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Define $T: \mathbb{R}^3 \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^2$ by $T(x,y,z) = (2y + z, x-z)$. Find $\mbox{ker}(T)$ and $\mbox{range}(T)$

I could find the kernel easy enough, and ended up getting $\{(-2x, x, -2x) : x \in \mathbb{R}\}$ but I don't really know how the get the range. In this case isn't the range effectively just the set with elements satisfying the equation $T$? I'm not really sure what the question is wanting to be honest. Some help would be great.

Thanks

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    The range is just the subset of the codomain that has elements mapped to it. For example, the exponential function $\exp: \mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R}$ has codomain $\mathbb{R}$ but its range is only the set of the *positive* real numbers.2012-08-23

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$(2y+z,x-z)=x(0,1)+y(2,0)+z(1,-1)$. Since $(0,1)$ and $(2,0)$ span $\mathbb R^2$, the range is $\mathbb R^2$. To find the kernel, set $(2y+z,x-z)=(0,0)$ so that we have $z=x=-2y$. This gives the kernel to be $\{(-2y,y,-2y):y\in\mathbb R\}$ which is what you have obtained correctly. Note the kernel is simply the line passing through the origin with direction $(-2,1,-2)$.

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    I think I meant the dimension of an element in the kernel. So in this case $dim(\mathbb{R}^3) = 3$ so the elements in the kernel should have 3 variables ie $(x,y,z)$?2012-08-23