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Affine combination

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In mathematics, an affine combination of vectors x1, ..., xn is a vector

called a linear combination of x1, ..., xn, in which the sum of the coefficients is 1, thus:

Here the vectors are elements of a given vector space V over a field K, and the coefficients are scalars in K.

This concept is important, for example, in Euclidean geometry.

The act of taking an affine combination commutes with any affine transformation T in the sense that

In particular, any affine combination of the fixed points of a given affine transformation is also a fixed point of , so the set of fixed points of forms an affine subspace (in 3D: a line or a plane, and the trivial cases, a point or the whole space).

When a stochastic matrix, A, acts on a column vector, B, the result is a column vector whose entries are affine combinations of B with coefficients from the rows in A.

See also

This can be considered as a better explanation of affine combination :

Provided by : Computer Science  Department,University of California, Davis

Affine geometry

References

  • Gallier, Jean (2001), Geometric Methods and Applications, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-0-387-95044-0. See chapter 2.