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Handout 9 More Matrix Properties The Transpose

This document discusses properties of square matrices and the transpose operation. Some key properties include: - A symmetric matrix has the same entries above and below the diagonal, while an antisymmetric matrix has opposite entries above and below the diagonal. - To transpose a matrix, its entries are reflected across the leading diagonal. The transpose of a matrix changes its shape. - Transposing twice returns the original matrix. The transpose of the sum of matrices is equal to the sum of their transposes.

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Roy Vesey
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
16 views1 page

Handout 9 More Matrix Properties The Transpose

This document discusses properties of square matrices and the transpose operation. Some key properties include: - A symmetric matrix has the same entries above and below the diagonal, while an antisymmetric matrix has opposite entries above and below the diagonal. - To transpose a matrix, its entries are reflected across the leading diagonal. The transpose of a matrix changes its shape. - Transposing twice returns the original matrix. The transpose of the sum of matrices is equal to the sum of their transposes.

Uploaded by

Roy Vesey
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Handout 9 More matrix properties; the transpose

Square matrix properties

These properties only apply to a square matrix, i.e. n × n.

• The leading diagonal is the diagonal line consisting of the entries a 11 , a22 , a33 , . . . ann .

• A diagonal matrix has zeros everywhere except the leading diagonal.


• The identity matrix I has zeros off the leading diagonal, and 1 for each entry on the diagonal. It
is a special case of a diagonal matrix, and A I = I A = A for any n × n matrix A.

• An upper triangular matrix has all its non-zero entries on or above the leading diagonal.

• A lower triangular matrix has all its non-zero entries on or below the leading diagonal.

• A symmetric matrix has the same entries below and above the diagonal: a ij = aji for any values
of i and j between 1 and n.

• An antisymmetric or skew-symmetric matrix has the opposite entries below and above the diagonal:
aij = −aji for any values of i and j between 1 and n. This automatically means the digaonal entries
must all be zero.

Transpose

To transpose a matrix, we reflect it across the line given by the leading diagonal a 11 , a22 etc. In general
the result is a different shape to the original matrix:
 
µ ¶ a11 a21
a11 a12 a13
A= A> =  a12 a22  [A> ]ij = Aji .
a21 a22 a23
a13 a23

• If A is m × n then A> is n × m.

• The transpose of a symmetric matrix is itself: A> = A (recalling that only square matrices can
be symmetric).

• For an antisymmetric matrix, A> = −A.

• The transpose of a product is (A B)> = B > A> .

• If you add a matrix and its transpose the result is symmetric. You can only do the addition
if the matrix and its transpose are the same shape; so we need a square matrix for this.

• If you subtract the transpose from the matrix the result is antisymmetric.

• The transpose of a sum is the sum of the transposes (as you would expect): A > + B > = (A + B)> .

• If we transpose twice we get back to where we started: (A> )> = A.

You can split a matrix into the sum of a symmetric and an antisymmetric matrix using the transpose:

A = 12 (A + A> ) + 12 (A − A> ).

The first of these is symmetric and the second, antisymmetric.

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