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List of named matrices

This article lists some important classes of matrices used in mathematics, science and engineering. A matrix (plural matrices, or less commonly matrixes) is a rectangular array of numbers called entries. Matrices have a long history of both study and application, leading to diverse ways of classifying matrices. A first group is matrices satisfying concrete conditions of the entries, including constant matrices. Important examples include the identity matrix given by

Several important classes of matrices are subsets of each other.

and the zero matrix of dimension . For example:

.

Further ways of classifying matrices are according to their eigenvalues, or by imposing conditions on the product of the matrix with other matrices. Finally, many domains, both in mathematics and other sciences including physics and chemistry, have particular matrices that are applied chiefly in these areas.

Constant matrices edit

The list below comprises matrices whose elements are constant for any given dimension (size) of matrix. The matrix entries will be denoted aij. The table below uses the Kronecker delta δij for two integers i and j which is 1 if i = j and 0 else.

Name Explanation Symbolic description of the entries Notes
Commutation matrix The matrix of the linear map that maps a matrix to its transpose See Vectorization
Duplication matrix The matrix of the linear map mapping the vector of the distinct entries of a symmetric matrix to the vector of all entries of the matrix See Vectorization
Elimination matrix The matrix of the linear map mapping the vector of the entries of a matrix to the vector of a part of the entries (for example the vector of the entries that are not below the main diagonal) See vectorization
Exchange matrix The binary matrix with ones on the anti-diagonal, and zeroes everywhere else. aij = δn+1−i,j A permutation matrix.
Hilbert matrix aij = (i + j − 1)−1. A Hankel matrix.
Identity matrix A square diagonal matrix, with all entries on the main diagonal equal to 1, and the rest 0. aij = δij
Lehmer matrix aij = min(i, j) ÷ max(i, j). A positive symmetric matrix.
Matrix of ones A matrix with all entries equal to one. aij = 1.
Pascal matrix A matrix containing the entries of Pascal's triangle.
Pauli matrices A set of three 2 × 2 complex Hermitian and unitary matrices. When combined with the I2 identity matrix, they form an orthogonal basis for the 2 × 2 complex Hermitian matrices.
Redheffer matrix Encodes a Dirichlet convolution. Matrix entries are given by the divisor function; entires of the inverse are given by the Möbius function. aij are 1 if i divides j or if j = 1; otherwise, aij = 0. A (0, 1)-matrix.
Shift matrix A matrix with ones on the superdiagonal or subdiagonal and zeroes elsewhere. aij = δi+1,j or aij = δi−1,j Multiplication by it shifts matrix elements by one position.
Zero matrix A matrix with all entries equal to zero. aij = 0.

Specific patterns for entries edit

The following lists matrices whose entries are subject to certain conditions. Many of them apply to square matrices only, that is matrices with the same number of columns and rows. The main diagonal of a square matrix is the diagonal joining the upper left corner and the lower right one or equivalently the entries ai,i. The other diagonal is called anti-diagonal (or counter-diagonal).

