definition, examples |Ch. 2, I.1 | 2:I.1.17,18,19,21,22,29,30 | |Linear maps between vector spaces |Ch. 3, II.1 | 3:II.1.18,19,20,22,24,25,26,28 | |Subspaces. Span | Ch. 2, I.2 |2:I.2.20,21,23,25,26,29,44,45 | |Linear independence | Ch. 2, II.1 | 2:II.1.21,22,25,28 | |Properties of linear independence | Ch. 2, II.1 | 2:II.1.29,30,32,33 | |Basis of a vector space | Ch. 2, III.1 | 2:III.1.20,21,22,23,24,25,26,30,31,34 | |Dimension of a vector space | Ch. 2, III.2 | 2:III.2.15,16,17,18,19,20,21,24,25,28| |Column space, row space, rank | Ch. 2, III.3 | 2:III.3.17,18,19,20,21,23,29,32,39 | |Range space and Kernel (Null space)| Ch. 3, II.2 | 3:II.2.21,23,24,26,31,35 | |Invertible matrices: definition, equivalent conditions; inverse matrix |Ch.3, IV.4 |3:IV.4.13,14,15,16,17,18,19,26,29 | |Elementary matrices. Row reduction using elementary matrices |Ch. 3, IV.3; CDTW Ch. 2, 2.3 |3:IV.3.24,25,32| |Determinant of a matrix, properties | Ch. 4, I.1, I.2 | 4:I.1.1,3,4,6,9; 4:I.2.8,9,12,13,15,18| |More on Determinants |Ch. 4, II.1, III.1| 4:III.1.11,14,16,17,20,21,22| |Matrix of a linear transformation, matrix of the composition, inverse|Ch. 3, III.1, IV.2 |3:III.1.13,17,18,19,21,23| |Change of basis, similar matrices |Ch. 3, V.1, V.2; Ch. 5, II.1 |3:V.1.7,9,10,12; 5:II.1.5,8,11,13,14| |Complex numbers |Matthews 5.1--5.6 |Matthews 5.8.1,2,5,6,7,9| |Eigenvectors, eigenvalues, eigenspaces for matrices and linear operators. Characteristic polynomial |Matthews 6.1, 6.2; Ch. 5, II.3|5:II.3.23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31| |Diagonalization of matrices |Ch. 5, II.2, II.3 |5:II.3.22,33,36,46| |Orthogonal and orthonormal bases of $R^n$ and its subspaces; orthogonal matrices |Ch. 3, VI.1, VI.2 |3:VI.1.6,7,17,19; 3:VI.2.10| |Orthogonal complement of a subspace, orthogonal projection|Ch. 3, VI.3 |3:VI.3.11,12,13,14,26,27| |Gram-Schmidt process; orthogonal diagonalization of matrices|Ch. 3, VI.2 |3:VI.2.13,15,17,18,19,22| ---- === Syllabi from previous semesters === ---- The syllabus for Math 304 in Spring 2022 is available through this link: [[https://www2.math.binghamton.edu/p/math304/spring2022|Spring 2022 page]] ---- The syllabus for Math 304 in Fall 2021 is available through this link: [[https://www2.math.binghamton.edu/p/math304/fall2021|Fall 2021 page]] ---- The syllabus for Math 304 in Spring 2021 is available through this link: [[https://www2.math.binghamton.edu/p/math304/spring2021|Spring 2021 page]] ---- The syllabus for Math 304 in Fall 2020 is available through this link: [[https://www2.math.binghamton.edu/p/math304/fall2020|Fall 2020 page]]