A note on the eigenvalues of a primitive matrix with large exponent (Q677125): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 11:58, 22 February 2024
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English | A note on the eigenvalues of a primitive matrix with large exponent |
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A note on the eigenvalues of a primitive matrix with large exponent (English)
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8 January 1998
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An \(n\times n\) matrix \(A=(a_{ij})\) with all \(a_{ij}\geq 0\) is called primitive if \(A^k\) has all positive entries for some \(k\geq 1\); the minimum such \(k\) is called \(\exp(A)\), the exponent of \(A\). A matrix \(A=(a_{ij})\) is stochastic, if all \(a_{ij}\geq 0\) and \(\sum_{j=1}^n a_{ij}=1\) for every \(i=1,\dots, n\). A typical result (Theorem 3): if \(A\) is an \(n\times n\) stochastic primitive matrix with \(\exp(A)\geq (4n-3)n/5\), then \(A\) has a complex conjugate pair of eigenvalues with moduli exceeding \((1/2)^{1/s}\), where \(s=[\exp(A)-n]/ (n-2)\).
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primitive matrix
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matrix exponent
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stochastic matrix
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eigenvalues
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