Name Explanation Notes, references
(0,1)-matrix A matrix with all elements either 0 or 1. Synonym for binary matrix or logical matrix.
Alternant matrix A matrix in which successive columns have a particular function applied to their entries.
Alternating sign matrix A square matrix with entries 0, 1 and −1 such that the sum of each row and column is 1 and the nonzero entries in each row and column alternate in sign.
Anti-diagonal matrix A square matrix with all entries off the anti-diagonal equal to zero.
Anti-Hermitian matrix Synonym for skew-Hermitian matrix.
Anti-symmetric matrix Synonym for skew-symmetric matrix.
Arrowhead matrix A square matrix containing zeros in all entries except for the first row, first column, and main diagonal.
Band matrix A square matrix whose non-zero entries are confined to a diagonal band.
Bidiagonal matrix A matrix with elements only on the main diagonal and either the superdiagonal or subdiagonal. Sometimes defined differently, see article.
Binary matrix A matrix whose entries are all either 0 or 1. Synonym for (0,1)-matrix or logical matrix.[1]
Bisymmetric matrix A square matrix that is symmetric with respect to its main diagonal and its main cross-diagonal.
Block-diagonal matrix A block matrix with entries only on the diagonal.
Block matrix A matrix partitioned in sub-matrices called blocks.
Block tridiagonal matrix A block matrix which is essentially a tridiagonal matrix but with submatrices in place of scalar elements.
Boolean matrix A matrix whose entries are taken from a Boolean algebra.
Cauchy matrix A matrix whose elements are of the form 1/(xi + yj) for (xi), (yj) injective sequences (i.e., taking every value only once).
Centrosymmetric matrix A matrix symmetric about its center; i.e., aij = ani+1,nj+1.
Circulant matrix A matrix where each row is a circular shift of its predecessor.
Conference matrix A square matrix with zero diagonal and +1 and −1 off the diagonal, such that CTC is a multiple of the identity matrix.
Complex Hadamard matrix A matrix with all rows and columns mutually orthogonal, whose entries are unimodular.
Compound matrix A matrix whose entries are generated by the determinants of all minors of a matrix.
Copositive matrix A square matrix A with real coefficients, such that   is nonnegative for every nonnegative vector x
Diagonally dominant matrix A matrix whose entries satisfy  .
Diagonal matrix A square matrix with all entries outside the main diagonal equal to zero.
Discrete Fourier-transform matrix Multiplying by a vector gives the DFT of the vector as result.
Elementary matrix A square matrix derived by applying an elementary row operation to the identity matrix.
Equivalent matrix A matrix that can be derived from another matrix through a sequence of elementary row or column operations.
Frobenius matrix A square matrix in the form of an identity matrix but with arbitrary entries in one column below the main diagonal.
GCD matrix The   matrix   having the greatest common divisor   as its   entry, where  .
Generalized permutation matrix A square matrix with precisely one nonzero element in each row and column.
Hadamard matrix A square matrix with entries +1, −1 whose rows are mutually orthogonal.
Hankel matrix A matrix with constant skew-diagonals; also an upside down Toeplitz matrix. A square Hankel matrix is symmetric.
Hermitian matrix A square matrix which is equal to its conjugate transpose, A = A*.
Hessenberg matrix An "almost" triangular matrix, for example, an upper Hessenberg matrix has zero entries below the first subdiagonal.
Hollow matrix A square matrix whose main diagonal comprises only zero elements.
Integer matrix A matrix whose entries are all integers.
Logical matrix A matrix with all entries either 0 or 1. Synonym for (0,1)-matrix, binary matrix or Boolean matrix. Can be used to represent a k-adic relation.
Markov matrix A matrix of non-negative real numbers, such that the entries in each row sum to 1.
Metzler matrix A matrix whose off-diagonal entries are non-negative.
Monomial matrix A square matrix with exactly one non-zero entry in each row and column. Synonym for generalized permutation matrix.
Moore matrix A row consists of a, aq, aq², etc., and each row uses a different variable.
Nonnegative matrix A matrix with all nonnegative entries.
Null-symmetric matrix A square matrix whose null space (or kernel) is equal to its transpose, N(A) = N(AT) or ker(A) = ker(AT). Synonym for kernel-symmetric matrices. Examples include (but not limited to) symmetric, skew-symmetric, and normal matrices.
Null-Hermitian matrix A square matrix whose null space (or kernel) is equal to its conjugate transpose, N(A)=N(A*) or ker(A)=ker(A*). Synonym for kernel-Hermitian matrices. Examples include (but not limited) to Hermitian, skew-Hermitian matrices, and normal matrices.
Partitioned matrix A matrix partitioned into sub-matrices, or equivalently, a matrix whose entries are themselves matrices rather than scalars. Synonym for block matrix.
Parisi matrix A block-hierarchical matrix. It consist of growing blocks placed along the diagonal, each block is itself a Parisi matrix of a smaller size. In theory of spin-glasses is also known as a replica matrix.
Pentadiagonal matrix A matrix with the only nonzero entries on the main diagonal and the two diagonals just above and below the main one.
Permutation matrix A matrix representation of a permutation, a square matrix with exactly one 1 in each row and column, and all other elements 0.
Persymmetric matrix A matrix that is symmetric about its northeast–southwest diagonal, i.e., aij = anj+1,ni+1.
Polynomial matrix A matrix whose entries are polynomials.
Positive matrix A matrix with all positive entries.
Quaternionic matrix A matrix whose entries are quaternions.
Random matrix A matrix whose entries are random variables
Sign matrix A matrix whose entries are either +1, 0, or −1.
Signature matrix A diagonal matrix where the diagonal elements are either +1 or −1.
Single-entry matrix A matrix where a single element is one and the rest of the elements are zero.
Skew-Hermitian matrix A square matrix which is equal to the negative of its conjugate transpose, A* = −A.
Skew-symmetric matrix A matrix which is equal to the negative of its transpose, AT = −A.
Skyline matrix A rearrangement of the entries of a banded matrix which requires less space.
Sparse matrix A matrix with relatively few non-zero elements. Sparse matrix algorithms can tackle huge sparse matrices that are utterly impractical for dense matrix algorithms.
Symmetric matrix A square matrix which is equal to its transpose, A = AT (ai,j = aj,i).
Toeplitz matrix A matrix with constant diagonals.
Totally positive matrix A matrix with determinants of all its square submatrices positive.
Triangular matrix A matrix with all entries above the main diagonal equal to zero (lower triangular) or with all entries below the main diagonal equal to zero (upper triangular).
Tridiagonal matrix 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, a2, a3, etc., and each row uses a different variable.
Walsh matrix A square matrix, with dimensions a power of 2, the entries of which are +1 or −1, and the property that the dot product of any two distinct rows (or columns) is zero.
Z-matrix A matrix with all off-diagonal entries less than zero.

Matrices satisfying some equations edit

A number of matrix-related notions is about properties of products or inverses of the given matrix. The matrix product of a m-by-n matrix A and a n-by-k matrix B is the m-by-k matrix C given by

 [2]

This matrix product is denoted AB. Unlike the product of numbers, matrix products are not commutative, that is to say AB need not be equal to BA.[2] A number of notions are concerned with the failure of this commutativity. An inverse of square matrix A is a matrix B (necessarily of the same dimension as A) such that AB = I. Equivalently, BA = I. An inverse need not exist. If it exists, B is uniquely determined, and is also called the inverse of A, denoted A−1.

