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{{Short description|Matrix equal to its conjugate-transpose
In mathematics, a '''Hermitian matrix''' (or '''self-adjoint matrix''') is a ] with ] entries that is equal to its own ] – that is, the element in the {{mvar|i}}-th row and {{mvar|j}}-th column is equal to the ] of the element in the {{mvar|j}}-th row and {{mvar|i}}-th column, for all indices {{mvar|i}} and {{mvar|j}}:
}}
{{For|matrices with symmetry over the ] field|Symmetric matrix}}
{{Use American English|date=January 2019}}


In ], a '''Hermitian matrix''' (or '''self-adjoint matrix''') is a ] ] that is equal to its own ]—that is, the element in the {{mvar|i}}-th row and {{mvar|j}}-th column is equal to the ] of the element in the {{mvar|j}}-th row and {{mvar|i}}-th column, for all indices {{mvar|i}} and {{mvar|j}}:
:<math>a_{ij} = \overline{a_{ji}}\,.</math>
<math display =block>A \text{ is Hermitian} \quad \iff \quad a_{ij} = \overline{a_{ji}}</math>


or in matrix form:
If the conjugate transpose of a matrix <math>A</math> is denoted by <math>A^\dagger</math>, then the Hermitian property can be written concisely as
<math display=block>A \text{ is Hermitian} \quad \iff \quad A = \overline {A^\mathsf{T}}.</math>

:<math> A = A^\dagger\,.</math>


Hermitian matrices can be understood as the complex extension of real ]. Hermitian matrices can be understood as the complex extension of real ].


If the ] of a matrix <math>A</math> is denoted by <math>A^\mathsf{H},</math> then the Hermitian property can be written concisely as
Hermitian matrices are named after ], who demonstrated in 1855 that matrices of this form share a property with real symmetric matrices of having ] always real.

<math display=block>A \text{ is Hermitian} \quad \iff \quad A = A^\mathsf{H}</math>

Hermitian matrices are named after ],<ref>{{Citation |last=Archibald |first=Tom |title=VI.47 Charles Hermite |date=2010-12-31 |url=https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9781400830398.773a/html |work=The Princeton Companion to Mathematics |pages=773 |editor-last=Gowers |editor-first=Timothy |access-date=2023-11-15 |publisher=Princeton University Press |doi=10.1515/9781400830398.773a |isbn=978-1-4008-3039-8 |editor2-last=Barrow-Green |editor2-first=June |editor3-last=Leader |editor3-first=Imre}}</ref> who demonstrated in 1855 that matrices of this form share a property with real symmetric matrices of always having real ]. Other, equivalent notations in common use are <math>A^\mathsf{H} = A^\dagger = A^\ast,</math> although in ], <math>A^\ast</math> typically means the ] only, and not the ].

==Alternative characterizations==

Hermitian matrices can be characterized in a number of equivalent ways, some of which are listed below:

===Equality with the adjoint===

A square matrix <math>A</math> is Hermitian if and only if it is equal to its ], that is, it satisfies
<math display="block">\langle \mathbf w, A \mathbf v\rangle = \langle A \mathbf w, \mathbf v\rangle,</math>
for any pair of vectors <math>\mathbf v, \mathbf w,</math> where <math>\langle \cdot, \cdot\rangle</math> denotes ] operation.

This is also the way that the more general concept of ] is defined.

===Real-valuedness of quadratic forms===

An <math>n\times{}n</math> matrix <math>A</math> is Hermitian if and only if
<math display="block">\langle \mathbf{v}, A \mathbf{v}\rangle\in\R, \quad \text{for all } \mathbf{v}\in \mathbb{C}^{n}.</math>

===Spectral properties===

A square matrix <math>A</math> is Hermitian if and only if it is unitarily ] with real ].

==Applications==

Hermitian matrices are fundamental to ] because they describe operators with necessarily real eigenvalues. An eigenvalue <math>a</math> of an operator <math>\hat{A}</math> on some quantum state <math>|\psi\rangle</math> is one of the possible measurement outcomes of the operator, which requires the operators to have real eigenvalues.

In ], Hermitian matrices are utilized in tasks like ] and signal representation.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Ribeiro |first=Alejandro |title=Signal and Information Processing |url=https://www.seas.upenn.edu/~ese2240/Lecture%20Notes/sip_PCA.pdf}}</ref> The eigenvalues and eigenvectors of Hermitian matrices play a crucial role in analyzing signals and extracting meaningful information.

Hermitian matrices are extensively studied in ] and ]. They have well-defined spectral properties, and many numerical algorithms, such as the ], exploit these properties for efficient computations. Hermitian matrices also appear in techniques like ] (SVD) and ].

In ] and ], Hermitian matrices are used in ], where they represent the relationships between different variables. The positive definiteness of a Hermitian covariance matrix ensures the well-definedness of multivariate distributions.<ref>{{Cite web |title=MULTIVARIATE NORMAL DISTRIBUTIONS |url=https://dspace.mit.edu/bitstream/handle/1721.1/121170/6-436j-fall-2008/contents/lecture-notes/MIT6_436JF08_lec15.pdf}}</ref>

Hermitian matrices are applied in the design and analysis of ], especially in the field of ] (MIMO) systems. Channel matrices in MIMO systems often exhibit Hermitian properties.

