scholarly journals Global Properties of Eigenvalues of Parametric Rank One Perturbations for Unstructured and Structured Matrices

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
André C. M. Ran ◽  
Michał Wojtylak

AbstractGeneral properties of eigenvalues of $$A+\tau uv^*$$ A + τ u v ∗ as functions of $$\tau \in {\mathbb {C} }$$ τ ∈ C or $$\tau \in {\mathbb {R} }$$ τ ∈ R or $$\tau ={{\,\mathrm{{e}}\,}}^{{{\,\mathrm{{i}}\,}}\theta }$$ τ = e i θ on the unit circle are considered. In particular, the problem of existence of global analytic formulas for eigenvalues is addressed. Furthermore, the limits of eigenvalues with $$\tau \rightarrow \infty $$ τ → ∞ are discussed in detail. The following classes of matrices are considered: complex (without additional structure), real (without additional structure), complex H-selfadjoint and real J-Hamiltonian.

2018 ◽  
Vol 33 ◽  
pp. 122-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Hartman ◽  
Milan Hladik

The radius of regularity, sometimes spelled as the radius of nonsingularity, is a measure providing the distance of a given matrix to the nearest singular one. Despite its possible application strength this measure is still far from being handled in an efficient way also due to findings of Poljak and Rohn providing proof that checking this property is NP-hard for a general matrix. There are basically two approaches to handle this situation. Firstly, approximation algorithms are applied and secondly, tighter bounds for radius of regularity are considered. Improvements of both approaches have been recently shown by Hartman and Hlad\'{i}k (doi:10.1007/978-3-319-31769-4\_9) utilizing relaxation of the radius computation to semidefinite programming. An estimation of the regularity radius using any of the above mentioned approaches is usually applied to general matrices considering none or just weak assumptions about the original matrix. Surprisingly less explored area is represented by utilization of properties of special classes of matrices as well as utilization of classical algorithms extended to be used to compute the considered radius. This work explores a process of regularity radius analysis and identifies useful properties enabling easier estimation of the corresponding radius values. At first, checking finiteness of this characteristic is shown to be a polynomial problem along with determining a sharp upper bound on the number of nonzero elements of the matrix to obtain infinite radius. Further, relationship between maximum (Chebyshev) norm and spectral norm is used to construct new bounds for the radius of regularity. Considering situations where the known bounds are not tight enough, a new method based on Jansson-Rohn algorithm for testing regularity of an interval matrix is presented which is not a priory exponential along with numerical experiments. For a situation where an input matrix has a special form, several corresponding results are provided such as exact formulas for several special classes of matrices, e.g., for totally positive and inverse non-negative, or approximation algorithms, e.g., rank-one radius matrices. For tridiagonal matrices, an algorithm by Bar-On, Codenotti and Leoncini is utilized to design a polynomial algorithm to compute the radius of regularity.


2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 329-344
Author(s):  
Lei Zhu ◽  
Weiwei Xu

AbstractWe consider backward errors for an eigenproblem of a class of symmetric generalised centrosymmetric matrices and skew-symmetric generalised skew-centrosymmetric matrices, which are extensions of symmetric centrosymmetric and skew-symmetric skew-centrosymmetric matrices. Explicit formulae are presented for the computable backward errors for approximate eigenpairs of these two kinds of structured matrices. Numerical examples illustrate our results.


2011 ◽  
Vol 435 (3) ◽  
pp. 687-716 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Mehl ◽  
Volker Mehrmann ◽  
André C.M. Ran ◽  
Leiba Rodman

1974 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 553-558
Author(s):  
Kenneth Pacholke

AbstractIn recent papers Brewer and Mott have studied integral domains which have finite character globally. This paper concentrates on domains which have finite character locally. Examples include global finite character domains plus Prufer, almost Dedekind, and almost Krull domains. General properties are given, including a valuation-theoretic characterization. The effect of requiring essential and/or rank one valuations is also studied.


10.37236/1734 ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
David Arthur

An arc-representation of a graph is a function mapping each vertex in the graph to an arc on the unit circle in such a way that adjacent vertices are mapped to intersecting arcs. The width of such a representation is the maximum number of arcs passing through a single point. The arc-width of a graph is defined to be the minimum width over all of its arc-representations. We extend the work of Barát and Hajnal on this subject and develop a generalization we call restricted arc-width. Our main results revolve around using this to bound arc-width from below and to examine the effect of several graph operations on arc-width. In particular, we completely describe the effect of disjoint unions and wedge sums while providing tight bounds on the effect of cones.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document