Logarithm TheoremPythagorean TheoremCombinatoricsQuadratic EquationsSequence and SeriesLinear AlgebraDiophantine EquationElliptic Curve FactorMultiplication, DivisionIndicesHighest Common Factor, Lower Common MultipleEquationsQuadratic EquationsSimultaneous EquationsRatio and ProportionArithemetical ProgressionGeometrical ProgressionHarmonical ProgressionPermutations, CombinationsSurdsBinomial TheoremMultinomial TheoremLogarithmExponential TheoremContinued Fractions and ConvergentsIndeterminate EquationsSimultaneous Equations IIImaginary ExpressionsMethod of Indeterminate CoefficientsMethod of Proof by InductionPartial FractionsConvergency and Divergency of SeriesExpansion of a FractionRecurring SeriesSummation of SeriesPolygonal NumbersFigurate NumbersHypergeometrical SeriesInterest and AnnuitiesProbabilitiesInequalitiesScales of NotationTheory of Numbers Factors of EquationDescartes' Rule of SignsThe Derived Functions of π(π₯)Equal roots of an equationLimits of the RootsNewton's Method of DivisorsReciprocal EquationsBinomial EquationsCubic EquationsBiquadratic EquationsCommensurable RootsIncommensurable RootsSymmetrical Functions of RootsExpansion of an Implicit FunctionDeterminants Draft for Information Only
ContentTheory of Equation
Theory of EquationProduct of Two Determinants of the π2 Order570
The values of π΄1, π΅1, β―, πΏ1 in the first column of π are annexed. For the second column write π's in the place of π's. For the third column write π's and so on.
{ π΄1=π1πΌ1+π2πΌ2+β―+πππΌπ π΅1=π1π½1+π2π½2+β―+πππ½π β― πΏ1=π1π1+π2π2+β―+ππππFor proof substitute the values of π΄1, π΅1, β― in the determinant π, and then resolve π into the sum of a number of determinants by (562), and note the determinants which vanish through having identical columns. Rule: To form the determinant π, which is the product of two determinants π and π. First connect by plus signs the constituents in the rows of both the determinants π and π. Now place the first row of π upon each row of π in turn, and let each two constituents as they touch become products. This is the first column of π. Perform the same operation upon π with the second row of π to obtain the second column of π; and again with the third row of π to obtain the third column of π, and so on. 571 If the number of columns, both in π and π, be π, and the number of rows, π, and if π be >π, then the determinant π, found in the same way from π and π, is equal to the sum of the πΆ(π,π) products of pairs of determinants obtained by taking any π columns out of π, and the corresponding π columns out of π. But if π be <π the determinant π vanishes. For in that case, in every one of the component determinants, there will be two columns identical. 572 The product of the determinants π and π may be formed in four ways by changing the rows into columns in either or both π and π. 573 Let the following system of π equations in π₯1π₯2β―π₯π be transformed by substituting the accompanying values of variables, π1π₯1+π2π₯2+β―+πππ₯π=0 π1π₯1+π2π₯2+β―+πππ₯π=0 β― π1π₯1+π2π₯2+β―+πππ₯π=0 that is π₯1=πΌ1π1+πΌ2π2+β―+πΌπππ π₯2=π½1π1+π½2π2+β―+π½πππ β― π₯π=π1π1+π2π2+β―+ππππ The eliminant of the resulting equations in π1π2β―ππ is the determinant π in (570), and is therefore equal to the product of the determinants π and π. The determinant π is then termed the modulus of transformation. 574 A Symmetrical determinant is symmetrical about the leading diagonal. If the π 's form the πth row, and the πΎ's the πth row; then π π=πΎπ throughout a symmetrical determinant. The square of a determinant is a symmetrical determinant. 