MA511

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spectral theorem

D=U^TAU

All fourier matrices are Hermitian

False

Rank(AB) >= (rank(A), rank(B))

False

Suppose A is a real symmetric negative definite matrix of size 4x4 that is x^TAx<0: All upper left minors of A are negative

False

The row space of a square matrix is orthogonal to the column space

False

if A is nxn matrix and A^2=0 then A, I+A, and I-A are all invertible

False

The differential equation du/dt = Au is stable if Re(lambdai) > 0 for all eigenvalues.

False Condition 1: a+b must be negative Condition 2: the determinant must be positive

If the characteristic polynomials of 2x2 matrices A and B are equal then A and B are similar

False:

If A is an mxn and B is nxr matrix then N(AB) >= N(A)

False: AB = mxr : N(AB) -> R^r A = mxn : N(A) ->R^n the subspaces are different dimensions so this is nonsense

If A is an nxn matrix and rank (A^TA)<n then rank(A)<n

False: If A is invertible then rank(A)=n

If V and W are subspaces of R^11 and dim(V)=5 and dim(W)=8 then dim(V intersect W)>=4

False: dim(V intersect U) = dimV + dimW - dim(V+W) 5+8-11

If A and B are unitary then A+B is unitary

False: Example: A=I B=-I. They are unitary but their sum is zero, not unitary

If U is a unitary matrix then all its eigenvalues are real

False: example [i]; this matrix is unitary and not real

If A and B are Hermitian, then A*B is Hermitian

False: A*B*=B*A* This is equal to A*B* only when A and B commute A+B is hermitian A*B+B*A is hermitian

Let A be an nxn matrix. If A is non-singular then it is diagnoalizable

False: Counter example is a Jordan Cell with non-zero eigenvalue

Suppose A is a real symmetric negative definite matrix of size 4x4 that is x^TAx<0: Determinant of A is negative

False: Determinant is the product of eigenvalues. Since they are all negative, and there are 4 of them, the determinant is positive

If A and B are nxn matrices of the same size, e^(A+B)=e^A*e^B

False: The left hand side does not change if we interchange A and B while the right hand side can change (order of matrices matters)

For a 5x5 matrix A, det(3A) = 3det(A)

False: the correct formula is det(3A) = 3^5det(A)

All fourier matrices Fn are unitarily diagonalizable

True

Given an mxn matrix A, the equation Ax=0 has ONLY a trivial solution if its columns are linearly independent

True

If A and B are both Hermitian matrices, then A+B is Hermitian

True

If A is Hermitian and U is unitary of the same size then U^-1AU is Hermitian

True

If A is a square matrix such that the linear transformation f(x)=Ax, preserves angles and lengths then A^TA is an orthogonal matrix

True

If A is singular then it has eigenvalue 0

True

If P is a projection matrix and P is invertible then P = I

True

If x^tA=b^T has exactly one solutions then rows of A are linearly independent

True

The set of all symmetric nxn matrices is a vector space

True

for a square matrix A the following four properties are equivalent: 1. A is left-invertible 2. the columns of A are linearly independent 3. A is right-invertible 4. the rows of A are linearly independent

True

if A is an nxn matrix and the system Ax=b has a unique solution, then A is a product of elementary matrices

True

If {q1, q2, q3} is an orthonormal set of vectors then q1q1^T+q2q2^T+q3q3^T is a projection matrix

True P=QQ^T

If P^2 = P and P=P^T then P is a projection matrix

True! this is definition of projection

A consistent linear system of 4 equations in 5 unknowns has infinitely many solutions

True:

If A and B are unitary matrices with the same eigenvalues then there is unitary U such that UBU^H=A

True:

If A is symmetric then RAR^T is symmetric

True: (RAR^T)^T = R^TA^TR and A=A^T bc it is symmetric

If A is symmetric positive definite then A=B^4 for some B which is symmetric positive definite

True: If A is positive definite there exists A=B^2 If B is positive definite there exists B^2=C^4 and so on

If U1 and U2 are unitary matrices of the same size, then U1U2^H is unitary

True: The product of two unitary matrices are unitary

If U is a unit vector then I - uu^T is a projection matrix

True: To be a projection: 1. must be symmetric 2. squared is equal to itself

If A is a square matrix which has a left inverse then A^TA is nonsingular

True: for a square matrix: nonsingular=invertible

For a 5x5 matrix A, det(-A) = -det(A)

