Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6416457 | Linear Algebra and its Applications | 2014 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
Given a list of complex numbers Ï:=(λ1,λ2,â¦,λn), we say that Ï is realisable if Ï is the spectrum of some (entrywise) nonnegative matrix. The Nonnegative Inverse Eigenvalue Problem (or NIEP) is the problem of characterising all realisable lists.Given a realisable list (Ï,λ2,λ3,â¦,λm), where Ï is the Perron eigenvalue and λ2 is real, we find families of lists (μ1,μ2,â¦,μn), for which(μ1,μ2,â¦,μn,λ3,λ4,â¦,λm) is realisable. In addition, given a realisable list(Ï,α+iβ,αâiβ,λ4,λ5,â¦,λm), where Ï is the Perron eigenvalue and α and β are real, we find families of lists (μ1,μ2,μ3,μ4), for which (μ1,μ2,μ3,μ4,λ4,λ5,â¦,λm) is realisable.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Mathematics
Algebra and Number Theory
Authors
Richard Ellard, Helena Å migoc,