Now consider another example:
The projections of
onto these vectors are
The sum of the projections is
Something went wrong, but what? It turns out that a set of
vectors can be used to reconstruct an arbitrary vector in
from
its projections only if they are linearly independent. In
general, a set of vectors is linearly independent if none of them can
be expressed as a linear combination of the others in the set. What
this means intuitively is that they must ``point in different
directions'' in
-space. In this example
so that they
lie along the same line in
-space. As a result, they are
linearly dependent: one is a linear combination of the other
(
).