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Introduction To Matrices: Dr. Ammar Isam

This document introduces matrices and their properties. It is divided into three sections: - Section 1 defines matrices and their basic properties such as dimensions, entries, types of matrices. - Section 2 covers basic matrix operations like addition, multiplication, and properties such as non-commutativity. - Section 3 discusses finding the inverse of square matrices, specifically 2x2 and 3x3 matrices using determinants and cofactor matrices.

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Yasser Hashim
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
120 views31 pages

Introduction To Matrices: Dr. Ammar Isam

This document introduces matrices and their properties. It is divided into three sections: - Section 1 defines matrices and their basic properties such as dimensions, entries, types of matrices. - Section 2 covers basic matrix operations like addition, multiplication, and properties such as non-commutativity. - Section 3 discusses finding the inverse of square matrices, specifically 2x2 and 3x3 matrices using determinants and cofactor matrices.

Uploaded by

Yasser Hashim
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 31

Introduction to Matrices

Dr. Ammar Isam


This chapter contains
This chapter is introducing matrices. It is divided into three main sections.
- Section 1 is discuss some of the basic properties and types of matrices
- Section 2 the operations of matrices strictly from a mathematical
perspective is given with examples.
- Section 3 the way to find invers of the square matrix with size 2*2, and
3*3 is discussed in details.

2
Section 1
Matrix: An Algebraic Definition
Algebraic definition of a matrix: a table of scalars in square brackets.
Matrix dimension is the width and height of the table, n x m.
Typically we use dimensions 2 x 2 for 2D work, and 3 x 3 for 3D
work.

- A matrix is a set of elements, organized into rows and columns


rows

a b 
columns
c d 
 
3
Matrix Components
Entries are numbered by row and column, eg. mij is the entry in row
i, column j.
Start numbering at 1, not 0.

4
Square Matrices
Same number as rows as columns.
Entries mii are called the diagonal entries. The others are called
nondiagonal entries

5
Diagonal Matrices
A diagonal matrix is a square matrix whose nondiagonal elements
are zero.

6
The Identity Matrix
The identity matrix of dimension n, denoted In, is the n x n matrix with 1s
on the diagonal and 0s elsewhere.

7
Vectors as Matrices
A row vector is a 1 x n matrix.
A column vector is an n x 1 matrix.
They were pretty much interchangeable in the lecture on Vectors.
They’re not once you start treating them as matrices.

8
Transpose of a Matrix
The transpose of an r x c matrix M is a c x r matrix called MT.
Take every row and rewrite it as a column.
Equivalently, flip about the diagonal

9
Transpose of a Vector
If v is a row vector, vT is a column vector and vice-versa

10
Basic Matrix Operations
Addition, and Subtraction

a b   e f  a  e b  f 
c d    g   
h  c  g d  h 
Just add elements
  

a b   e f  a  e b  f 
c d    g 
h  c  g d  h 
 Just subtract elements
  

11
Multiplying By a Scalar
Can multiply a matrix by a scalar.
Result is a matrix of the same dimension.
To multiply a matrix by a scalar, multiply each component by the
scalar.

12
Matrix Multiplication
Multiplying an r x n matrix A by an n x c matrix B gives an r x c
result AB.

13
Matrix Times Column Vector Multiplication
Can multiply a matrix times a column vector.

14
Example

15
Another Way of Looking at It

16
2 x 2 Case

17
2 x 2 Example

18
3 x 3 Case

19
3 x 3 Example

20
Identity Matrix
Recall that the identity matrix I (or In) is a diagonal
matrix whose diagonal entries are all 1.
Now that we’ve seen the definition of matrix
multiplication, we can say that IM = MI = M for all
matrices M (dimensions appropriate)

21
Matrix Multiplication Facts
Not commutative: in general AB  BA.
Associative:
(AB)C = A(BC)
Associates with scalar multiplication:
k(AB) = (kA)B =A(kB)
(AB)T = BTAT
(M1M2M3…Mn)T = MnT …M3TM2TM1T

22
Row Vector Times Matrix Multiplication
Can multiply a row vector times a matrix

23
Determinants
Determinant of order 2

 a11 a12 
Consider a 2  2 matrix: A
a22 
 a21

Determinant of A, denoted , is
|A | a number and
can be evaluated by
a11 a12
| A |  a11a22  a12 a21
a21 a22

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easy to remember (for order 2 only)..
a11 a12
| A |  a11a22  a12 a21
a21 a22
- +

1 2
Example: Evaluate the determinant: 3 4
1 2
 1  4  2  3  2
3 4

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The following properties are true for
determinants of any order.
1. If every element of a row (column) is zero,
e.g., 1 2
 1 0  2  0  0 , then |A| = 0.
0 0

determinant of a matrix
2. |AT| = |A| = that of its transpose

3. |AB| = |A||B|
26
 a11 a12 
For any 2x2 matrix A
 a21 a22 

1  a22 a12 
Its inverse can be written as A  1
 a
A  21 a11 

 1 0 
Example: Find the inverse of A 
 1 2 
The determinant of A is -2
 1 0 
Hence, the inverse of A is 1
A  
1/ 2 1/ 2 
How to find an inverse for a 3x3 matrix?

27
Determinants of order 3
1 2 3
Consider an example: A   4 5 6
7 8 9 

Its determinant can be obtained by:


1 2 3
4 5 1 2 1 2
A  4 5 6 3 6 9
7 8 7 8 4 5
7 8 9
 3  3  6  6  9  3  0

You are encouraged to find the determinant by


using other rows or columns 28
Inverse of a 33 matrix
1 2 3 
Cofactor matrix of A  0 4 5 
1 0 6 

The cofactor for each element of matrix A:


4 5 0 5 0 4
A11   24 A12   5 A13   4
0 6 1 6 1 0

2 3 1 3 1 2
A21   12 A22  3 A23   2
0 6 1 6 1 0

2 3 1 3 1 2
A31   2 A32    5 A33  4
4 5 0 5 0 4
29
1 2 3 
Cofactor matrix of A  0 4 5  is then given by:
1 0 6 

 24 5 4 
 12 3 2 
 
 2 5 4 

30
1 2 3 
Inverse matrix of A  0 4 5  is given by:
1 0 6 

 24 5 4   24 12 2 
T

1 1   1  
A   12 3 2  5 3 5
A  22  
 2 5 4   4 2 4 

 12 11  6 11 1 11 
  5 22 3 22 5 22 
  2 11 1 11 2 11 

31

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