Calculus 3 : Calculus 3

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for Calculus 3

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Example Questions

Example Question #105 : Matrices

Find the matrix product of , where  and  

Possible Answers:

Correct answer:

Explanation:

In order to multiply two matrices, , the respective dimensions of each must be of the form  and  to create an  (notation is rows x columns) matrix. Unlike the multiplication of individual values, the order of the matrices does matter.

For a multiplication of the form

The resulting matrix is

The notation may be daunting but numerical examples may elucidate.

We're told that 

 and 

The resulting matrix product is then:

Example Question #106 : Matrices

Find the matrix product of , where  and  

Possible Answers:

Correct answer:

Explanation:

In order to multiply two matrices, , the respective dimensions of each must be of the form  and  to create an  (notation is rows x columns) matrix. Unlike the multiplication of individual values, the order of the matrices does matter.

For a multiplication of the form

The resulting matrix is

The notation may be daunting but numerical examples may elucidate.

We're told that

 and 

The resulting matrix product is then:

Example Question #107 : Matrices

Find the matrix product of , where  and  

Possible Answers:

Correct answer:

Explanation:

In order to multiply two matrices, , the respective dimensions of each must be of the form  and  to create an  (notation is rows x columns) matrix. Unlike the multiplication of individual values, the order of the matrices does matter.

For a multiplication of the form

The resulting matrix is

The notation may be daunting but numerical examples may elucidate.

We're told that 

 and 

The resulting matrix product is then:

Example Question #101 : Matrices

Find the matrix product of , where  and  

Possible Answers:

Correct answer:

Explanation:

In order to multiply two matrices, , the respective dimensions of each must be of the form  and  to create an  (notation is rows x columns) matrix. Unlike the multiplication of individual values, the order of the matrices does matter.

For a multiplication of the form

The resulting matrix is

The notation may be daunting but numerical examples may elucidate.

We're told that 

 and 

The resulting matrix product is then:

Example Question #109 : Matrices

Find the matrix product of , where  and  

Possible Answers:

Correct answer:

Explanation:

In order to multiply two matrices, , the respective dimensions of each must be of the form  and  to create an  (notation is rows x columns) matrix. Unlike the multiplication of individual values, the order of the matrices does matter.

For a multiplication of the form

The resulting matrix is

The notation may be daunting but numerical examples may elucidate.

We're told that

 and 

The resulting matrix product is then:

Example Question #110 : Matrices

Find the matrix product of , where  and  

Possible Answers:

Correct answer:

Explanation:

In order to multiply two matrices, , the respective dimensions of each must be of the form  and  to create an  (notation is rows x columns) matrix. Unlike the multiplication of individual values, the order of the matrices does matter.

For a multiplication of the form

The resulting matrix is

The notation may be daunting but numerical examples may elucidate.

We're told that 

 and 

The resulting matrix product is then:

Example Question #111 : Matrices

Find the matrix product of , where  and  

Possible Answers:

Correct answer:

Explanation:

In order to multiply two matrices, , the respective dimensions of each must be of the form  and  to create an  (notation is rows x columns) matrix. Unlike the multiplication of individual values, the order of the matrices does matter.

For a multiplication of the form

The resulting matrix is

The notation may be daunting but numerical examples may elucidate.

We're told that 

 and 

The resulting matrix product is then:

Example Question #112 : Matrices

Find the matrix product of , where  and  

Possible Answers:

Correct answer:

Explanation:

In order to multiply two matrices, , the respective dimensions of each must be of the form  and  to create an  (notation is rows x columns) matrix. Unlike the multiplication of individual values, the order of the matrices does matter.

For a multiplication of the form

The resulting matrix is

The notation may be daunting but numerical examples may elucidate.

We're told that 

 and 

The resulting matrix product is then:

Example Question #2701 : Calculus 3

Calculate the determinant of .

Possible Answers:

Correct answer:

Explanation:

In order to find the determinant, we need to multiply the main diagonal components and then subtract the off main diagonal components.

Example Question #704 : Vectors And Vector Operations

Find the product of the two matrices:

Where

and

Possible Answers:

Correct answer:

Explanation:

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