True: (-1)^5 = -1

If A and B are unitary then AB is unitary

True: (AB)(AB)*=ABB*A*=I

Suppose A is a real symmetric negative definite matrix of size 4x4 that is x^TAx<0: no row exchanges are required when bringing A to upper triangular form by row operations

True: -A is positive definite For positive definite matrix, no row exchanges are required. Thus the same is for A

Suppose A is a real symmetric negative definite matrix of size 4x4 that is x^TAx<0: All eigenvalues of A are strictly negative

True: By the spectral theorem, A is congruent to the diagonal matrix with eigenvalues on the main diagonal.

for an nxn matrix A, if A^2019=0 then A is singular

True: If A^2019x=0, x =/0, then A^2018x belongs to N(A). If A^2018x=0 then A^2017x belongs to N(A) and so on. We eventually find a non-zero vector in N(A). This means A is singular.

If A is Hermitian and B is unitary then B^-1AB is defined as Hermitian

True: This is defined because unitary matrices are invertible, and B^-1=B* (B^-1AB)* = (B*AB)* = B*A*B = B^-1AB

Let A and B be the same size nxn matrices. If A and B are similar, then trA=trB

True: similar matrices have the same characteristic polynomial

For a 5x5 matrix A: the determinant of A does not change if the rows A are rearranged in the opposite order

True: this depends on the sign of the permutation. for n=5, there are two transposes thus it is even.

Suppose A is a real symmetric negative definite matrix of size 4x4 that is x^TAx<0: A is non-singular

True: x^tAx<0 for all x not equal to zero means that the signature consists of n minuses

If Q has orthonormal rows then QQ^T=I

True; orthonormal rows requires the matrix to be square. Thus this works

If P is an nxn projection matrix then rank(P)=rank(I-P)

false

If a is a non-zero vector in R^n, and P is the projection matrix for the orthogonal projection on to span(a), then the rank(P) = n-1

false

if P is an nxn projection matrix, then rank(P)=n

false

if U is an orthogonal matrix, then U=U^T

false

suppose that A and B are matrices of the same size then, rank(A+B)<= min(rank(A),rank(B))

false

suppose that a homogeneous system of m equations in n unknowns has no nontrivial solution. then m=n

false

the row space of a square matrix is orthogonal to the column space

false

the set of orthogonal matrices form a vector space

false

The set of all non-invertible nxn matrices is a vector space

false: zero is included, sum does not work

If A and B are the same size nxn matrices, det(A+B)=det(A)+det(B)

false: ex Identity matrix det(I+I)=0 det(I)+det(I)=2

What is hermitian

matrix A = the conjugate transpose of A

A singular matrix is a square matrix that has no inverse

true

For an nxn matrix A, if v is an eigenvector of A the v is also an eigenvector of e^A

true

For square nxn matrices A, B, and C; det(ABC)=det(A)det(B)det(C)

true

If A has infinitely many inverse solutions then it has no right inverse

true

If A is hermitian and U is unitary of the same size then U^-1AU is hermitian

true

If A is mxn and rank(A)=m then A has linearly independent rows

true

If P is an nxn projection matrix then I-P is also a projection

true

If U is an orthogonal matrix, then U is invertible

true

If U is an orthogonal matrix, then U^T is also orthogonal

true

If v is an eigenvector of A then it is an eigenvector of A+A^2

true

Suppose that A and B are nxn square matrices and A is invertible. Then, nullity(AB)=nullity(BA)

true

The column space is orthogonal to the left nullspace

true

The row space of a matrix is orthogonal to the null space

true

A homogeneous system of four equations in fie unknowns has a non-trivial solution

true dimN(A) + rank(A)= # of cols

If u1 and u2 are solutions to the nonhomogeneous system Ax=b, then u1 - u2 is also a solution to Ax=0

true: Au1=b Au2=b A(u1-u2)= Au1 - Au2 = b - b = 0

If A is Hermitian and real then A is symmetric

true: If A is real then the conjugate of A = A. A = A^H (definition of Hermitian) ITherefore, A = A^T So it is confirmed symmetric

If A is orthogonal and symmetric then A has eigenvalues of 1, and -1

true: eigenvalues of symmetric matrices are real and eigenvalues of orthogonal matrix have unit modulus


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