To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

Nilpotent matrix

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In linear algebra, a nilpotent matrix is a square matrix N such that

for some positive integer . The smallest such is called the index of ,[1] sometimes the degree of .

More generally, a nilpotent transformation is a linear transformation of a vector space such that for some positive integer (and thus, for all ).[2][3][4] Both of these concepts are special cases of a more general concept of nilpotence that applies to elements of rings.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/5
    Views:
    100 711
    314
    4 226
    58 692
    27 767
  • What is Nilpotent Matrix?
  • Nilpotent Matrix | nilpotency index
  • NILPOTENT MATRIX | WITH EXAMPLE | LINEAR ALGEBRA | VERY EASY
  • Matrix Part:12 Idempotent matrix||Involutory matrix||Nilpotent matrix||Orthogonal matrix||Hermitian
  • 6]Idempotent, Involutory and Nilpotent Matrix with Examples - Matrix Algebra | Engineering Maths

Transcription

Examples

Example 1

The matrix

is nilpotent with index 2, since .

Example 2

More generally, any -dimensional triangular matrix with zeros along the main diagonal is nilpotent, with index [citation needed]. For example, the matrix

is nilpotent, with


The index of is therefore 3.

Example 3

Although the examples above have a large number of zero entries, a typical nilpotent matrix does not. For example,

although the matrix has no zero entries.

Example 4

Additionally, any matrices of the form

such as

or

square to zero.

Example 5

Perhaps some of the most striking examples of nilpotent matrices are square matrices of the form:

The first few of which are:

These matrices are nilpotent but there are no zero entries in any powers of them less than the index.[5]

Example 6

Consider the linear space of polynomials of a bounded degree. The derivative operator is a linear map. We know that applying the derivative to a polynomial decreases its degree by one, so when applying it iteratively, we will eventually obtain zero. Therefore, on such a space, the derivative is representable by a nilpotent matrix.

Characterization

For an square matrix with real (or complex) entries, the following are equivalent:

  • is nilpotent.
  • The characteristic polynomial for is .
  • The minimal polynomial for is for some positive integer .
  • The only complex eigenvalue for is 0.

The last theorem holds true for matrices over any field of characteristic 0 or sufficiently large characteristic. (cf. Newton's identities)

This theorem has several consequences, including:

  • The index of an nilpotent matrix is always less than or equal to . For example, every nilpotent matrix squares to zero.
  • The determinant and trace of a nilpotent matrix are always zero. Consequently, a nilpotent matrix cannot be invertible.
  • The only nilpotent diagonalizable matrix is the zero matrix.

See also: Jordan–Chevalley decomposition#Nilpotency criterion.

Classification

Consider the (upper) shift matrix:

This matrix has 1s along the superdiagonal and 0s everywhere else. As a linear transformation, the shift matrix "shifts" the components of a vector one position to the left, with a zero appearing in the last position:

[6]

This matrix is nilpotent with degree , and is the canonical nilpotent matrix.

Specifically, if is any nilpotent matrix, then is similar to a block diagonal matrix of the form

where each of the blocks is a shift matrix (possibly of different sizes). This form is a special case of the Jordan canonical form for matrices.[7]

For example, any nonzero 2 × 2 nilpotent matrix is similar to the matrix

That is, if is any nonzero 2 × 2 nilpotent matrix, then there exists a basis b1b2 such that Nb1 = 0 and Nb2 = b1.

This classification theorem holds for matrices over any field. (It is not necessary for the field to be algebraically closed.)

Flag of subspaces

A nilpotent transformation on naturally determines a flag of subspaces

and a signature

The signature characterizes up to an invertible linear transformation. Furthermore, it satisfies the inequalities

Conversely, any sequence of natural numbers satisfying these inequalities is the signature of a nilpotent transformation.

Additional properties

  • If is nilpotent of index , then and are invertible, where is the identity matrix. The inverses are given by
  • If is nilpotent, then

    Conversely, if is a matrix and

    for all values of , then is nilpotent. In fact, since is a polynomial of degree , it suffices to have this hold for distinct values of .
  • Every singular matrix can be written as a product of nilpotent matrices.[8]
  • A nilpotent matrix is a special case of a convergent matrix.

Generalizations

A linear operator is locally nilpotent if for every vector , there exists a such that

For operators on a finite-dimensional vector space, local nilpotence is equivalent to nilpotence.

Notes

  1. ^ Herstein (1975, p. 294)
  2. ^ Beauregard & Fraleigh (1973, p. 312)
  3. ^ Herstein (1975, p. 268)
  4. ^ Nering (1970, p. 274)
  5. ^ Mercer, Idris D. (31 October 2005). "Finding "nonobvious" nilpotent matrices" (PDF). idmercer.com. self-published; personal credentials: PhD Mathematics, Simon Fraser University. Retrieved 5 April 2023.
  6. ^ Beauregard & Fraleigh (1973, p. 312)
  7. ^ Beauregard & Fraleigh (1973, pp. 312, 313)
  8. ^ R. Sullivan, Products of nilpotent matrices, Linear and Multilinear Algebra, Vol. 56, No. 3

References

External links

This page was last edited on 10 March 2024, at 18:44
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.