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  2. Adjugate matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adjugate_matrix

    Adjugate matrix. In linear algebra, the adjugate of a square matrix A is the transpose of its cofactor matrix and is denoted by adj (A). [1][2] It is also occasionally known as adjunct matrix, [3][4] or "adjoint", [5] though the latter term today normally refers to a different concept, the adjoint operator which for a matrix is the conjugate ...

  3. Conjugate transpose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conjugate_transpose

    Conjugate transpose. In mathematics, the conjugate transpose, also known as the Hermitian transpose, of an complex matrix is an matrix obtained by transposing and applying complex conjugation to each entry (the complex conjugate of being , for real numbers and ). There are several notations, such as or , [1] , [2] or (often in physics) .

  4. Invertible matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invertible_matrix

    Matrix inversion is the process of finding the matrix which when multiplied by the original matrix gives the identity matrix. [2] Over a field, a square matrix that is not invertible is called singular or degenerate. A square matrix with entries in a field is singular if and only if its determinant is zero.

  5. Transpose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transpose

    If A is an m × n matrix and A T is its transpose, then the result of matrix multiplication with these two matrices gives two square matrices: A A T is m × m and A T A is n × n. Furthermore, these products are symmetric matrices. Indeed, the matrix product A A T has entries that are the inner product of a row of A with a column of A T.

  6. Matrix multiplication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matrix_multiplication

    In mathematics, particularly in linear algebra, matrix multiplication is a binary operation that produces a matrix from two matrices. For matrix multiplication, the number of columns in the first matrix must be equal to the number of rows in the second matrix. The resulting matrix, known as the matrix product, has the number of rows of the ...

  7. Orthogonal matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthogonal_matrix

    Orthogonal matrix. In linear algebra, an orthogonal matrix, or orthonormal matrix, is a real square matrix whose columns and rows are orthonormal vectors. One way to express this is where QT is the transpose of Q and I is the identity matrix. This leads to the equivalent characterization: a matrix Q is orthogonal if its transpose is equal to ...

  8. Cholesky decomposition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cholesky_decomposition

    In linear algebra, the Cholesky decomposition or Cholesky factorization (pronounced / ʃəˈlɛski / shə-LES-kee) is a decomposition of a Hermitian, positive-definite matrix into the product of a lower triangular matrix and its conjugate transpose, which is useful for efficient numerical solutions, e.g., Monte Carlo simulations.

  9. Split-quaternion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Split-quaternion

    Then, applied to the representation of split-quaternions as 2×2 real matrices, the above algebra homomorphism is the matrix similarity. . It follows almost immediately that for a split quaternion represented as a complex matrix, the conjugate is the matrix of the cofactors, and the norm is the determinant.