In ], Hermitian matrices are used to study the ]. The Hermitian Laplacian matrix is a key tool in this context, as it is used to analyze the spectra of mixed graphs.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Lau |first=Ivan |title=Hermitian Spectral Theory of Mixed Graphs |url=https://www.sfu.ca/~iplau/Edinburgh_CS_Project.pdf}}</ref> The Hermitian-adjacency matrix of a mixed graph is another important concept, as it is a Hermitian matrix that plays a role in studying the energies of mixed graphs.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Liu |first1=Jianxi |last2=Li |first2=Xueliang |date=February 2015 |title=Hermitian-adjacency matrices and Hermitian energies of mixed graphs |journal=Linear Algebra and Its Applications |language=en |volume=466 |pages=182–207 |doi=10.1016/j.laa.2014.10.028|doi-access=free }}</ref>

==Examples and solutions==

In this section, the conjugate transpose of matrix <math> A </math> is denoted as <math> A^\mathsf{H} ,</math> the transpose of matrix <math> A </math> is denoted as <math> A^\mathsf{T} </math> and conjugate of matrix <math> A </math> is denoted as <math> \overline{A} .</math>


== Examples ==
See the following example: See the following example:


<math display=block>\begin{bmatrix}
:<math>
0 & a - ib & c-id \\
\begin{bmatrix}
2 & 2+i & 4 \\ a+ib & 1 & m-in \\
2-i & 3 & i \\ c+id & m+in & 2
\end{bmatrix}</math>
4 & -i & 1 \\
\end{bmatrix}
</math>


The diagonal elements must be ], as they must be their own complex conjugate. The diagonal elements must be ], as they must be their own complex conjugate.


Well-known families of ], ] and their generalizations are Hermitian. In ] such Hermitian matrices are often multiplied by ] coefficients,<ref> Well-known families of Hermitian matrices include the ], the ] and their generalizations. In ] such Hermitian matrices are often multiplied by ] coefficients,<ref>
{{cite book |title=The geometry of physics: an introduction |last=Frankel |first=Theodore |authorlink=Theodore Frankel |year=2004 |publisher=] |isbn=0-521-53927-7 |page=652 |url=http://books.google.ru/books?id=DUnjs6nEn8wC&lpg=PA652&dq=%22Lie%20algebra%22%20physics%20%22skew-Hermitian%22&pg=PA652#v=onepage&q&f=false }} {{cite book |title=The Geometry of Physics: an introduction |last=Frankel |first=Theodore |author-link=Theodore Frankel |year=2004 |publisher=] |isbn=0-521-53927-7 |page=652 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DUnjs6nEn8wC&q=%22Lie%20algebra%22%20physics%20%22skew-Hermitian%22&pg=PA652 }}
</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220307172254/http://www.hep.caltech.edu/~fcp/physics/quantumMechanics/angularMomentum/angularMomentum.pdf |date=2022-03-07 }} at ]</ref> which results in ].
</ref><ref>
at ]
</ref> which results in ''skew-Hermitian'' matrices (see ]).


Here, we offer another useful Hermitian matrix using an abstract example. If a square matrix <math> A </math> equals the ] with its conjugate transpose, that is, <math> A = BB^\mathsf{H} ,</math> then <math> A </math> is a Hermitian ]. Furthermore, if <math> B </math> is row full-rank, then <math> A </math> is positive definite.
== Properties ==


==Properties==
The entries on the ] (top left to bottom right) of any Hermitian matrix are necessarily real, because they have to be equal to their complex conjugate. A matrix that has only real entries is Hermitian ] it is a ], i.e., if it is symmetric with respect to the main diagonal. A real and symmetric matrix is simply a special case of a Hermitian matrix.


===Main diagonal values are real===
Every Hermitian matrix is a ], and the finite-dimensional ] applies. It says that any Hermitian matrix can be ] by a ], and that the resulting diagonal matrix has only real entries. This implies that all ]s of a Hermitian matrix {{mvar|A}} are real, and that {{mvar|A}} has {{mvar|n}} linearly independent ]s. Moreover, it is possible to find an ] of {{math|'''C'''<sup>''n''</sup>}} consisting of {{mvar|n}} eigenvectors of {{mvar|A}}.


The entries on the ] (top left to bottom right) of any Hermitian matrix are ].
The sum of any two Hermitian matrices is Hermitian, and the ] of an invertible Hermitian matrix is Hermitian as well. However, the ] of two Hermitian matrices {{mvar|A}} and {{mvar|B}} is Hermitian if and only if {{math|1=''AB'' = ''BA''}}. Thus {{math|''A''<sup>''n''</sup>}} is Hermitian if {{mvar|A}} is Hermitian and {{mvar|n}} is an integer.

{{math proof|1= By definition of the Hermitian matrix
<math display=block>H_{ij} = \overline{H}_{ji} </math>
so for {{math|1=''i'' = ''j''}} the above follows.
}}

Only the ] entries are necessarily real; Hermitian matrices can have arbitrary complex-valued entries in their ]s, as long as diagonally-opposite entries are complex conjugates.

===Symmetric===

A matrix that has only real entries is ] ] it is a Hermitian matrix. A real and symmetric matrix is simply a special case of a Hermitian matrix.

{{math proof|1= <math>H_{ij} = \overline{H}_{ji}</math> by definition. Thus <math>H_{ij} = H_{ji}</math> (matrix symmetry) if and only if <math>H_{ij} = \overline{H}_{ij}</math> (<math>H_{ij}</math> is real).
}}

So, if a real anti-symmetric matrix is multiplied by a real multiple of the imaginary unit <math>i,</math> then it becomes Hermitian.

===Normal===

Every Hermitian matrix is a ]. That is to say, <math>AA^\mathsf{H} = A^\mathsf{H}A.</math>

{{math proof|1=<math>A = A^\mathsf{H},</math> so <math>AA^\mathsf{H} = AA = A^\mathsf{H}A.</math>}}

===Diagonalizable===

The finite-dimensional ] says that any Hermitian matrix can be ] by a ], and that the resulting diagonal matrix has only real entries. This implies that all ]s of a Hermitian matrix {{mvar|A}} with dimension {{mvar|n}} are real, and that {{mvar|A}} has {{mvar|n}} linearly independent ]s. Moreover, a Hermitian matrix has ] eigenvectors for distinct eigenvalues. Even if there are degenerate eigenvalues, it is always possible to find an ] of {{math|'''C'''<sup>''n''</sup>}} consisting of {{mvar|n}} eigenvectors of {{mvar|A}}.

