← 2025 Paper 1
UPSC Maths 2025 Paper 1 Q4c-ii — Solution
8 marks · Section A
Question
Let Pn denote the vector space of all polynomials of degree ≤n over R. Verify that dim(P2P4)=dimP4−dimP2.
Technique
Find the dimensions of the polynomial spaces from the monomial basis, then verify the quotient-dimension formula dim(V/W)=dimV−dimW by exhibiting an explicit basis of the quotient.
Solution
Step 0 — P2 is a subspace of P4. Every polynomial of degree ≤2 also has degree ≤4, so P2⊆P4, and it is closed under addition and scalar multiplication. Hence P2 is a subspace of P4 and the quotient P4/P2 is well-defined.
Step 1 — Dimensions of P4 and P2.
A basis of Pn is {1,x,x2,…,xn}, so dimPn=n+1. Therefore
dimP4=5(basis {1,x,x2,x3,x4}),dimP2=3(basis {1,x,x2}).
Hence dimP4−dimP2=5−3=2.
Step 2 — Dimension of the quotient P4/P2 directly.
Cosets in P4/P2 are p(x)+P2. Two polynomials are in the same coset iff their difference lies in P2, i.e. iff they have the same degree-3 and degree-4 coefficients. Writing a general element of P4 as
p(x)=a0+a1x+a2x2+a3x3+a4x4,
its coset is
p(x)+P2=a3(x3+P2)+a4(x4+P2),
because a0+a1x+a2x2∈P2 collapses to the zero coset. Thus every coset is a unique linear combination of the two cosets x3=x3+P2 and x4=x4+P2.
Independence of {x3,x4}: if αx3+βx4=0, then αx3+βx4∈P2, forcing α=β=0 (a nonzero degree-3 or degree-4 polynomial cannot have degree ≤2). So {x3,x4} is a basis of P4/P2 and
dim(P2P4)=2.
Step 3 — Compare.
dim(P2P4)=2=5−3=dimP4−dimP2.■
This is the special case of the general theorem dim(V/W)=dimV−dimW (which follows from the rank–nullity theorem applied to the quotient map π:V→V/W, whose kernel is W).
Answer
dim(P2P4)=2=dimP4−dimP2=5−3.