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ENGG2013 Unit 7 Non-singular matrix and Gauss-Jordan elimination

ENGG2013 Unit 7 Non-singular matrix and Gauss-Jordan elimination. Jan, 2011. Outline. Matrix arithmetic Matrix addition, multiplication Non-singular matrix Gauss-Jordan elimination. The love function: a normal case. Function L. Function L’. Domain. Range. Range. Domain. Boy 1

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ENGG2013 Unit 7 Non-singular matrix and Gauss-Jordan elimination

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  1. ENGG2013 Unit 7Non-singular matrixand Gauss-Jordan elimination Jan, 2011.

  2. Outline • Matrix arithmetic • Matrix addition, multiplication • Non-singular matrix • Gauss-Jordan elimination ENGG2013

  3. The love function: a normal case Function L Function L’ Domain Range Range Domain Boy 1 Boy 2 Boy 3 Boy 4 Boy 5 Girl A Girl B Girl C Girl D Girl E Girl A Girl B Girl C Girl D Girl E Boy 1 Boy 2 Boy 3 Boy 4 Boy 5 L(Boy 1) = Girl A, but L’(Girl A) = Boy 4. ENGG2013

  4. The love function: a utopian case Function L Function L’ Domain Domain Range Range Boy 1 Boy 2 Boy 3 Boy 4 Boy 5 Girl A Girl B Girl C Girl D Girl E Girl A Girl B Girl C Girl D Girl E Boy 1 Boy 2 Boy 3 Boy 4 Boy 5 This function L’ is the inverse of L ENGG2013

  5. The love function: no inverse Function L Domain Domain Range Range Boy 1 Boy 2 Boy 3 Boy 4 Boy 5 Girl A Girl B Girl C Girl D Girl E Girl A Girl B Girl C Girl D Girl E Boy 1 Boy 2 Boy 3 Boy 4 Boy 5 This is not a function This function L has no inverse ENGG2013

  6. Undo-able Rotate 90 degrees clockwise Multiplied by Rotate 90 degrees counter-clockwise Multiplied by A matrix which represents a reversibleprocess is called invertible or non-singular. ENGG2013

  7. Objectives • How to determine whether a matrix is invertible? • If a matrix is invertible, how to find the corresponding inverse matrix? ENGG2013

  8. MATRIX ALGEBRA ENGG2013

  9. Matrix equality • Two matrices are said to be equal if • They have the same number of rows and the same number of columns (i.e. same size). • The corresponding entry are identical. ENGG2013

  10. Matrix addition and scalar multiplication • We can add two matrices if they have the same size • To multiply a matrix by a real number, we just multiply all entries in the matrix by that number. ENGG2013

  11. Matrix multiplication • Given an mn matrix A and a pq matrix B, their product AB is defined if n=p. • If n = p, we define their product, say C = AB, by computing the (i,j)-entry in C as the dot product of the i-th row of A and the j-th row of B. pq m q mn ENGG2013

  12. Examples is undefined. is undefined. ENGG2013

  13. Square matrix • A matrix with equal number of columns and rows is called a square matrix. • For square matrices of the same size, we can freely multiply them without worrying whether the product is well-defined or not. • Because multiplication is always well-defined in this case. • The entries with the same column and row index are called the diagonal entries. • For example: ENGG2013

  14. Compatibility with function composition Multiplied by Multiplied by Multiplied by ENGG2013

  15. Order does matter in multiplication Rotate 90 degrees Reflection around x-axis Multiplied by Multiplied by Are they the same? Reflection around x-axis Rotate 90 degrees Multiplied by Multiplied by ENGG2013

  16. Non-commutativity • For real numbers, we have 35 = 53. • Multiplication of real numbers is commutative. • For matrices, in general AB BA. • Multiplication of matrices is non-commutative. • For example ENGG2013

  17. Associativity • For real numbers, we have (34)5 = 3(45). • Multiplication of real numbers is associative. • For any three matrices A, B, C, it is always true that (AB)C= A(BC), provided that the multiplications are well-defined. • Multiplication of matrices is associative. ENGG2013