===Sum of Hermitian matrices===

The sum of any two Hermitian matrices is Hermitian.

{{math proof|1= <math display="block">(A + B)_{ij} = A_{ij} + B_{ij} = \overline{A}_{ji} + \overline{B}_{ji} = \overline{(A + B)}_{ji},</math> as claimed.}}

===Inverse is Hermitian===

The ] of an invertible Hermitian matrix is Hermitian as well.

{{math proof|1= If <math>A^{-1}A = I,</math> then <math>I= I^\mathsf{H} = \left(A^{-1}A\right)^\mathsf{H} = A^\mathsf{H}\left(A^{-1}\right)^\mathsf{H} = A \left(A^{-1}\right)^\mathsf{H},</math> so <math>A^{-1}=\left(A^{-1}\right)^\mathsf{H}</math> as claimed.}}

===Associative product of Hermitian matrices===

The ] of two Hermitian matrices {{mvar|A}} and {{mvar|B}} is Hermitian if and only if {{math|1=''AB'' = ''BA''}}.

{{math proof|1= <math display="block">(AB)^\mathsf{H} = \overline{(AB)^\mathsf{T}} = \overline{B^\mathsf{T} A^\mathsf{T}} = \overline{B^\mathsf{T}} \ \overline{A^\mathsf{T}} = B^\mathsf{H} A^\mathsf{H} = BA.</math> Thus <math>(AB)^\mathsf{H} = AB</math> ] <math>AB = BA.</math>

Thus {{math|''A''<sup>''n''</sup>}} is Hermitian if {{mvar|A}} is Hermitian and {{mvar|n}} is an integer.
}}

===''ABA'' Hermitian===

If ''A'' and ''B'' are Hermitian, then ''ABA'' is also Hermitian.
{{math proof|1= <math display="block">(ABA)^\mathsf{H} = (A(BA))^\mathsf{H} = (BA)^\mathsf{H}A^\mathsf{H} = A^\mathsf{H}B^\mathsf{H}A^\mathsf{H} = ABA </math>}}

==={{math|v<sup>H</sup>''A''v}} is real for complex {{math|v}}===

For an arbitrary complex valued vector {{Math|'''v'''}} the product <math> \mathbf{v}^\mathsf{H} A \mathbf{v} </math> is real because of <math> \mathbf{v}^\mathsf{H} A \mathbf{v} = \left(\mathbf{v}^\mathsf{H} A \mathbf{v}\right)^\mathsf{H} .</math> This is especially important in quantum physics where Hermitian matrices are operators that measure properties of a system, e.g. total ], which have to be real.

===Complex Hermitian forms vector space over {{math|ℝ}}===

The Hermitian complex {{mvar|n}}-by-{{mvar|n}} matrices do not form a ] over the ]s, {{math|'''ℂ'''}}, since the identity matrix {{math|''I''<sub>''n''</sub>}} is Hermitian, but {{math|''i'' ''I''<sub>''n''</sub>}} is not. However the complex Hermitian matrices ''do'' form a vector space over the ] {{math|'''ℝ'''}}. In the {{math|2''n''<sup>2</sup>}}-] vector space of complex {{math|''n'' × ''n''}} matrices over {{math|'''ℝ'''}}, the complex Hermitian matrices form a subspace of dimension {{math|''n''<sup>2</sup>}}. If {{math|''E''<sub>''jk''</sub>}} denotes the {{mvar|n}}-by-{{mvar|n}} matrix with a {{math|1}} in the {{math|''j'',''k''}} position and zeros elsewhere, a basis (orthonormal with respect to the Frobenius inner product) can be described as follows:
<math display=block>E_{jj} \text{ for } 1 \leq j \leq n \quad (n \text{ matrices}) </math>

together with the set of matrices of the form
<math display=block>\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\left(E_{jk} + E_{kj}\right) \text{ for } 1 \leq j < k \leq n \quad \left( \frac{n^2-n} 2 \text{ matrices} \right) </math>


The Hermitian complex {{mvar|n}}-by-{{mvar|n}} matrices do not form a ] over the ]s, since the identity matrix {{math|''I''<sub>n</sub>}} is Hermitian, but {{math|''i'' ''I''<sub>n</sub>}} is not. However the complex Hermitian matrices ''do'' form a vector space over the ] {{math|'''R'''}}. In the {{math|2''n''<sup>2</sup>}}-] vector space of complex {{math|''n'' × ''n''}} matrices over {{math|'''R'''}}, the complex Hermitian matrices form a subspace of dimension {{math|''n''<sup>2</sup>}}. If {{math|''E''<sub>''jk''</sub>}} denotes the {{mvar|n}}-by-{{mvar|n}} matrix with a 1 in the {{math|''j'',''k''}} position and zeros elsewhere, a basis can be described as follows:
:<math>\; E_{jj}</math> for <math>1\leq j\leq n</math> ({{mvar|n}} matrices)
together with the set of matrices of the form
:<math>\; E_{jk}+E_{kj}</math> for <math>1\leq j<k\leq n </math> ({{sfrac|''n''<sup>2</sup> − ''n''|2}} matrices)
and the matrices and the matrices
:<math>\; i(E_{jk}-E_{kj})</math> for <math>1\leq j<k\leq n </math> ({{sfrac|''n''<sup>2</sup> − ''n''|2}} matrices) <math display=block>\frac{i}{\sqrt{2}}\left(E_{jk} - E_{kj}\right) \text{ for } 1 \leq j < k \leq n \quad \left( \frac{n^2-n} 2 \text{ matrices} \right) </math>
where <math>i</math> denotes the complex number <math>\sqrt{-1}</math>, known as the ].