Name Explanation Notes
Circular matrix or Coninvolutory matrix A matrix whose inverse is equal to its entrywise complex conjugate: A−1 = A. Compare with unitary matrices.
Congruent matrix Two matrices A and B are congruent if there exists an invertible matrix P such that PT A P = B. Compare with similar matrices.
EP matrix or Range-Hermitian matrix A square matrix that commutes with its Moore–Penrose inverse: AA+ = A+A.
Idempotent matrix or
Projection Matrix
A matrix that has the property A² = AA = A. The name projection matrix inspires from the observation of projection of a point multiple
times onto a subspace(plane or a line) giving the same result as one projection.
Invertible matrix A square matrix having a multiplicative inverse, that is, a matrix B such that AB = BA = I. Invertible matrices form the general linear group.
Involutory matrix A square matrix which is its own inverse, i.e., AA = I. Signature matrices, Householder matrices (Also known as 'reflection matrices'
to reflect a point about a plane or line) have this property.
Isometric matrix A matrix that preserves distances, i.e., a matrix that satisfies A*A = I where A* denotes the conjugate transpose of A.
Nilpotent matrix A square matrix satisfying Aq = 0 for some positive integer q. Equivalently, the only eigenvalue of A is 0.
Normal matrix A square matrix that commutes with its conjugate transpose: AA = AA They are the matrices to which the spectral theorem applies.
Orthogonal matrix A matrix whose inverse is equal to its transpose, A−1 = AT. They form the orthogonal group.
Orthonormal matrix A matrix whose columns are orthonormal vectors.
Partially Isometric matrix A matrix that is an isometry on the orthogonal complement of its kernel. Equivalently, a matrix that satisfies AA*A = A. Equivalently, a matrix with singular values that are either 0 or 1.
Singular matrix A square matrix that is not invertible.
Unimodular matrix An invertible matrix with entries in the integers (integer matrix) Necessarily the determinant is +1 or −1.
Unipotent matrix A square matrix with all eigenvalues equal to 1. Equivalently, AI is nilpotent. See also unipotent group.
Unitary matrix A square matrix whose inverse is equal to its conjugate transpose, A−1 = A*.
Totally unimodular matrix A matrix for which every non-singular square submatrix is unimodular. This has some implications in the linear programming relaxation of an integer program.
Weighing matrix A square matrix the entries of which are in {0, 1, −1}, such that AAT = wI for some positive integer w.

Matrices with conditions on eigenvalues or eigenvectors edit

Name Explanation Notes
Convergent matrix A square matrix whose successive powers approach the zero matrix. Its eigenvalues have magnitude less than one.
Defective matrix A square matrix that does not have a complete basis of eigenvectors, and is thus not diagonalizable.
Derogatory matrix A square matrix whose minimal polynomial is of order less than n. Equivalently, at least one of its eigenvalues has at least two Jordan blocks.[3]
Diagonalizable matrix A square matrix similar to a diagonal matrix. It has an eigenbasis, that is, a complete set of linearly independent eigenvectors.
Hurwitz matrix A matrix whose eigenvalues have strictly negative real part. A stable system of differential equations may be represented by a Hurwitz matrix.
M-matrix A Z-matrix with eigenvalues whose real parts are nonnegative.
Positive-definite matrix A Hermitian matrix with every eigenvalue positive.
Stability matrix Synonym for Hurwitz matrix.
Stieltjes matrix A real symmetric positive definite matrix with nonpositive off-diagonal entries. Special case of an M-matrix.

