Applications of CS decomposition in linear combinations of two orthogonal projectors
DOI10.1016/j.amc.2008.05.053zbMath1157.15010OpenAlexW2030246007MaRDI QIDQ2378986
Vladimir Rakočevič, Julio Benítez Lopez
Publication date: 14 January 2009
Published in: Applied Mathematics and Computation (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amc.2008.05.053
idempotentspectrumrankMoore-Penrose inverseorthogonal projectornilpotentdiagonalizableCS decompositionprincipal anglestripotenthypergeneralized projectorgeneralized projectorinvolutiveEP
Factorization of matrices (15A23) Eigenvalues, singular values, and eigenvectors (15A18) Canonical forms, reductions, classification (15A21)
Related Items (10)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- The nullity and rank of linear combinations of idempotent matrices
- The many proofs of an identity on the norm of oblique projections
- The combination technique and some generalisations
- History and generality of the CS decomposition
- Perturbation analysis of the canonical correlations of matrix pairs
- Canonical analysis of two Euclidean subspaces and its applications
- Generalized and hypergeneralized projectors
- Idempotency of linear combinations of two idempotent matrices
- On the norm of idempotents in \(C^*\)-algebras
- Characterizations and linear combinations of \(k\)-generalized projectors
- On the spectra of sums of orthogonal projections with applications to parallel computing
- On Principal Angles between Subspaces of Euclidean Space
- When is a linear combination of two idempotent matrices the group involutory matrix?
- Matrix Analysis
- Nonsingularity of the Difference of Two Oblique Projectors
- The Rotation of Eigenvectors by a Perturbation. III
- Rank equalities for idempotent and involutory matrices
This page was built for publication: Applications of CS decomposition in linear combinations of two orthogonal projectors