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Noting that any identity matrix is a rotation matrix, and that matrix multiplication is associative, we may summarize all these properties by saying that the n × n rotation matrices form a group, which for n > 2 is non-abelian, called a special orthogonal group, and denoted by SO(n), SO(n,R), SO n, or SO n (R), the group of n × n rotation ...
The determinant of a tridiagonal matrix A of order n can be computed from a three-term recurrence relation. [4] Write f 1 = |a 1 | = a 1 (i.e., f 1 is the determinant of the 1 by 1 matrix consisting only of a 1), and let
In numerical linear algebra, the tridiagonal matrix algorithm, also known as the Thomas algorithm (named after Llewellyn Thomas), is a simplified form of Gaussian elimination that can be used to solve tridiagonal systems of equations. A tridiagonal system for n unknowns may be written as
A matrix with the only nonzero entries on the main diagonal and the diagonals just above and below the main one. X–Y–Z matrix A generalization to three dimensions of the concept of two-dimensional array: Vandermonde matrix: A row consists of 1, a, a 2, a 3, etc., and each row uses a different variable. Walsh matrix
The fact that the Pauli matrices, along with the identity matrix I, form an orthogonal basis for the Hilbert space of all 2 × 2 complex matrices , over , means that we can express any 2 × 2 complex matrix M as = + where c is a complex number, and a is a 3-component, complex vector.
In matrix theory and combinatorics, a Pascal matrix is a matrix (possibly infinite) containing the binomial coefficients as its elements. It is thus an encoding of Pascal's triangle in matrix form. There are three natural ways to achieve this: as a lower-triangular matrix, an upper-triangular matrix, or a symmetric matrix. For example, the 5 × ...
The naïve algorithm using three nested loops uses Ω(n 3) communication bandwidth. Cannon's algorithm, also known as the 2D algorithm, is a communication-avoiding algorithm that partitions each input matrix into a block matrix whose elements are submatrices of size √ M/3 by √ M/3, where M is the size of fast memory. [28]
The identity matrix is the only idempotent matrix with non-zero determinant. That is, it is the only matrix such that: When multiplied by itself, the result is itself; All of its rows and columns are linearly independent. The principal square root of an identity matrix is itself, and this is its only positive-definite square root. However ...