  18. INVERTIBLE MATRIX ENGG2013

  19. Identity matrix • A square matrix whose diagonal entries are all one, and off-diagonal entries are all zero, is called an identity matrix. • We usually use capital letter I for identity matrix, or add a subscript and write In if we want to stress that the size is nn. ENGG2013

  20. Multiplication by identity matrix is trivial • Identity matrix is like a do-nothing process. • There is no change after multiplication by the identity matrix • IA = A for any A. • BI = B for any B. Multiplied by ENGG2013

  21. Invertible matrix • Given an nn matrix A, if we can find a matrix A’, such that then A is said to be invertible, or non-singular. • This matrix A’ is called an inverse of A. Multiplied byA Multiplied by A’ Multiplied byIn ENGG2013

  22. Example implies is invertible. Rotate 90 CW Rotate 90 CCW Multiplied by Multiplied by ENGG2013

  23. Matrix inverse may not exist • If matrix A induces a many-to-one mapping, then we cannot hope for any inverse. has no inverse ENGG2013

  24. Naïve method for computing matrix inverse • Consider • Want to find A’ such that AA’= I • Solve for p, q, r, s in ENGG2013

  25. Uniqueness of matrix inverse • Before we discuss how to compute matrix inverse, we first show there is at most one A’ such that AA’ = A’ A = I. • Suppose on the contrary that there is another matrix A’’ such that AA’’ = A’’ A = I. • We want to prove that A’ = A’’. ENGG2013

  26. Proof of uniqueness Defining property of A’’ Multiply by A’ from the left I times anything is the same thing Matrix multiplication is associative Defining property of A’ I times anything is the same thing ENGG2013

  27. Notation • Since the matrix inverse (if exists) is unique, we use the symbol A-1 to represent the unique matrix which satisfies • We say that A-1 is the inverse of A. ENGG2013

  28. A convenient fact • To check that a matrix B is the inverse of A, it is sufficient to check either • BA = I, or • AB = I. • It can be proved that (1) implies (2), and (2) implies (1). • The details is left as exercise. ENGG2013

  29. GAUSS-JORDAN ELIMINATION ENGG2013

  30. Row operation using matrix • Recall that there are three kind of elementary row operations • Row exchange • Multiply a row by a non-zero constant • Replace a row by the sum of itself and a constant multiple of another row. • We can perform elementary row operation by matrix multiplication (from the left). • All three kinds of operation are invertible. ENGG2013

  31. Row exchange • Example: exchange row 2 and row 3 Multiply the same matrix from the left again, we get back the original matrix. ENGG2013

  32. Multiply a row by a constant • Multiply the first row by -1. Multiply the same matrix from the left again, we get back the original matrix. ENGG2013

  33. Row replacement • Add the first row to the second row Multiply by another matrix from the left to undo ENGG2013

  34. Elementary matrix (I) • Three types of elementary matrices • Exchange row i and row j Col. i Col. j Row i Row j ENGG2013

  35. Elementary matrix (II) • Multiply row i by m Col. i Row i ENGG2013

  36. Elementary matrix (III) • Add s times row i to row j Col. i Col. j Row i Row j ENGG2013

  37. Row reduction • A series of row reductions is the same as multiplying from the left a series of elementary matrices. … E1, E2, E3, … are elementary matrices. ENGG2013

  38. If we can row reduce to identity • Then A is non-singular, or invertible. (Matrixmultiplication isassociative) ENGG2013

  39. Gauss-Jordan elimination • It is convenient to append an identity matrix to the right • We can interpret it as If we can row reduce A to the identity by a series of row operationsthen we can apply the same series of row operations to I and obtain the inverse of A. ENGG2013

  40. Algorithm • Input: an nn matrix A. • Create an n  2n matrix M • The left half is A • The right half is In • Try to reduce the expanded matrix Msuch that the left half is equal to In. • If succeed, the right half of M is the inverse of A. • If you cannot reduce the left half of M to , then A is not invertible, a.k.a. singular. ENGG2013

  41. Example • Find the inverse of • Create a 36 matrix • After some row reductionswe get • Answer: ENGG2013

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