A note on the numerical solution of complex Hamiltonian and skew-Hamiltonian eigenvalue problems (Q1297820): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 10:15, 22 February 2025

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A note on the numerical solution of complex Hamiltonian and skew-Hamiltonian eigenvalue problems
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    A note on the numerical solution of complex Hamiltonian and skew-Hamiltonian eigenvalue problems (English)
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    19 September 1999
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    Computation of eigenvalues of a \((2n,2n)\) skew-Hamiltonian matrix \(N\) with complex elements is effected by transforming the \((4n,4n)\) block diagonal matrix with diagonal blocks \(N\), \(\overline N\) into a real skew-Hamiltonian matrix \({\mathcal N}\) whose eigenvalues agree with those of \(N\). The matrix \({\mathcal N}\) may be put into a skew-Hamiltonian Schur from \({\mathcal R}\) and the eigenvalues may be obtained by a method of \textit{C. F. Van Loan} [Linear Algebra Appl. 61, 233-251 (1984; Zbl 0565.65018)]. The results apply to complex Hamiltonian matrices as well since if \(N\) is skew-Hamiltonian then \(H= (-iN)\) is Hamiltonian. The eigenspaces associated with the positive and negative eigenvalues of \(H\), \(\text{Inv}_+H\), \(\text{Inv}_-H\), are computed from the Hamiltonian Schur form \((-i{\mathcal R})\) assuming that \(H\) has no purely imaginary eigenvalues. These eigenspaces are useful in certain control problems. A code ZHAEV has been written using the new numerical method and an error analysis of the method is presented. In two numerical tests ZHAEV is compared with ZGEEV, a general code for determining eigenvalues of nonsymmetric matrices. The results obtained show that the new code is faster and more accurate than the more general code.
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    skew-Hamiltonian matrix
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    algebraic Riccati equation
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    invariant subspace
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    eigenvalues
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    complex Hamiltonian matrices
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    eigenspaces
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    error analysis
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    numerical tests
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