Weyr canonical form

The image shows an example of a general Weyr matrix consisting of two blocks each of which is a basic Weyr matrix. The basic Weyr matrix in the top-left corner has the structure (4,2,1) and the other one has the structure (2,2,1,1).

In mathematics, in linear algebra, a Weyr canonical form (or, Weyr form or Weyr matrix) is a square matrix satisfying certain conditions. A square matrix is said to be in the Weyr canonical form if the matrix satisfies the conditions defining the Weyr canonical form. The Weyr form was discovered by the Czech mathematician Eduard Weyr in 1885.[1][2][3] The Weyr form did not become popular among mathematicians and it was overshadowed by the closely related, but distinct, canonical form known by the name Jordan canonical form.[3] The Weyr form has been rediscovered several times since Weyr’s original discovery in 1885.[4] This form has been variously called as modified Jordan form, reordered Jordan form, second Jordan form, and H-form.[4] The current terminology is credited to Shapiro who introduced it in a paper published in the American Mathematical Monthly in 1999.[4][5]

Recently several applications have been found for the Weyr matrix. Of particular interest is an application of the Weyr matrix in the study of phylogenetic invariants in biomathematics.

Definitions

Definition

A basic Weyr matrix with eigenvalue is an matrix of the following form: There is a partition

of with

such that, when is viewed as an blocked matrix , where the block is an matrix, the following three features are present:

  1. The main diagonal blocks are the scalar matrices for .
  2. The first superdiagonal blocks are full column rank matrices in reduced row-echelon form (that is, an identity matrix followed by zero rows) for .
  3. All other blocks of W are zero (that is, when ).

In this case, we say that has Weyr structure .

Example

The following is an example of a basic Weyr matrix.

In this matrix, and . So has the Weyr structure . Also,

and

Definition

Let be a square matrix and let be the distinct eigenvalues of . We say that is in Weyr form (or is a Weyr matrix) if has the following form:

where is a basic Weyr matrix with eigenvalue for .

Example

The following image shows an example of a general Weyr matrix consisting of three basic Weyr matrix blocks. The basic Weyr matrix in the top-left corner has the structure (4,2,1) with eigenvalue 4, the middle block has structure (2,2,1,1) with eigenvalue -3 and the one in the lower-right corner has the structure (3, 2) with eigenvalue 0.

The Weyr form is canonical

That the Weyr form is a canonical form of a matrix is a consequence of the following result:[3] Each square matrix over an algebraically closed field is similar to a Weyr matrix which is unique up to permutation of its basic blocks. The matrix is called the Weyr (canonical) form of .

Computation of the Weyr canonical form

Reduction to the nilpotent case

Let be a square matrix of order over an algebraically closed field and let the distinct eigenvalues of be . As a consequence of the generalized eigenspace decomposition theorem, one can show that is similar to a block diagonal matrix of the form

where is a diagonal matrix and is a nilpotent matrix. So the problem of reducing to the Weyr form reduces to the problem of reducing the nilpotent matrices to the Weyr form.

Reduction of a nilpotent matrix to the Weyr form

Given a nilpotent square matrix of order over an algebraically closed field , the following algorithm produces an invertible matrix and a Weyr matrix such that .

Step 1

Let

Step 2

  1. Compute a basis for the null space of .
  2. Extend the basis for the null space of to a basis for the -dimensional vector space .
  3. Form the matrix consisting of these basis vectors.
  4. Compute . is a square matrix of size nullity .

Step 3

If is nonzero, repeat Step 2 on .

  1. Compute a basis for the null space of .
  2. Extend the basis for the null space of to a basis for the vector space having dimension nullity .
  3. Form the matrix consisting of these basis vectors.
  4. Compute . is a square matrix of size nullity nullity.

Step 4

Continue the processes of Steps 1 and 2 to obtain increasingly smaller square matrices and associated nvertible matrices until the first zero matrix is obtained.

Step 5

The Weyr structure of is where = nullity.

Step 6

  1. Compute the matrix (here the 's are appropriately sized identity matrices).
  2. Compute . is a matrix of the following form:
.

Step 7

Use elementary row operations to find an invertible matrix of appropriate size such that the product is a matrix of the form .

Step 8

Set diag and compute . In this matrix, the -block is .

Step 9

Find a matrix formed as a product of elementary matrices such that is a matrix in which all the blocks above the block contain only 's.

Step 10

Repeat Steps 8 and 9 on column converting -block to via conjugation by some invertible matrix . Use this block to clear out the blocks above, via conjugation by a product of elementary matrices.

Step 11

Repeat these processes on columns, using conjugations by . The resulting matrix is now in Weyr form.

Step 12

Let . Then .

Applications of the Weyr form

Some well-known applications of the Weyr form are listed below:[3]

  1. The Weyr form can be used to simplify the proof of Gerstenhaber’s Theorem which asserts that the subalgebra generated by two commuting matrices has dimension at most .
  2. A set of finite matrices is said to be approximately simultaneously diagonalizable if they can be perturbed to simultaneously diagonalizable matrices. The Weyr form is used to prove approximate simultaneous diagonalizability of various classes of matrices. The approximate simultaneous diagonalizability property has applications in the study of phylogenetic invariants in biomathematics.
  3. The Weyr form can be used to simplify the proofs of the irreducibility of the variety of all k-tuples of commuting complex matrices.

References

  1. Eduard Weyr (1985). "Répartition des matrices en espèces et formation de toutes les espèces" (PDF). Comptes Rendus, Paris. 100: 966–969. Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  2. Eduard Weyr (1890). "Zur Theorie der bilinearen Formen". Monatsh. Math. Physik. 1: 163–236.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Kevin C. Meara; John Clark; Charles I. Vinsonhaler (2011). Advanced Topics in Linear Algebra: Weaving Matrix Problems through the Weyr Form. Oxford University Press.
  4. 1 2 3 Kevin C. Meara; John Clark; Charles I. Vinsonhaler (2011). Advanced Topics in Linear Algebra: Weaving Matrix Problems through the Weyr Form. Oxford University Press. pp. 44, 81–82.
  5. Shapiro, H. (1999). "The Weyr characteristic". The American Mathematical Monthly. 106: 919–929. doi:10.2307/2589746.
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