575 A Reciprocal determinant has for its constituents the first minors of the original determinant, and is equal to its πβ1th power; that is, π΄1β―π΄π β―β―β― β―β―β― πΏ1β―πΏπ= π1β―ππ β―β―β― β―β―β― π1β―πππβ1 Proof: Multiply both sides of the equation by the original determinant (555). The constituents on the left side all vanish except the diagonal of β's. 576 Partial and complementary DeterminantsIf π rows and the same number of columns be selected from a determinant, and if the rows be brought to the top, and the columns to the left side, without changing their order, then the elements common to the selected rows and columns form a Partial determinant of the order π, and the elements not found in any of those rows and columns form the Complementary determinant, its order being πβπ.ExampleLet the selected rows from the determinant (π1π2π3π4π5) be the second, third, and fifth; and the selected columns be the third, fourth, and fifth. The original and the transformed determinants will beπΌ1πΌ2πΌ3πΌ4πΌ5π1π2π3π4π5π1π2π3π4π5π1π2π3π4π5π1π2π3π4π5and π3π4π5π1π2π3π4π5π1π2π3π4π5π1π2πΌ3πΌ4πΌ5πΌ1πΌ2π3π4π5π1π2The partial determinant of the third order is (π3π4π5), and its complementary of the second order is (πΌ1π2). The complete altered determinant is plus or minus, according as the permuations of the rows and columns are of the same or of different class. In the example they are of the same class, for there have been four transpositions of rows, and six of columns. Thus (β1)10=+1 gives the sign of the altered determinant. 577 TheoremA partial reciprocal determinant of the πth order is equal to the product of the πβ1th power of the original determinant, and the complementary of its corresponding partial determinant.Take the last determinant for an example. Here π=5, π=3; and by the theorem, π΅3π΅4π΅5πΆ3πΆ4πΆ5πΈ3πΈ4πΈ5=β2 πΌ1πΌ2π1π2where π΅, πΆ, πΈ are the respective minors. ProofRaise the Partial Reciprocal to the original order five without altering its value, by (564); and multiply it by β, with the rows and columns changed to correspond as in Ex. (576); thus, by (570), we haveπ΅3π΅4π΅5π΅1π΅2πΆ3πΆ4πΆ5πΆ1πΆ2πΈ3πΈ4πΈ5πΈ1πΈ20001000001 π3π4π5π1π2π3π4π5π1π2π3π4π5π1π2π3π4π5π1π2π3π4π5π1π2= β00π1π20β0π1π200βπ1π2000π1π2000π1π2=β3 π1π2π1π2578 The product of the differences between every pair of π quantities π1, π2, β―, ππ, (π1βπ2)(π1βπ3)(π1βπ4)β―(π1βππ)Γ(π2βπ3)(π2βπ4)β―(π2βππ)Γ(π3βπ4)β―(π3βππ)β―Γ(ππβ1βππ) }= 111β―1π1π2π3β―πππ ProofThe determinant vanishes when any two of the quantities are equal. Therefore it is divisible by each of the factors on the left; therefore by their product. And the quotient is seen to be unity, for both sides of the equation are of the same degree; viz.,12π(πβ1). 579 The product of the squares of the differences of the same π quantities= π 0π 1β―π πβ1π 1π 2β―π πβ―β―β―β―π πβ1π πβ―π 2πβ2580 With teh same meaning for π 1, π 2, β―, the same determinant taken of an order π, less than π, is equal to the sum of the products of the squares of the differences of π of the π quantities taken in every possible way; that is, in πΆ(π, π) ways. Exampleπ 0π 1π 1π 2=(π1βπ2)2+(π1βπ3)2+β―β‘β(π1βπ2)2 π 0π 1π 2π 1π 2π 3π 2π 3π 3=β‘β(π1βπ2)2(π1βπ3)2(π2βπ3)2 The next determinant in order =β(π1βπ2)2(π1βπ3)2π1βπ4)2(π2βπ3)2(π2βπ4)2(π3βπ4)2 And so on until the equation (579) is reached. Proved by substituting the values of π 1, π 2, β―, and resolving the determinant into its partial determinants by (571). 581 The quotient of π0π₯π+π1π₯πβ1+β―+πππ₯πβπ+β―π0π₯π+π1π₯πβ1+β―+πππ₯πβπ+β―is given by the formula π0π₯πβπ+π1π₯πβπβ1+β―+πππ₯πβπβπ+β― where ππ= 1π π000β―π0π1π00β―π1π2π1π0β―π2β―β―β―β―β―ππππβ1ππβ2β―π1ππProved by Induction. Sources and Referenceshttps://archive.org/details/synopsis-of-elementary-results-in-pure-and-applied-mathematics-pdfdriveΒ©sideway ID: 210800024 Last Updated: 8/24/2021 Revision: 0 Ref: References
Latest Updated Links
|
Home 5 Business Management HBR 3 Information Recreation Hobbies 8 Culture Chinese 1097 English 339 Travel 9 Reference 79 Computer Hardware 251 Software Application 213 Digitization 32 Latex 52 Manim 205 KB 1 Numeric 19 Programming Web 289 Unicode 504 HTML 66 CSS 65 SVG 46 ASP.NET 270 OS 431 DeskTop 7 Python 72 Knowledge Mathematics Formulas 8 Set 1 Logic 1 Algebra 84 Number Theory 206 Trigonometry 31 Geometry 34 Calculus 67 Engineering Tables 8 Mechanical Rigid Bodies Statics 92 Dynamics 37 Fluid 5 Control Acoustics 19 Natural Sciences Matter 1 Electric 27 Biology 1 |
Copyright © 2000-2025 Sideway . All rights reserved Disclaimers last modified on 06 September 2019