Interpreting eigenvalues and eigenvectors when using symbolic toolbox
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Fredrik Scheie
on 13 May 2022
Commented: Christine Tobler
on 19 May 2022
When using the symbolic math toolbox (symbolic "d" in this case) I sometimes end up with results (using different stochastic matrices) where I get more eigenvalues returned than eigenvectors which does not make sense to me. Might it be that since the eigenvalues are returned in the same dimension as the input matrix the first eigenvalue in this case 0 is to be ignored. I.e we get three eigenvalues (1, -(d*(3 + 15^(1/2)*1i))/6, (d*(- 3 + 15^(1/2)*1i))/6) corresponding to the three eigenvectors in the example provided below?
Thanks in advance for any input!
Btw I did notice that if I change the symbolic 'd' to a scalar e.g d= 0.5 I get 4 eigenvectors and 4 eigenvalues.
function [eig_mat,eig_val,M] = pagerank_function(linkMatrix,d)
n = size(linkMatrix,1)
M = times(d, linkMatrix) + times((1-d)/n , ones(n))
% diagonal matrix eigenvalues D, eigenvectors mtx U
[U,D] = eig((M))
extract_ev = diag(D)
%x = round(U, 2);
eig_mat = simplify(U)
eig_val = simplify(extract_ev)
end
Where I input the following matrix :
D125 = [0,1/3,1/3,1/3;
0,0,1,0;
1,0,0,0;
0,0,1,0];
And run the function using ;
d = sym('d');
[eig_mat,eig_val,M] = pagerank_function(D125,d);
% Latex code
latex_evtable = latex(sym([eig_mat]))
latex_etable = latex(sym([eig_val]))
latex_matrix = latex(sym(M))
Mtx_maker = latex(sym(D125))
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Accepted Answer
Christine Tobler
on 16 May 2022
I'm getting both 4 eigenvalues and 4 eigenvectors when running your code:
linkMatrix = [0,1/3,1/3,1/3;
0,0,1,0;
1,0,0,0;
0,0,1,0];
d = sym('d');
n = size(linkMatrix,1)
M = times(d, linkMatrix) + times((1-d)/n , ones(n))
% diagonal matrix eigenvalues D, eigenvectors mtx U
[U,D] = eig((M))
extract_ev = diag(D)
%x = round(U, 2);
eig_mat = simplify(U)
eig_val = simplify(extract_ev)
Can you describe more of what outputs you are seeing?
4 Comments
Christine Tobler
on 19 May 2022
Yes, that's the gist of it. Basically, numerical computation of EIG is based on a series of orthogonal similarity transformations applied to matrix A (Anew = Q*A*Q'). The transformations being orthogonal is important, since it means the amount of round-off error is kept minimal compared to doing Anew = X*A*inv(X) with a non-orthogonal matrix. But while the round-off is minimal, it still exists and means that we can't meaningfully tell the difference between two exactly identical eigenvalues and two eigenvalues that are just very close to each other.
If you're interested in more details, you might take a look at the Schur decomposition, which is an intermediate step in numerically computing the eigenvalue decomposition of a matrix. It decomposes A = U*T*U' where T is upper triangular (if you use the 'complex' flag) and U is orthogonal. The eigenvectors are then computed from T in a second step.
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