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When is the Adjoint of a Matrix a Low Degree Rational Function in the Matrix?
Author(s) -
Jörg Liesen
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
siam journal on matrix analysis and applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.268
H-Index - 101
eISSN - 1095-7162
pISSN - 0895-4798
DOI - 10.1137/060675538
Subject(s) - mathematics , degree (music) , eigenvalues and eigenvectors , normal matrix , matrix (chemical analysis) , polynomial , complex plane , degree of a polynomial , product (mathematics) , rational function , bounded function , combinatorics , function (biology) , pure mathematics , mathematical analysis , geometry , physics , materials science , quantum mechanics , evolutionary biology , acoustics , composite material , biology
We show that the adjoint $A^+$ of a matrix A with respect to a given inner product is a rational function in A, if and only if A is normal with respect to the inner product. We consider such matrices and analyze the McMillan degrees of the rational functions r such that $A^+=r(A)$. We introduce the McMillan degree of A as the smallest among these degrees, characterize this degree in terms of the number and distribution of the eigenvalues of A, and compare the McMillan degree with the normal degree of A, which is defined as the smallest degree of a polynomial p for which $A^+=p(A)$. We show that unless the eigenvalues of A lie on a single circle in the complex plane, the ratio of the normal degree and the McMillan degree of A is bounded by a small constant that depends neither on the number nor on the distribution of the eigenvalues of A. Our analysis is motivated by applications in the area of short recurrence Krylov subspace methods

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