Matrices generated by specific data edit

Name Definition Comments
Adjugate matrix Transpose of the cofactor matrix The inverse of a matrix is its adjugate matrix divided by its determinant
Augmented matrix Matrix whose rows are concatenations of the rows of two smaller matrices Used for performing the same row operations on two matrices
Bézout matrix Square matrix whose determinant is the resultant of two polynomials See also Sylvester matrix
Carleman matrix Infinite matrix of the Taylor coefficients of an analytic function and its integer powers The composition of two functions can be expressed as the product of their Carleman matrices
Cartan matrix A matrix associated with either a finite-dimensional associative algebra, or a semisimple Lie algebra
Cofactor matrix Formed by the cofactors of a square matrix, that is, the signed minors, of the matrix Transpose of the Adjugate matrix
Companion matrix A matrix having the coefficients of a polynomial as last column, and having the polynomial as its characteristic polynomial
Coxeter matrix A matrix which describes the relations between the involutions that generate a Coxeter group
Distance matrix The square matrix formed by the pairwise distances of a set of points Euclidean distance matrix is a special case
Euclidean distance matrix A matrix that describes the pairwise distances between points in Euclidean space See also distance matrix
Fundamental matrix The matrix formed from the fundamental solutions of a system of linear differential equations
Generator matrix In Coding theory, a matrix whose rows span a linear code
Gramian matrix The symmetric matrix of the pairwise inner products of a set of vectors in an inner product space
Hessian matrix The square matrix of second partial derivatives of a function of several variables
Householder matrix The matrix of a reflection with respect to a hyperplane passing through the origin
Jacobian matrix The matrix of the partial derivatives of a function of several variables
Moment matrix Used in statistics and Sum-of-squares optimization
Payoff matrix A matrix in game theory and economics, that represents the payoffs in a normal form game where players move simultaneously
Pick matrix A matrix that occurs in the study of analytical interpolation problems
Rotation matrix A matrix representing a rotation
Seifert matrix A matrix in knot theory, primarily for the algebraic analysis of topological properties of knots and links. Alexander polynomial
Shear matrix The matrix of a shear transformation
Similarity matrix A matrix of scores which express the similarity between two data points Sequence alignment
Sylvester matrix A square matrix whose entries come from the coefficients of two polynomials The Sylvester matrix is nonsingular if and only if the two polynomials are coprime to each other
Symplectic matrix The real matrix of a symplectic transformation
Transformation matrix The matrix of a linear transformation or a geometric transformation
Wedderburn matrix A matrix of the form  , used for rank-reduction & biconjugate decompositions Analysis of matrix decompositions

Matrices used in statistics edit

The following matrices find their main application in statistics and probability theory.

  • Bernoulli matrix — a square matrix with entries +1, −1, with equal probability of each.
  • Centering matrix — a matrix which, when multiplied with a vector, has the same effect as subtracting the mean of the components of the vector from every component.
  • Correlation matrix — a symmetric n×n matrix, formed by the pairwise correlation coefficients of several random variables.
  • Covariance matrix — a symmetric n×n matrix, formed by the pairwise covariances of several random variables. Sometimes called a dispersion matrix.
  • Dispersion matrix — another name for a covariance matrix.
  • Doubly stochastic matrix — a non-negative matrix such that each row and each column sums to 1 (thus the matrix is both left stochastic and right stochastic)
  • Fisher information matrix — a matrix representing the variance of the partial derivative, with respect to a parameter, of the log of the likelihood function of a random variable.
  • Hat matrix — a square matrix used in statistics to relate fitted values to observed values.
  • Orthostochastic matrix — doubly stochastic matrix whose entries are the squares of the absolute values of the entries of some orthogonal matrix
  • Precision matrix — a symmetric n×n matrix, formed by inverting the covariance matrix. Also called the information matrix.
  • Stochastic matrix — a non-negative matrix describing a stochastic process. The sum of entries of any row is one.
  • Transition matrix — a matrix representing the probabilities of conditions changing from one state to another in a Markov chain
  • Unistochastic matrix — a doubly stochastic matrix whose entries are the squares of the absolute values of the entries of some unitary matrix

Matrices used in graph theory edit

The following matrices find their main application in graph and network theory.

  • Adjacency matrix — a square matrix representing a graph, with aij non-zero if vertex i and vertex j are adjacent.
  • Biadjacency matrix — a special class of adjacency matrix that describes adjacency in bipartite graphs.
  • Degree matrix — a diagonal matrix defining the degree of each vertex in a graph.
  • Edmonds matrix — a square matrix of a bipartite graph.
  • Incidence matrix — a matrix representing a relationship between two classes of objects (usually vertices and edges in the context of graph theory).
  • Laplacian matrix — a matrix equal to the degree matrix minus the adjacency matrix for a graph, used to find the number of spanning trees in the graph.
  • Seidel adjacency matrix — a matrix similar to the usual adjacency matrix but with −1 for adjacency; +1 for nonadjacency; 0 on the diagonal.
  • Skew-adjacency matrix — an adjacency matrix in which each non-zero aij is 1 or −1, accordingly as the direction i → j matches or opposes that of an initially specified orientation.
  • Tutte matrix — a generalization of the Edmonds matrix for a balanced bipartite graph.

Matrices used in science and engineering edit

Specific matrices edit

Other matrix-related terms and definitions edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hogben 2006, Ch. 31.3.
  2. ^ a b Weisstein, Eric W. "Matrix Multiplication". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2020-09-07.
  3. ^ "Non-derogatory matrix - Encyclopedia of Mathematics". encyclopediaofmath.org. Retrieved 2020-09-07.