where <math>i</math> denotes the ], <math>i = \sqrt{-1}~.</math>
If {{mvar|n}} orthonormal eigenvectors <math>u_1,\dots,u_n</math> of a Hermitian matrix are chosen and written as the columns of the matrix {{mvar|U}}, then one ] of {{mvar|A}} is <math> A = U \Lambda U^\dagger</math> where <math> U U^\dagger = I=U^\dagger U</math>

and therefore
An example is that the four ] form a complete basis for the vector space of all complex 2-by-2 Hermitian matrices over {{math|'''ℝ'''}}.
:<math> A = \sum _j \lambda_j u_j u_j ^\dagger </math>,

where <math>\lambda_j</math> are the eigenvalues on the diagonal of the diagonal matrix <math>\; \Lambda </math>.
===Eigendecomposition===

If {{mvar|n}} orthonormal eigenvectors <math>\mathbf{u}_1, \dots, \mathbf{u}_n</math> of a Hermitian matrix are chosen and written as the columns of the matrix {{mvar|U}}, then one ] of {{mvar|A}} is <math> A = U \Lambda U^\mathsf{H}</math> where <math>U U^\mathsf{H} = I = U^\mathsf{H} U</math> and therefore
<math display=block>A = \sum_j \lambda_j \mathbf{u}_j \mathbf{u}_j ^\mathsf{H},</math>
where <math>\lambda_j</math> are the eigenvalues on the diagonal of the diagonal matrix <math>\Lambda.</math>

=== Singular values ===
The singular values of <math>A</math> are the absolute values of its eigenvalues:

Since <math>A</math> has an eigendecomposition <math>A=U\Lambda U^H</math>, where <math>U</math> is a ] (its columns are orthonormal vectors; ]), a ] of <math>A</math> is <math>A=U|\Lambda|\text{sgn}(\Lambda)U^H</math>, where <math>|\Lambda|</math> and <math>\text{sgn}(\Lambda)</math> are diagonal matrices containing the absolute values <math>|\lambda|</math> and signs <math>\text{sgn}(\lambda)</math> of <math>A</math>'s eigenvalues, respectively. <math>\sgn(\Lambda)U^H</math> is unitary, since the columns of <math>U^H</math> are only getting multiplied by <math>\pm 1</math>. <math>|\Lambda|</math> contains the singular values of <math>A</math>, namely, the absolute values of its eigenvalues.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Trefethan |first1=Lloyd N. |url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/1348374386 |title=Numerical linear algebra |last2=Bau, III |first2=David |publisher=] |year=1997 |isbn=0-89871-361-7 |location=Philadelphia, PA, USA |pages=34 |oclc=1348374386}}</ref>

===Real determinant===

The determinant of a Hermitian matrix is real:

{{math proof|1= <math> \det(A) = \det\left(A^\mathsf{T}\right)\quad \Rightarrow \quad \det\left(A^\mathsf{H}\right) = \overline{\det(A)} </math>
Therefore if <math>A = A^\mathsf{H}\quad \Rightarrow \quad \det(A) = \overline{\det(A)} .</math>
}}
(Alternatively, the determinant is the product of the matrix's eigenvalues, and as mentioned before, the eigenvalues of a Hermitian matrix are real.)

==Decomposition into Hermitian and skew-Hermitian matrices==


{{anchor|facts}}Additional facts related to Hermitian matrices include: {{anchor|facts}}Additional facts related to Hermitian matrices include:
* The sum of a square matrix and its conjugate transpose <math>(C + C^{\dagger})</math> is Hermitian. * The sum of a square matrix and its conjugate transpose <math>\left(A + A^\mathsf{H}\right)</math> is Hermitian.
* The difference of a square matrix and its conjugate transpose <math>(C - C^{\dagger})</math> is ] (also called antihermitian). * The difference of a square matrix and its conjugate transpose <math>\left(A - A^\mathsf{H}\right)</math> is ] (also called antihermitian). This implies that the ] of two Hermitian matrices is skew-Hermitian.
* An arbitrary square matrix {{mvar|C}} can be written as the sum of a Hermitian matrix {{mvar|A}} and a skew-Hermitian matrix {{mvar|B}}. This is known as the Toeplitz decomposition of {{mvar|C}}.<ref name="HornJohnson">{{cite book |title=Matrix Analysis, second edition |first1=Roger A. |last1=Horn |first2=Charles R. |last2=Johnson |isbn=9780521839402 |publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2013}}</ref>{{rp|227}} <math display="block">C = A + B \quad\text{with}\quad A = \frac{1}{2}\left(C + C^\mathsf{H}\right) \quad\text{and}\quad B = \frac{1}{2}\left(C - C^\mathsf{H}\right)</math>
** This implies that ] of two Hermitian matrices is skew-Hermitian.

* An arbitrary square matrix {{mvar|C}} can be written as the sum of a Hermitian matrix {{mvar|A}} and a skew-Hermitian matrix {{mvar|B}}:
==Rayleigh quotient==
::<math>C = A+B \quad\mbox{with}\quad A = \frac{1}{2}(C + C^{\dagger}) \quad\mbox{and}\quad B = \frac{1}{2}(C - C^{\dagger}).</math>
{{Main|Rayleigh quotient}}
* The determinant of a Hermitian matrix is real:

:: Proof: <math> \det(A) = \det(A^\mathrm{T})\quad \Rightarrow \quad \det(A^\dagger) = \det(A)^* </math>
In mathematics, for a given complex Hermitian matrix {{mvar|M}} and nonzero vector {{math|'''x'''}}, the Rayleigh quotient<ref>Also known as the '''Rayleigh–Ritz ratio'''; named after ] and ].</ref> <math>R(M, \mathbf{x}),</math> is defined as:<ref name="HornJohnson"/>{{rp|p. 234}}<ref>Parlet B. N. ''The symmetric eigenvalue problem'', SIAM, Classics in Applied Mathematics,1998</ref>
:: Therefore if <math>A=A^\dagger\quad \Rightarrow \quad \det(A) = \det(A)^*.</math>
<math display=block>R(M, \mathbf{x}) := \frac{\mathbf{x}^\mathsf{H} M \mathbf{x}}{\mathbf{x}^\mathsf{H} \mathbf{x}}.</math>
:(Alternatively, the determinant is the product of the matrix's eigenvalues, and as mentioned before, the eigenvalues of a Hermitian matrix are real.)

