A combinatorial approach to matrix theory and its applications
β Scribed by Richard A. Brualdi, Dragos Cvetkovic
- Book ID
- 127454424
- Publisher
- Chapman & Hall/CRC Press
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1 MB
- Series
- Discrete mathematics and its applications
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
- City
- Boca Raton
- ISBN
- 1420082248
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Unlike most elementary books on matrices, **A Combinatorial Approach to Matrix Theory and Its Applications employs combinatorial and graph-theoretical tools to develop basic theorems of matrix theory, shedding new light on the subject by exploring the connections of these tools to matrices.
After reviewing the basics of graph theory, elementary counting formulas, fields, and vector spaces, the book explains the algebra of matrices and uses the KΓΆnig digraph to carry out simple matrix operations. It then discusses matrix powers, provides a graph-theoretical definition of the determinant using the Coates digraph of a matrix, and presents a graph-theoretical interpretation of matrix inverses. The authors develop the elementary theory of solutions of systems of linear equations and show how to use the Coates digraph to solve a linear system. They also explore the eigenvalues, eigenvectors, and characteristic polynomial of a matrix; examine the important properties of nonnegative matrices that are part of the PerronβFrobenius theory; and study eigenvalue inclusion regions and sign-nonsingular matrices. The final chapter presents applications to electrical engineering, physics, and chemistry.
Using combinatorial and graph-theoretical tools, this book enables a solid understanding of the fundamentals of matrix theory and its application to scientific areas.**
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The theory of correspondence reaches far deeper than that of mere numerical congruity with which it is associated as the substance with the shadow"
A new approach is formuiatedfor the matching polynomial m(G) of a graph G. A matrix A(G) is associated with G. A certain function de$ned on A(G) yields the matching polynomial of G. This approach leads to a simple characterization of m(G). It also facilitates a technique for constructing graphs with
From the reviews of the first printing of this book, published as volume 58 of the Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences: "... This book will be very useful as a reference and guide to researchers and graduate students in algebra and and topology." Acta Scientiarum Mathematicarum, Ungarn, 1994 ".