Given A=((-1, 2), (3, 4)) and B=((-4, 3), (5, -2)), how do you find A-2B?

1 Answer
Apr 19, 2016

Follow the order of operations to find:
A-2B=((-1, 2), (3, 4))-((-8, 6), (10, -4)) = ((7, -4), (-7, 8))

Explanation:

To solve a matrix equation we follow the normal order of operations with the added restriction that multiplication and division need to happen in the order that they are written, since for matrices, AB !=BA in general (there are special cases where this is true).

So for our equation, A-2B, we need to start with the multiplication 2B. Multiplying a scalar, 2, by a matrix, B, has the effect of multiplying each of the matrix elements by the scalar, therefore,

2B = 2*((-4, 3), (5, -2)) = ((-8, 6), (10, -4))

subtracting two matrices requires that each matrix have the same dimensions - this is true in our case since A and B are both 2xx2 matrices. Subtracting matrices results in the subtraction of each element from the corresponding element in the other matrix, i.e.

((a_(11), a_(12)), (a_(21), a_(22)))-((b_(11), b_(12)), (b_(21), b_(22))) = ((a_(11)-b_(11), a_(12)-b_(12)), (a_(21)-b_(21), a_(22)-b_(22)))

in our case

A-2B=((-1, 2), (3, 4))-((-8, 6), (10, -4)) = ((7, -4), (-7, 8))