If I have an array of 4 dimensions say A=complex(rand(2,2,2,2),rand(2,2,2,2)). If I need to calculate the inverse of this matrix, as defined beow , how should I do it?
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I need to compute B(x,y,z,w) such that if I multiply the terms of A and B , I should get an identity matrix I(a,b,c,d):
I=zeros(a,b,c,d);
for a=1:2
for b=1:2
for c=1:2
for d=1:2
for i=1:2
for j=1:2
I(a,b,c,d)=A(a,b,i,j)*B(i,j,c,d)+I(a,b,c,d);
end
end
end
end
end
end
The I(a,b,c,d)= 1 only when a=b=c=d
2 Comments
Matt J
on 21 Oct 2016
It is puzzling that you are organizing your data in 4D form, when you appear to want to do simple 2D matrix algebra with it. Are you sure it wouldn't be better just to reshape your data into 2D form
A=reshape(A,4,4)
and keep it that way?
Accepted Answer
Matt J
on 21 Oct 2016
[a,b,c,d]=ndgrid(1:2);
I=reshape(a==b & b==c & c==d, 4,4);
A=reshape(A,4,4);
B=reshape( A\I , 2,2,2,2);
More Answers (1)
KSSV
on 21 Oct 2016
Are you looking for something like this?
A = rand(2,2,2,2) ;
B = zeros(2,2,2,2) ;
for i = 1:2
for j = 1:2
B(:,:,i,j) = inv(A(:,:,i,j)) ;
end
end
% check
for i = 1:2
for j = 1:2
A(:,:,i,j)*B(:,:,i,j)
end
end
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