References edit

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This article lists some important classes of matrices used in mathematics science and engineering A matrix plural matrices or less commonly matrixes is a rectangular array of numbers called entries Matrices have a long history of both study and application leading to diverse ways of classifying matrices A first group is matrices satisfying concrete conditions of the entries including constant matrices Important examples include the identity matrix given bySeveral important classes of matrices are subsets of each other I n 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 displaystyle I n begin bmatrix 1 amp 0 amp cdots amp 0 0 amp 1 amp cdots amp 0 vdots amp vdots amp ddots amp vdots 0 amp 0 amp cdots amp 1 end bmatrix and the zero matrix of dimension m n displaystyle m times n For example O 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 displaystyle O 2 times 3 begin pmatrix 0 amp 0 amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 0 end pmatrix Further ways of classifying matrices are according to their eigenvalues or by imposing conditions on the product of the matrix with other matrices Finally many domains both in mathematics and other sciences including physics and chemistry have particular matrices that are applied chiefly in these areas Contents 1 Constant matrices 2 Specific patterns for entries 3 Matrices satisfying some equations 4 Matrices with conditions on eigenvalues or eigenvectors 5 Matrices generated by specific data 6 Matrices used in statistics 7 Matrices used in graph theory 8 Matrices used in science and engineering 9 Specific matrices 10 Other matrix related terms and definitions 11 See also 12 Notes 13 ReferencesConstant matrices editThe list below comprises matrices whose elements are constant for any given dimension size of matrix The matrix entries will be denoted aij The table below uses the Kronecker delta dij for two integers i and j which is 1 if i j and 0 else Name Explanation Symbolic description of the entries Notes Commutation matrix The matrix of the linear map that maps a matrix to its transpose See Vectorization Duplication matrix The matrix of the linear map mapping the vector of the distinct entries of a symmetric matrix to the vector of all entries of the matrix See Vectorization Elimination matrix The matrix of the linear map mapping the vector of the entries of a matrix to the vector of a part of the entries for example the vector of the entries that are not below the main diagonal See vectorization Exchange matrix The binary matrix with ones on the anti diagonal and zeroes everywhere else aij dn 1 i j A permutation matrix Hilbert matrix aij i j 1 1 A Hankel matrix Identity matrix A square diagonal matrix with all entries on the main diagonal equal to 1 and the rest 0 aij dij Lehmer matrix aij min i j max i j A positive symmetric matrix Matrix of ones A matrix with all entries equal to one aij 1 Pascal matrix A matrix containing the entries of Pascal s triangle Pauli matrices A set of three 2 2 complex Hermitian and unitary matrices When combined with the I2 identity matrix they form an orthogonal basis for the 2 2 complex Hermitian matrices Redheffer matrix Encodes a Dirichlet convolution Matrix entries are given by the divisor function entires of the inverse are given by the Mobius function aij are 1 if i divides j or if j 1 otherwise aij 0 A 0 1 matrix Shift matrix A matrix with ones on the superdiagonal or subdiagonal and zeroes elsewhere aij di 1 j or aij di 1 j Multiplication by it shifts matrix elements by one position Zero matrix A matrix with all entries equal to zero aij 0 Specific patterns for entries editThe following lists matrices whose entries are subject to certain conditions Many of them apply to square matrices only that is matrices with the same number of columns and rows The main diagonal of a square matrix is the diagonal joining the upper left corner and the lower right one or equivalently the entries ai i The other diagonal is called anti diagonal or counter diagonal Name Explanation Notes references 0 1 matrix A matrix with all elements either 0 or 1 Synonym for binary matrix or logical matrix Alternant matrix A matrix in which successive columns have a particular function applied to their entries Alternating sign matrix A square matrix with entries 0 1 and 1 such that the sum of each row and column is 1 and the nonzero entries in each row and column alternate in sign Anti diagonal matrix A square matrix with all entries off the anti diagonal equal to zero Anti Hermitian matrix Synonym for skew Hermitian matrix Anti symmetric matrix Synonym for skew symmetric matrix Arrowhead matrix A square matrix containing zeros in all entries except for the first row first column and main diagonal Band matrix A square matrix whose non zero entries are confined to a diagonal band Bidiagonal matrix A matrix with elements only on the main diagonal and either the superdiagonal or subdiagonal Sometimes defined differently see article Binary matrix A matrix whose entries are all either 0 or 1 Synonym for 0 1 matrix or logical matrix 1 Bisymmetric matrix A square matrix that is symmetric with respect to its main diagonal and its main cross diagonal Block diagonal matrix A block matrix with entries only on the diagonal Block matrix A matrix partitioned in sub matrices called blocks Block tridiagonal matrix A block matrix which is essentially a tridiagonal matrix but with submatrices in place of scalar elements Boolean matrix A matrix whose entries are taken from a Boolean algebra Cauchy matrix A matrix whose elements are of the form 1 xi yj for xi yj injective sequences i e taking every value only once Centrosymmetric matrix A matrix symmetric about its center i e aij an i 1 n j 1 Circulant matrix A matrix where each row is a circular shift of its predecessor Conference matrix A square matrix with zero diagonal and 1 and 1 off the diagonal such that CTC is a multiple of the identity matrix Complex Hadamard matrix A matrix with all rows and columns mutually orthogonal whose entries are unimodular Compound matrix A matrix whose entries are generated by the determinants