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4 votes
1 answer
147 views

prove spectral equivalence bounds for inverse fractional power of matrices

The question is an extention to the answered question prove spectral equivalence bounds for fractional power of matrices. Let $A, D \in \mathbb{R}^{n \times n}$ be two symmetric,positive definite and ...
Luna947's user avatar
  • 75
3 votes
1 answer
80 views

prove spectral equivalence bounds for fractional power of matrices

Let $A, D \in \mathbb{R}^{n \times n}$ be two symmetric,positive definite and tri-diagonal matrices for that we know that they are spectrally equivalent, thus ist holds $$ c^- x^\top D x \le x^\top A ...
Luna947's user avatar
  • 75
1 vote
1 answer
88 views

Are these $L_2$-spectral radii approximations strictly increasing?

Suppose that $V$ is a finite dimensional complex Hilbert space. Let $L(V)$ denote the collection of all linear mappings from $V$ to $V$. Let $A_1,\dots,A_r:V\rightarrow V$ be linear operators. Then ...
Joseph Van Name's user avatar
2 votes
3 answers
216 views

Equivalence of operators

let $T$ and $S$ be positive definite (thus self-adjoint) operators on a Hilbert space. I am wondering whether we have equivalence of operators $$ c(T+S) \le \sqrt{T^2+S^2} \le C(T+S)$$ for some ...
van Dyke's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
487 views

Intuitive proof of Golden-Thompson inequality

Sutter et al. [1] in their paper "Multivariate Trace Inequalities" give an intuitive proof of the following Golden-Thompson inequality: For any hermitian matrices $A,B$: $$ \text{tr}(\exp{(A+B)}) \...
Saket Choudhary's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
587 views

Lower bound on the sum of singular values for a sum of Hermitian matrices

Denote the eigenvalues of an $n\times n$ matrix $\mathbf{X}$ by $\lambda_i(\mathbf{X})$ and its singular values by $\sigma_i(\mathbf{X})$, $i=1,\ldots,n$. When $\mathbf{X}$ is Hermitian, we know that $...
Bullmoose's user avatar
  • 907
0 votes
1 answer
72 views

Characterisation of a matrix ordering property

Let $n$ be a positive integer; we consider all matrices mentioned henceforth to be $n$-by-$n$ matrices. Let $A$ and $B$ be matrices wherein all entries are nonnegative (such matrices will be called ...
Liam Baker's user avatar