For real matrices and vectors, the condition of being Hermitian reduces to that of being symmetric, and the conjugate transpose <math>\mathbf{x}^\mathsf{H}</math> to the usual transpose <math>\mathbf{x}^\mathsf{T}.</math> <math>R(M, c \mathbf x) = R(M, \mathbf x)</math> for any non-zero real scalar <math>c.</math> Also, recall that a Hermitian (or real symmetric) matrix has real eigenvalues.

It can be shown<ref name="HornJohnson" /> that, for a given matrix, the Rayleigh quotient reaches its minimum value <math>\lambda_\min</math> (the smallest eigenvalue of M) when <math>\mathbf x</math> is <math>\mathbf v_\min</math> (the corresponding eigenvector). Similarly, <math>R(M, \mathbf x) \leq \lambda_\max</math> and <math>R(M, \mathbf v_\max) = \lambda_\max .</math>

The Rayleigh quotient is used in the min-max theorem to get exact values of all eigenvalues. It is also used in eigenvalue algorithms to obtain an eigenvalue approximation from an eigenvector approximation. Specifically, this is the basis for Rayleigh quotient iteration.

The range of the Rayleigh quotient (for matrix that is not necessarily Hermitian) is called a numerical range (or spectrum in functional analysis). When the matrix is Hermitian, the numerical range is equal to the spectral norm. Still in functional analysis, <math>\lambda_\max</math> is known as the spectral radius. In the context of C*-algebras or algebraic quantum mechanics, the function that to {{math|''M''}} associates the Rayleigh quotient {{math|''R''(''M'', ''x'')}} for a fixed {{math|'''x'''}} and {{math|''M''}} varying through the algebra would be referred to as "vector state" of the algebra.


==See also== ==See also==

*] (anti-Hermitian matrix)
* {{annotated link|Complex symmetric matrix}}
*]
* {{annotated link|Haynsworth inertia additivity formula}}
*]
* {{annotated link|Hermitian form}}
*]
*] * {{annotated link|Normal matrix}}
* {{annotated link|Schur–Horn theorem}}
* {{annotated link|Self-adjoint operator}}
* {{annotated link|Skew-Hermitian matrix}} (anti-Hermitian matrix)
* {{annotated link|Unitary matrix}}
* {{annotated link|Vector space}}


==References== ==References==

{{reflist}} {{reflist}}


==External links== ==External links==
*{{springer|title=Hermitian matrix|id=p/h047070}} * {{springer|title=Hermitian matrix|id=p/h047070}}
*, by Chao-Kuei Hung from Shu-Te University, gives a more geometric explanation. * {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170829203442/https://www.cyut.edu.tw/~ckhung/b/la/hermitian.en.php |date=2017-08-29 }}, by Chao-Kuei Hung from Chaoyang University, gives a more geometric explanation.
*{{MathPages|id=home/kmath306/kmath306|title=Hermitian Matrices}} *{{MathPages|id=home/kmath306/kmath306|title=Hermitian Matrices}}

{{Matrix classes}}
{{Authority control}}


] ]

Latest revision as of 00:55, 10 November 2024

Matrix equal to its conjugate-transpose For matrices with symmetry over the real number field, see Symmetric matrix.

In mathematics, a Hermitian matrix (or self-adjoint matrix) is a complex square matrix that is equal to its own conjugate transpose—that is, the element in the i-th row and j-th column is equal to the complex conjugate of the element in the j-th row and i-th column, for all indices i and j: A  is Hermitian a i j = a j i ¯ {\displaystyle A{\text{ is Hermitian}}\quad \iff \quad a_{ij}={\overline {a_{ji}}}}

or in matrix form: A  is Hermitian A = A T ¯ . {\displaystyle A{\text{ is Hermitian}}\quad \iff \quad A={\overline {A^{\mathsf {T}}}}.}

Hermitian matrices can be understood as the complex extension of real symmetric matrices.

If the conjugate transpose of a matrix A {\displaystyle A} is denoted by A H , {\displaystyle A^{\mathsf {H}},} then the Hermitian property can be written concisely as

A  is Hermitian A = A H {\displaystyle A{\text{ is Hermitian}}\quad \iff \quad A=A^{\mathsf {H}}}

Hermitian matrices are named after Charles Hermite, who demonstrated in 1855 that matrices of this form share a property with real symmetric matrices of always having real eigenvalues. Other, equivalent notations in common use are A H = A = A , {\displaystyle A^{\mathsf {H}}=A^{\dagger }=A^{\ast },} although in quantum mechanics, A {\displaystyle A^{\ast }} typically means the complex conjugate only, and not the conjugate transpose.

Alternative characterizations

Hermitian matrices can be characterized in a number of equivalent ways, some of which are listed below:

Equality with the adjoint

A square matrix A {\displaystyle A} is Hermitian if and only if it is equal to its conjugate transpose, that is, it satisfies w , A v = A w , v , {\displaystyle \langle \mathbf {w} ,A\mathbf {v} \rangle =\langle A\mathbf {w} ,\mathbf {v} \rangle ,} for any pair of vectors v , w , {\displaystyle \mathbf {v} ,\mathbf {w} ,} where , {\displaystyle \langle \cdot ,\cdot \rangle } denotes the inner product operation.

This is also the way that the more general concept of self-adjoint operator is defined.

Real-valuedness of quadratic forms

An n × n {\displaystyle n\times {}n} matrix A {\displaystyle A} is Hermitian if and only if v , A v R , for all  v C n . {\displaystyle \langle \mathbf {v} ,A\mathbf {v} \rangle \in \mathbb {R} ,\quad {\text{for all }}\mathbf {v} \in \mathbb {C} ^{n}.}

Spectral properties

A square matrix A {\displaystyle A} is Hermitian if and only if it is unitarily diagonalizable with real eigenvalues.

