0
$\begingroup$

This question is probably very elementary.

Basically I want to prove that conjugate matrices represent the same linear map but in different bases.

It is intuitively clear since if $M=X^{-1}NX$ and $N$ is expressed wrt basis $V$ then $X$ gives the coefficients of the linear combinations of vectors in $V$ for the new basis wrt which $M$ is expressed. So take a basis vector for $M$, then $X$ maps it to its representation wrt $V$ then $N$ acts on it then $X^{-1}$ maps it back to the expression wrt $M$'s basis.

But I don't know how to argue this rigorously. Maybe I also have to mention that $N$ is a linear map so this works? Please help!

Thanks.

1 Answers 1

1

I think you did argue pretty formally, and perhaps I'd only add the following: any invertible operator can be seen as one mapping a basis into another basis (in fact, this can be taken as the definition of invertible operator: one that maps a basis into a basis) , so X in your post is representing an operator changing basis...