Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4601376 Linear Algebra and its Applications 2010 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

or an n-by-n matrix A, its Crawford number c(A) (resp., generalized Crawford number C(A)) is, by definition, the distance from the origin to its numerical range W(A) (resp., the boundary of its numerical range ∂W(A)). It is shown that if A has eigenvalues λ1,…,λn arranged so that |λ1|⩾⋯⩾|λn|, then (resp., ) equals 0 or |λn| (resp., |λj| for some j, 1⩽j⩽n). For a normal A, more can be said, namely, (resp., for some j, 3⩽j⩽n). In these cases, the above possible values can all be assumed by some A.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Algebra and Number Theory