of all minors of a matrix Copositive matrix A square matrix A with real coefficients such that f x x T A x displaystyle f x x T Ax nbsp is nonnegative for every nonnegative vector x Diagonally dominant matrix A matrix whose entries satisfy a i i gt j i a i j displaystyle a ii gt sum j neq i a ij nbsp Diagonal matrix A square matrix with all entries outside the main diagonal equal to zero Discrete Fourier transform matrix Multiplying by a vector gives the DFT of the vector as result Elementary matrix A square matrix derived by applying an elementary row operation to the identity matrix Equivalent matrix A matrix that can be derived from another matrix through a sequence of elementary row or column operations Frobenius matrix A square matrix in the form of an identity matrix but with arbitrary entries in one column below the main diagonal GCD matrix The n n displaystyle n times n nbsp matrix S displaystyle S nbsp having the greatest common divisor x i x j displaystyle x i x j nbsp as its i j displaystyle ij nbsp entry where x i x j S displaystyle x i x j in S nbsp Generalized permutation matrix A square matrix with precisely one nonzero element in each row and column Hadamard matrix A square matrix with entries 1 1 whose rows are mutually orthogonal Hankel matrix A matrix with constant skew diagonals also an upside down Toeplitz matrix A square Hankel matrix is symmetric Hermitian matrix A square matrix which is equal to its conjugate transpose A A Hessenberg matrix An almost triangular matrix for example an upper Hessenberg matrix has zero entries below the first subdiagonal Hollow matrix A square matrix whose main diagonal comprises only zero elements Integer matrix A matrix whose entries are all integers Logical matrix A matrix with all entries either 0 or 1 Synonym for 0 1 matrix binary matrix or Boolean matrix Can be used to represent a k adic relation Markov matrix A matrix of non negative real numbers such that the entries in each row sum to 1 Metzler matrix A matrix whose off diagonal entries are non negative Monomial matrix A square matrix with exactly one non zero entry in each row and column Synonym for generalized permutation matrix Moore matrix A row consists of a aq aq etc and each row uses a different variable Nonnegative matrix A matrix with all nonnegative entries Null symmetric matrix A square matrix whose null space or kernel is equal to its transpose N A N AT or ker A ker AT Synonym for kernel symmetric matrices Examples include but not limited to symmetric skew symmetric and normal matrices Null Hermitian matrix A square matrix whose null space or kernel is equal to its conjugate transpose N A N A or ker A ker A Synonym for kernel Hermitian matrices Examples include but not limited to Hermitian skew Hermitian matrices and normal matrices Partitioned matrix A matrix partitioned into sub matrices or equivalently a matrix whose entries are themselves matrices rather than scalars Synonym for block matrix Parisi matrix A block hierarchical matrix It consist of growing blocks placed along the diagonal each block is itself a Parisi matrix of a smaller size In theory of spin glasses is also known as a replica matrix Pentadiagonal matrix A matrix with the only nonzero entries on the main diagonal and the two diagonals just above and below the main one Permutation matrix A matrix representation of a permutation a square matrix with exactly one 1 in each row and column and all other elements 0 Persymmetric matrix A matrix that is symmetric about its northeast southwest diagonal i e aij an j 1 n i 1 Polynomial matrix A matrix whose entries are polynomials Positive matrix A matrix with all positive entries Quaternionic matrix A matrix whose entries are quaternions Random matrix A matrix whose entries are random variables Sign matrix A matrix whose entries are either 1 0 or 1 Signature matrix A diagonal matrix where the diagonal elements are either 1 or 1 Single entry matrix A matrix where a single element is one and the rest of the elements are zero Skew Hermitian matrix A square matrix which is equal to the negative of its conjugate transpose A A Skew symmetric matrix A matrix which is equal to the negative of its transpose AT A Skyline matrix A rearrangement of the entries of a banded matrix which requires less space Sparse matrix A matrix with relatively few non zero elements Sparse matrix algorithms can tackle huge sparse matrices that are utterly impractical for dense matrix algorithms Symmetric matrix A square matrix which is equal to its transpose A AT ai j aj i Toeplitz matrix A matrix with constant diagonals Totally positive matrix A matrix with determinants of all its square submatrices positive Triangular matrix A matrix with all entries above the main diagonal equal to zero lower triangular or with all entries below the main diagonal equal to zero upper triangular Tridiagonal matrix 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 a2 a3 etc and each row uses a different variable Walsh matrix A square matrix with dimensions a power of 2 the entries of which are 1 or 1 and the property that the dot product of any two distinct rows or columns is zero Z matrix A matrix with all off diagonal entries less than zero Matrices satisfying some equations editA number of matrix related notions is about properties of products or inverses of the given matrix The matrix product of a m by n matrix A and a n by k matrix B is the m by k matrix C given by C i j r 1 n A i r B r j displaystyle C i j sum r 1 n A i r B r j nbsp 2 This matrix product is denoted AB Unlike the product of numbers matrix products are not commutative that is to say AB need not be equal to BA 2 A number of notions are concerned with the failure of this commutativity An inverse of square matrix A is a matrix B necessarily of the same dimension as A such that AB I Equivalently BA I An inverse need not exist If it exists B is uniquely determined and is also called the inverse of A denoted A 1 Name Explanation Notes Circular matrix or Coninvolutory matrix A matrix whose inverse is equal to its entrywise complex conjugate A 1 A Compare with unitary matrices Congruent matrix Two matrices A and B are congruent if there