Diagonalizable matrix

In linear algebra, a square matrix  is called diagonalizable or non-defective if it is similar to a diagonal matrix. That is, if there exists an invertible matrix  and a diagonal matrix such that . This is equivalent to . (Such , are not unique.) This property exists for any linear map: for a finite-dimensional vector space , a linear map  is called diagonalizable if there exists an ordered basis of  consisting of eigenvectors of . These definitions are equivalent: if  has a matrix representation as above, then the column vectors of  form a basis consisting of eigenvectors of , and the diagonal entries of  are the corresponding eigenvalues of ; with respect to this eigenvector basis,  is represented by .

Diagonalization is the process of finding the above  and and makes many subsequent computations easier. One can raise a diagonal matrix  to a power by simply raising the diagonal entries to that power. The determinant of a diagonal matrix is simply the product of all diagonal entries. Such computations generalize easily to .

The geometric transformation represented by a diagonalizable matrix is an inhomogeneous dilation (or anisotropic scaling). That is, it can scale the space by a different amount in different directions. The direction of each eigenvector is scaled by a factor given by the corresponding eigenvalue.

A square matrix that is not diagonalizable is called defective. It can happen that a matrix with real entries is defective over the real numbers, meaning that is impossible for any invertible and diagonal with real entries, but it is possible with complex entries, so that is diagonalizable over the complex numbers. For example, this is the case for a generic rotation matrix.

Many results for diagonalizable matrices hold only over an algebraically closed field (such as the complex numbers). In this case, diagonalizable matrices are dense in the space of all matrices, which means any defective matrix can be deformed into a diagonalizable matrix by a small perturbation; and the Jordan–Chevalley decomposition states that any matrix is uniquely the sum of a diagonalizable matrix and a nilpotent matrix. Over an algebraically closed field, diagonalizable matrices are equivalent to semi-simple matrices.


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