Skew-Hamiltonian Matrices in Linear Algebra
editIn linear algebra, a skew-Hamiltonian matrix is a specific type of matrix that corresponds to a skew-symmetric bilinear form on a symplectic vector space. Let be a vector space equipped with a symplectic form, denoted by Ω. A symplectic vector space must necessarily be of even dimension.
A linear map is defined as a skew-Hamiltonian operator with respect to the symplectic form Ω if the bilinear form defined by is skew-symmetric.
Given a basis in , the symplectic form Ω can be expressed as . In this context, a linear operator is skew-Hamiltonian with respect to Ω if and only if its corresponding matrix satisfies the condition , where is the skew-symmetric matrix defined as:
With representing the identity matrix.
Matrices that meet this criterion are classified as skew-Hamiltonian matrices. Notably, the square of any Hamiltonian matrix is skew-Hamiltonian. Conversely, any skew-Hamiltonian matrix can be expressed as the square of a Hamiltonian matrix.[1][2]
Notes
edit- ^ William C. Waterhouse, The structure of alternating-Hamiltonian matrices, Linear Algebra and its Applications, Volume 396, 1 February 2005, Pages 385-390
- ^ Heike Fassbender, D. Steven Mackey, Niloufer Mackey and Hongguo Xu Hamiltonian Square Roots of Skew-Hamiltonian Matrices, Linear Algebra and its Applications 287, pp. 125 - 159, 1999