exists an invertible matrix P such that PT A P B Compare with similar matrices EP matrix or Range Hermitian matrix A square matrix that commutes with its Moore Penrose inverse AA A A Idempotent matrix or Projection Matrix A matrix that has the property A AA A The name projection matrix inspires from the observation of projection of a point multiple times onto a subspace plane or a line giving the same result as one projection Invertible matrix A square matrix having a multiplicative inverse that is a matrix B such that AB BA I Invertible matrices form the general linear group Involutory matrix A square matrix which is its own inverse i e AA I Signature matrices Householder matrices Also known as reflection matrices to reflect a point about a plane or line have this property Isometric matrix A matrix that preserves distances i e a matrix that satisfies A A I where A denotes the conjugate transpose of A Nilpotent matrix A square matrix satisfying Aq 0 for some positive integer q Equivalently the only eigenvalue of A is 0 Normal matrix A square matrix that commutes with its conjugate transpose AA A A They are the matrices to which the spectral theorem applies Orthogonal matrix A matrix whose inverse is equal to its transpose A 1 AT They form the orthogonal group Orthonormal matrix A matrix whose columns are orthonormal vectors Partially Isometric matrix A matrix that is an isometry on the orthogonal complement of its kernel Equivalently a matrix that satisfies AA A A Equivalently a matrix with singular values that are either 0 or 1 Singular matrix A square matrix that is not invertible Unimodular matrix An invertible matrix with entries in the integers integer matrix Necessarily the determinant is 1 or 1 Unipotent matrix A square matrix with all eigenvalues equal to 1 Equivalently A I is nilpotent See also unipotent group Unitary matrix A square matrix whose inverse is equal to its conjugate transpose A 1 A Totally unimodular matrix A matrix for which every non singular square submatrix is unimodular This has some implications in the linear programming relaxation of an integer program Weighing matrix A square matrix the entries of which are in 0 1 1 such that AAT wI for some positive integer w Matrices with conditions on eigenvalues or eigenvectors editName Explanation Notes Convergent matrix A square matrix whose successive powers approach the zero matrix Its eigenvalues have magnitude less than one Defective matrix A square matrix that does not have a complete basis of eigenvectors and is thus not diagonalizable Derogatory matrix A square matrix whose minimal polynomial is of order less than n Equivalently at least one of its eigenvalues has at least two Jordan blocks 3 Diagonalizable matrix A square matrix similar to a diagonal matrix It has an eigenbasis that is a complete set of linearly independent eigenvectors Hurwitz matrix A matrix whose eigenvalues have strictly negative real part A stable system of differential equations may be represented by a Hurwitz matrix M matrix A Z matrix with eigenvalues whose real parts are nonnegative Positive definite matrix A Hermitian matrix with every eigenvalue positive Stability matrix Synonym for Hurwitz matrix Stieltjes matrix A real symmetric positive definite matrix with nonpositive off diagonal entries Special case of an M matrix Matrices generated by specific data editName Definition Comments Adjugate matrix Transpose of the cofactor matrix The inverse of a matrix is its adjugate matrix divided by its determinant Augmented matrix Matrix whose rows are concatenations of the rows of two smaller matrices Used for performing the same row operations on two matrices Bezout matrix Square matrix whose determinant is the resultant of two polynomials See also Sylvester matrix Carleman matrix Infinite matrix of the Taylor coefficients of an analytic function and its integer powers The composition of two functions can be expressed as the product of their Carleman matrices Cartan matrix A matrix associated with either a finite dimensional associative algebra or a semisimple Lie algebra Cofactor matrix Formed by the cofactors of a square matrix that is the signed minors of the matrix Transpose of the Adjugate matrix Companion matrix A matrix having the coefficients of a polynomial as last column and having the polynomial as its characteristic polynomial Coxeter matrix A matrix which describes the relations between the involutions that generate a Coxeter group Distance matrix The square matrix formed by the pairwise distances of a set of points Euclidean distance matrix is a special case Euclidean distance matrix A matrix that describes the pairwise distances between points in Euclidean space See also distance matrix Fundamental matrix The matrix formed from the fundamental solutions of a system of linear differential equations Generator matrix In Coding theory a matrix whose rows span a linear code Gramian matrix The symmetric matrix of the pairwise inner products of a set of vectors in an inner product space Hessian matrix The square matrix of second partial derivatives of a function of several variables Householder matrix The matrix of a reflection with respect to a hyperplane passing through the origin Jacobian matrix The matrix of the partial derivatives of a function of several variables Moment matrix Used in statistics and Sum of squares optimization Payoff matrix A matrix in game theory and economics that represents the payoffs in a normal form game where players move simultaneously Pick matrix A matrix that occurs in the study of analytical interpolation problems Rotation matrix A matrix representing a rotation Seifert matrix A matrix in knot theory primarily for the algebraic analysis of topological properties of knots and links Alexander polynomial Shear matrix The matrix of a shear transformation Similarity matrix A matrix of scores which express the similarity between two data points Sequence alignment Sylvester matrix A square matrix whose entries come from the coefficients of two polynomials The Sylvester matrix is nonsingular if and only if the two polynomials are coprime to each other Symplectic matrix The real matrix of a symplectic transformation