Applications

Hermitian matrices are fundamental to quantum mechanics because they describe operators with necessarily real eigenvalues. An eigenvalue a {\displaystyle a} of an operator A ^ {\displaystyle {\hat {A}}} on some quantum state | ψ {\displaystyle |\psi \rangle } is one of the possible measurement outcomes of the operator, which requires the operators to have real eigenvalues.

In signal processing, Hermitian matrices are utilized in tasks like Fourier analysis and signal representation. The eigenvalues and eigenvectors of Hermitian matrices play a crucial role in analyzing signals and extracting meaningful information.

Hermitian matrices are extensively studied in linear algebra and numerical analysis. They have well-defined spectral properties, and many numerical algorithms, such as the Lanczos algorithm, exploit these properties for efficient computations. Hermitian matrices also appear in techniques like singular value decomposition (SVD) and eigenvalue decomposition.

In statistics and machine learning, Hermitian matrices are used in covariance matrices, where they represent the relationships between different variables. The positive definiteness of a Hermitian covariance matrix ensures the well-definedness of multivariate distributions.

Hermitian matrices are applied in the design and analysis of communications system, especially in the field of multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems. Channel matrices in MIMO systems often exhibit Hermitian properties.

In graph theory, Hermitian matrices are used to study the spectra of graphs. The Hermitian Laplacian matrix is a key tool in this context, as it is used to analyze the spectra of mixed graphs. The Hermitian-adjacency matrix of a mixed graph is another important concept, as it is a Hermitian matrix that plays a role in studying the energies of mixed graphs.

Examples and solutions

In this section, the conjugate transpose of matrix A {\displaystyle A} is denoted as A H , {\displaystyle A^{\mathsf {H}},} the transpose of matrix A {\displaystyle A} is denoted as A T {\displaystyle A^{\mathsf {T}}} and conjugate of matrix A {\displaystyle A} is denoted as A ¯ . {\displaystyle {\overline {A}}.}

See the following example:

[ 0 a i b c i d a + i b 1 m i n c + i d m + i n 2 ] {\displaystyle {\begin{bmatrix}0&a-ib&c-id\\a+ib&1&m-in\\c+id&m+in&2\end{bmatrix}}}

The diagonal elements must be real, as they must be their own complex conjugate.

Well-known families of Hermitian matrices include the Pauli matrices, the Gell-Mann matrices and their generalizations. In theoretical physics such Hermitian matrices are often multiplied by imaginary coefficients, which results in skew-Hermitian matrices.

Here, we offer another useful Hermitian matrix using an abstract example. If a square matrix A {\displaystyle A} equals the product of a matrix with its conjugate transpose, that is, A = B B H , {\displaystyle A=BB^{\mathsf {H}},} then A {\displaystyle A} is a Hermitian positive semi-definite matrix. Furthermore, if B {\displaystyle B} is row full-rank, then A {\displaystyle A} is positive definite.

Properties

Main diagonal values are real

The entries on the main diagonal (top left to bottom right) of any Hermitian matrix are real.

Proof

By definition of the Hermitian matrix H i j = H ¯ j i {\displaystyle H_{ij}={\overline {H}}_{ji}} so for i = j the above follows.

Only the main diagonal entries are necessarily real; Hermitian matrices can have arbitrary complex-valued entries in their off-diagonal elements, as long as diagonally-opposite entries are complex conjugates.

Symmetric

A matrix that has only real entries is symmetric if and only if it is a Hermitian matrix. A real and symmetric matrix is simply a special case of a Hermitian matrix.

Proof

H i j = H ¯ j i {\displaystyle H_{ij}={\overline {H}}_{ji}} by definition. Thus H i j = H j i {\displaystyle H_{ij}=H_{ji}} (matrix symmetry) if and only if H i j = H ¯ i j {\displaystyle H_{ij}={\overline {H}}_{ij}} ( H i j {\displaystyle H_{ij}} is real).

So, if a real anti-symmetric matrix is multiplied by a real multiple of the imaginary unit i , {\displaystyle i,} then it becomes Hermitian.

Normal

Every Hermitian matrix is a normal matrix. That is to say, A A H = A H A . {\displaystyle AA^{\mathsf {H}}=A^{\mathsf {H}}A.}

Proof

A = A H , {\displaystyle A=A^{\mathsf {H}},} so A A H = A A = A H A . {\displaystyle AA^{\mathsf {H}}=AA=A^{\mathsf {H}}A.}

Diagonalizable

The finite-dimensional spectral theorem says that any Hermitian matrix can be diagonalized by a unitary matrix, and that the resulting diagonal matrix has only real entries. This implies that all eigenvalues of a Hermitian matrix A with dimension n are real, and that A has n linearly independent eigenvectors. Moreover, a Hermitian matrix has orthogonal eigenvectors for distinct eigenvalues. Even if there are degenerate eigenvalues, it is always possible to find an orthogonal basis of C consisting of n eigenvectors of A.

Sum of Hermitian matrices

The sum of any two Hermitian matrices is Hermitian.

Proof

( A + B ) i j = A i j + B i j = A ¯ j i + B ¯ j i = ( A + B ) ¯ j i , {\displaystyle (A+B)_{ij}=A_{ij}+B_{ij}={\overline {A}}_{ji}+{\overline {B}}_{ji}={\overline {(A+B)}}_{ji},} as claimed.

Inverse is Hermitian

The inverse of an invertible Hermitian matrix is Hermitian as well.

