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  2. Determinant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Determinant

    The rule of Sarrus is a mnemonic for the expanded form of this determinant: the sum of the products of three diagonal north-west to south-east lines of matrix elements, minus the sum of the products of three diagonal south-west to north-east lines of elements, when the copies of the first two columns of the matrix are written beside it as in ...

  3. Detection error tradeoff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detection_error_tradeoff

    The normal deviate mapping (or normal quantile function, or inverse normal cumulative distribution) is given by the probit function, so that the horizontal axis is x = probit(P fa) and the vertical is y = probit(P fr), where P fa and P fr are the false-accept and false-reject rates.

  4. Matrix determinant lemma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matrix_determinant_lemma

    The determinant of the left hand side is the product of the determinants of the three matrices. Since the first and third matrix are triangular matrices with unit diagonal, their determinants are just 1. The determinant of the middle matrix is our desired value. The determinant of the right hand side is simply (1 + v T u). So we have the result:

  5. Rule of Sarrus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_Sarrus

    Rule of Sarrus: The determinant of the three columns on the left is the sum of the products along the down-right diagonals minus the sum of the products along the up-right diagonals. In matrix theory , the rule of Sarrus is a mnemonic device for computing the determinant of a 3 × 3 {\displaystyle 3\times 3} matrix named after the French ...

  6. 3D rotation group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3D_rotation_group

    In addition to preserving length, proper rotations must also preserve orientation. A matrix will preserve or reverse orientation according to whether the determinant of the matrix is positive or negative. For an orthogonal matrix R, note that det R T = det R implies (det R) 2 = 1, so that det R = ±1.

  7. Special unitary group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_unitary_group

    In mathematics, the special unitary group of degree n, denoted SU(n), is the Lie group of n × n unitary matrices with determinant 1.. The matrices of the more general unitary group may have complex determinants with absolute value 1, rather than real 1 in the special case.

  8. Tridiagonal matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tridiagonal_matrix

    In general, the inverse of a tridiagonal matrix is a semiseparable matrix and vice versa. [11] The inverse of a symmetric tridiagonal matrix can be written as a single-pair matrix (a.k.a. generator-representable semiseparable matrix) of the form [12] [13]

  9. Jacobian matrix and determinant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacobian_matrix_and...

    When this matrix is square, that is, when the function takes the same number of variables as input as the number of vector components of its output, its determinant is referred to as the Jacobian determinant. Both the matrix and (if applicable) the determinant are often referred to simply as the Jacobian in literature. [4]