Transformation matrix The matrix of a linear transformation or a geometric transformation Wedderburn matrix A matrix of the form A y T A x 1 A x y T A displaystyle A y T Ax 1 Axy T A nbsp used for rank reduction amp biconjugate decompositions Analysis of matrix decompositionsMatrices used in statistics editThe following matrices find their main application in statistics and probability theory Bernoulli matrix a square matrix with entries 1 1 with equal probability of each Centering matrix a matrix which when multiplied with a vector has the same effect as subtracting the mean of the components of the vector from every component Correlation matrix a symmetric n n matrix formed by the pairwise correlation coefficients of several random variables Covariance matrix a symmetric n n matrix formed by the pairwise covariances of several random variables Sometimes called a dispersion matrix Dispersion matrix another name for a covariance matrix Doubly stochastic matrix a non negative matrix such that each row and each column sums to 1 thus the matrix is both left stochastic and right stochastic Fisher information matrix a matrix representing the variance of the partial derivative with respect to a parameter of the log of the likelihood function of a random variable Hat matrix a square matrix used in statistics to relate fitted values to observed values Orthostochastic matrix doubly stochastic matrix whose entries are the squares of the absolute values of the entries of some orthogonal matrix Precision matrix a symmetric n n matrix formed by inverting the covariance matrix Also called the information matrix Stochastic matrix a non negative matrix describing a stochastic process The sum of entries of any row is one Transition matrix a matrix representing the probabilities of conditions changing from one state to another in a Markov chain Unistochastic matrix a doubly stochastic matrix whose entries are the squares of the absolute values of the entries of some unitary matrixMatrices used in graph theory editThe following matrices find their main application in graph and network theory Adjacency matrix a square matrix representing a graph with aij non zero if vertex i and vertex j are adjacent Biadjacency matrix a special class of adjacency matrix that describes adjacency in bipartite graphs Degree matrix a diagonal matrix defining the degree of each vertex in a graph Edmonds matrix a square matrix of a bipartite graph Incidence matrix a matrix representing a relationship between two classes of objects usually vertices and edges in the context of graph theory Laplacian matrix a matrix equal to the degree matrix minus the adjacency matrix for a graph used to find the number of spanning trees in the graph Seidel adjacency matrix a matrix similar to the usual adjacency matrix but with 1 for adjacency 1 for nonadjacency 0 on the diagonal Skew adjacency matrix an adjacency matrix in which each non zero aij is 1 or 1 accordingly as the direction i j matches or opposes that of an initially specified orientation Tutte matrix a generalization of the Edmonds matrix for a balanced bipartite graph Matrices used in science and engineering editCabibbo Kobayashi Maskawa matrix a unitary matrix used in particle physics to describe the strength of flavour changing weak decays Density matrix a matrix describing the statistical state of a quantum system Hermitian non negative and with trace 1 Fundamental matrix computer vision a 3 3 matrix in computer vision that relates corresponding points in stereo images Fuzzy associative matrix a matrix in artificial intelligence used in machine learning processes Gamma matrices 4 4 matrices in quantum field theory Gell Mann matrices a generalization of the Pauli matrices these matrices are one notable representation of the infinitesimal generators of the special unitary group SU 3 Hamiltonian matrix a matrix used in a variety of fields including quantum mechanics and linear quadratic regulator LQR systems Irregular matrix a matrix used in computer science which has a varying number of elements in each row Overlap matrix a type of Gramian matrix used in quantum chemistry to describe the inter relationship of a set of basis vectors of a quantum system S matrix a matrix in quantum mechanics that connects asymptotic infinite past and future particle states Scattering matrix a matrix in Microwave Engineering that describes how the power move in a multiport system State transition matrix exponent of state matrix in control systems Substitution matrix a matrix from bioinformatics which describes mutation rates of amino acid or DNA sequences Supnick matrix a square matrix used in computer science Z matrix a matrix in chemistry representing a molecule in terms of its relative atomic geometry Specific matrices editWilson matrix a matrix used as an example for test purposes Other matrix related terms and definitions editJordan canonical form an almost diagonalised matrix where the only non zero elements appear on the lead and superdiagonals Linear independence two or more vectors are linearly independent if there is no way to construct one from linear combinations of the others Matrix exponential defined by the exponential series Matrix representation of conic sections Pseudoinverse a generalization of the inverse matrix Row echelon form a matrix in this form is the result of applying the forward elimination procedure to a matrix as used in Gaussian elimination Wronskian the determinant of a matrix of functions and their derivatives such that row n is the n 1 th derivative of row one See also editPerfect matrix nbsp Mathematics portalNotes edit Hogben 2006 Ch 31 3 a b Weisstein Eric W Matrix Multiplication mathworld wolfram com Retrieved 2020 09 07 Non derogatory matrix Encyclopedia of Mathematics encyclopediaofmath org Retrieved 2020 09 07 References editHogben Leslie 2006 Handbook of Linear Algebra Discrete Mathematics and Its Applications Boca Raton Chapman amp Hall CRC ISBN 978 1 58488 510 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of named matrices amp oldid 1187555657, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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