Proof

If A 1 A = I , {\displaystyle A^{-1}A=I,} then I = I H = ( A 1 A ) H = A H ( A 1 ) H = A ( A 1 ) H , {\displaystyle I=I^{\mathsf {H}}=\left(A^{-1}A\right)^{\mathsf {H}}=A^{\mathsf {H}}\left(A^{-1}\right)^{\mathsf {H}}=A\left(A^{-1}\right)^{\mathsf {H}},} so A 1 = ( A 1 ) H {\displaystyle A^{-1}=\left(A^{-1}\right)^{\mathsf {H}}} as claimed.

Associative product of Hermitian matrices

The product of two Hermitian matrices A and B is Hermitian if and only if AB = BA.

Proof

( A B ) H = ( A B ) T ¯ = B T A T ¯ = B T ¯   A T ¯ = B H A H = B A . {\displaystyle (AB)^{\mathsf {H}}={\overline {(AB)^{\mathsf {T}}}}={\overline {B^{\mathsf {T}}A^{\mathsf {T}}}}={\overline {B^{\mathsf {T}}}}\ {\overline {A^{\mathsf {T}}}}=B^{\mathsf {H}}A^{\mathsf {H}}=BA.} Thus ( A B ) H = A B {\displaystyle (AB)^{\mathsf {H}}=AB} if and only if A B = B A . {\displaystyle AB=BA.}

Thus A is Hermitian if A is Hermitian and n is an integer.

ABA Hermitian

If A and B are Hermitian, then ABA is also Hermitian.

Proof

( A B A ) H = ( A ( B A ) ) H = ( B A ) H A H = A H B H A H = A B A {\displaystyle (ABA)^{\mathsf {H}}=(A(BA))^{\mathsf {H}}=(BA)^{\mathsf {H}}A^{\mathsf {H}}=A^{\mathsf {H}}B^{\mathsf {H}}A^{\mathsf {H}}=ABA}

vAv is real for complex v

For an arbitrary complex valued vector v the product v H A v {\displaystyle \mathbf {v} ^{\mathsf {H}}A\mathbf {v} } is real because of v H A v = ( v H A v ) H . {\displaystyle \mathbf {v} ^{\mathsf {H}}A\mathbf {v} =\left(\mathbf {v} ^{\mathsf {H}}A\mathbf {v} \right)^{\mathsf {H}}.} This is especially important in quantum physics where Hermitian matrices are operators that measure properties of a system, e.g. total spin, which have to be real.

Complex Hermitian forms vector space over ℝ

The Hermitian complex n-by-n matrices do not form a vector space over the complex numbers, , since the identity matrix In is Hermitian, but iIn is not. However the complex Hermitian matrices do form a vector space over the real numbers . In the 2n-dimensional vector space of complex n × n matrices over , the complex Hermitian matrices form a subspace of dimension n. If Ejk denotes the n-by-n matrix with a 1 in the j,k position and zeros elsewhere, a basis (orthonormal with respect to the Frobenius inner product) can be described as follows: E j j  for  1 j n ( n  matrices ) {\displaystyle E_{jj}{\text{ for }}1\leq j\leq n\quad (n{\text{ matrices}})}

together with the set of matrices of the form 1 2 ( E j k + E k j )  for  1 j < k n ( n 2 n 2  matrices ) {\displaystyle {\frac {1}{\sqrt {2}}}\left(E_{jk}+E_{kj}\right){\text{ for }}1\leq j<k\leq n\quad \left({\frac {n^{2}-n}{2}}{\text{ matrices}}\right)}

and the matrices i 2 ( E j k E k j )  for  1 j < k n ( n 2 n 2  matrices ) {\displaystyle {\frac {i}{\sqrt {2}}}\left(E_{jk}-E_{kj}\right){\text{ for }}1\leq j<k\leq n\quad \left({\frac {n^{2}-n}{2}}{\text{ matrices}}\right)}

where i {\displaystyle i} denotes the imaginary unit, i = 1   . {\displaystyle i={\sqrt {-1}}~.}

An example is that the four Pauli matrices form a complete basis for the vector space of all complex 2-by-2 Hermitian matrices over .

Eigendecomposition

If n orthonormal eigenvectors u 1 , , u n {\displaystyle \mathbf {u} _{1},\dots ,\mathbf {u} _{n}} of a Hermitian matrix are chosen and written as the columns of the matrix U, then one eigendecomposition of A is A = U Λ U H {\displaystyle A=U\Lambda U^{\mathsf {H}}} where U U H = I = U H U {\displaystyle UU^{\mathsf {H}}=I=U^{\mathsf {H}}U} and therefore A = j λ j u j u j H , {\displaystyle A=\sum _{j}\lambda _{j}\mathbf {u} _{j}\mathbf {u} _{j}^{\mathsf {H}},} where λ j {\displaystyle \lambda _{j}} are the eigenvalues on the diagonal of the diagonal matrix Λ . {\displaystyle \Lambda .}

Singular values

The singular values of A {\displaystyle A} are the absolute values of its eigenvalues:

Since A {\displaystyle A} has an eigendecomposition A = U Λ U H {\displaystyle A=U\Lambda U^{H}} , where U {\displaystyle U} is a unitary matrix (its columns are orthonormal vectors; see above), a singular value decomposition of A {\displaystyle A} is A = U | Λ | sgn ( Λ ) U H {\displaystyle A=U|\Lambda |{\text{sgn}}(\Lambda )U^{H}} , where | Λ | {\displaystyle |\Lambda |} and sgn ( Λ ) {\displaystyle {\text{sgn}}(\Lambda )} are diagonal matrices containing the absolute values | λ | {\displaystyle |\lambda |} and signs sgn ( λ ) {\displaystyle {\text{sgn}}(\lambda )} of A {\displaystyle A} 's eigenvalues, respectively. sgn ( Λ ) U H {\displaystyle \operatorname {sgn}(\Lambda )U^{H}} is unitary, since the columns of U H {\displaystyle U^{H}} are only getting multiplied by ± 1 {\displaystyle \pm 1} . | Λ | {\displaystyle |\Lambda |} contains the singular values of A {\displaystyle A} , namely, the absolute values of its eigenvalues.

