Why (A+B)(A-B) ≠ A² − B²

Question

If \(A\) and \(B\) are square matrices of the same order, explain why in general \[ (A + B)(A – B) \ne A^2 – B^2. \]


Solution

Step 1: Expand

\[ (A + B)(A – B) \] \[ = A(A – B) + B(A – B) \] \[ = A^2 – AB + BA – B^2 \]

Step 2: Compare with Algebra

In algebra: \[ (a+b)(a-b) = a^2 – b^2 \] But for matrices: \[ AB \ne BA \quad \text{(in general)} \]

Step 3: Key Reason

\[ -AB + BA \ne 0 \] So, \[ (A+B)(A-B) \ne A^2 – B^2 \]

Step 4: Special Case

If: \[ AB = BA \] then: \[ -AB + BA = 0 \] and identity becomes valid.

Final Answer

\[ (A+B)(A-B) = A^2 – AB + BA – B^2 \] \[ \ne A^2 – B^2 \quad \text{(in general)} \] \[ \text{Because } AB \ne BA \]

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