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A square matrix is called bisymmetric if it is both centrosymmetric and either symmetric or antisymmetric (Muir 1960, p. 19).
A matrix is a concise and useful way of uniquely representing and working with linear transformations. In particular, every linear transformation can be represented by a ...
A square matrix is called centrosymmetric if it is symmetric with respect to the center (Muir 1960, p. 19).
An antisymmetric matrix, also known as a skew-symmetric or antimetric matrix, is a square matrix that satisfies the identity A=-A^(T) (1) where A^(T) is the matrix transpose. ...
A symmetric matrix is a square matrix that satisfies A^(T)=A, (1) where A^(T) denotes the transpose, so a_(ij)=a_(ji). This also implies A^(-1)A^(T)=I, (2) where I is the ...
A matrix for which horizontal and vertical dimensions are not the same (i.e., an m×n matrix with m!=n).
A square matrix A such that A^2=I, where I is the identity matrix. An involutory matrix is its own matrix inverse.
A positive matrix is a real or integer matrix (a)_(ij) for which each matrix element is a positive number, i.e., a_(ij)>0 for all i, j. Positive matrices are therefore a ...
The power A^n of a matrix A for n a nonnegative integer is defined as the matrix product of n copies of A, A^n=A...A_()_(n). A matrix to the zeroth power is defined to be the ...
The process of computing a matrix inverse.
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