Real determinant

The determinant of a Hermitian matrix is real:

Proof

det ( A ) = det ( A T ) det ( A H ) = det ( A ) ¯ {\displaystyle \det(A)=\det \left(A^{\mathsf {T}}\right)\quad \Rightarrow \quad \det \left(A^{\mathsf {H}}\right)={\overline {\det(A)}}} Therefore if A = A H det ( A ) = det ( A ) ¯ . {\displaystyle A=A^{\mathsf {H}}\quad \Rightarrow \quad \det(A)={\overline {\det(A)}}.}

(Alternatively, the determinant is the product of the matrix's eigenvalues, and as mentioned before, the eigenvalues of a Hermitian matrix are real.)

Decomposition into Hermitian and skew-Hermitian matrices

Additional facts related to Hermitian matrices include:

  • The sum of a square matrix and its conjugate transpose ( A + A H ) {\displaystyle \left(A+A^{\mathsf {H}}\right)} is Hermitian.
  • The difference of a square matrix and its conjugate transpose ( A A H ) {\displaystyle \left(A-A^{\mathsf {H}}\right)} is skew-Hermitian (also called antihermitian). This implies that the commutator of two Hermitian matrices is skew-Hermitian.
  • An arbitrary square matrix C can be written as the sum of a Hermitian matrix A and a skew-Hermitian matrix B. This is known as the Toeplitz decomposition of C. C = A + B with A = 1 2 ( C + C H ) and B = 1 2 ( C C H ) {\displaystyle C=A+B\quad {\text{with}}\quad A={\frac {1}{2}}\left(C+C^{\mathsf {H}}\right)\quad {\text{and}}\quad B={\frac {1}{2}}\left(C-C^{\mathsf {H}}\right)}

Rayleigh quotient

Main article: Rayleigh quotient

In mathematics, for a given complex Hermitian matrix M and nonzero vector x, the Rayleigh quotient R ( M , x ) , {\displaystyle R(M,\mathbf {x} ),} is defined as: R ( M , x ) := x H M x x H x . {\displaystyle R(M,\mathbf {x} ):={\frac {\mathbf {x} ^{\mathsf {H}}M\mathbf {x} }{\mathbf {x} ^{\mathsf {H}}\mathbf {x} }}.}

For real matrices and vectors, the condition of being Hermitian reduces to that of being symmetric, and the conjugate transpose x H {\displaystyle \mathbf {x} ^{\mathsf {H}}} to the usual transpose x T . {\displaystyle \mathbf {x} ^{\mathsf {T}}.} R ( M , c x ) = R ( M , x ) {\displaystyle R(M,c\mathbf {x} )=R(M,\mathbf {x} )} for any non-zero real scalar c . {\displaystyle c.} Also, recall that a Hermitian (or real symmetric) matrix has real eigenvalues.

It can be shown that, for a given matrix, the Rayleigh quotient reaches its minimum value λ min {\displaystyle \lambda _{\min }} (the smallest eigenvalue of M) when x {\displaystyle \mathbf {x} } is v min {\displaystyle \mathbf {v} _{\min }} (the corresponding eigenvector). Similarly, R ( M , x ) λ max {\displaystyle R(M,\mathbf {x} )\leq \lambda _{\max }} and R ( M , v max ) = λ max . {\displaystyle R(M,\mathbf {v} _{\max })=\lambda _{\max }.}

The Rayleigh quotient is used in the min-max theorem to get exact values of all eigenvalues. It is also used in eigenvalue algorithms to obtain an eigenvalue approximation from an eigenvector approximation. Specifically, this is the basis for Rayleigh quotient iteration.

The range of the Rayleigh quotient (for matrix that is not necessarily Hermitian) is called a numerical range (or spectrum in functional analysis). When the matrix is Hermitian, the numerical range is equal to the spectral norm. Still in functional analysis, λ max {\displaystyle \lambda _{\max }} is known as the spectral radius. In the context of C*-algebras or algebraic quantum mechanics, the function that to M associates the Rayleigh quotient R(M, x) for a fixed x and M varying through the algebra would be referred to as "vector state" of the algebra.

See also

References

  1. Archibald, Tom (2010-12-31), Gowers, Timothy; Barrow-Green, June; Leader, Imre (eds.), "VI.47 Charles Hermite", The Princeton Companion to Mathematics, Princeton University Press, p. 773, doi:10.1515/9781400830398.773a, ISBN 978-1-4008-3039-8, retrieved 2023-11-15
  2. Ribeiro, Alejandro. "Signal and Information Processing" (PDF).
  3. "MULTIVARIATE NORMAL DISTRIBUTIONS" (PDF).
  4. Lau, Ivan. "Hermitian Spectral Theory of Mixed Graphs" (PDF).
  5. Liu, Jianxi; Li, Xueliang (February 2015). "Hermitian-adjacency matrices and Hermitian energies of mixed graphs". Linear Algebra and Its Applications. 466: 182–207. doi:10.1016/j.laa.2014.10.028.
  6. Frankel, Theodore (2004). The Geometry of Physics: an introduction. Cambridge University Press. p. 652. ISBN 0-521-53927-7.
  7. Physics 125 Course Notes Archived 2022-03-07 at the Wayback Machine at California Institute of Technology
  8. Trefethan, Lloyd N.; Bau, III, David (1997). Numerical linear algebra. Philadelphia, PA, USA: SIAM. p. 34. ISBN 0-89871-361-7. OCLC 1348374386.
  9. ^ Horn, Roger A.; Johnson, Charles R. (2013). Matrix Analysis, second edition. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521839402.
  10. Also known as the Rayleigh–Ritz ratio; named after Walther Ritz and Lord Rayleigh.
  11. Parlet B. N. The symmetric eigenvalue problem, SIAM, Classics in Applied Mathematics,1998

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