There are a number of very good books available on linear algebra. From this one might deduce that the existing books contain all that one needs to know in the best possible form and that any new book would just repeat material in the old ones. However, new results in linear algebra appear constantl
Combinatorial and Graph-Theoretical Problems in Linear Algebra
โ Scribed by Mike Boyle (auth.), Richard A. Brualdi, Shmuel Friedland, Victor Klee (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag New York
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 265
- Series
- The IMA Volumes in Mathematics and its Applications 50
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This IMA Volume in Mathematics and its Applications COMBINATORIAL AND GRAPH-THEORETICAL PROBLEMS IN LINEAR ALGEBRA is based on the proceedings of a workshop that was an integral part of the 1991-92 IMA program on "Applied Linear Algebra." We are grateful to Richard Brualdi, George Cybenko, Alan George, Gene Golub, Mitchell Luskin, and Paul Van Dooren for planning and implementing the year-long program. We especially thank Richard Brualdi, Shmuel Friedland, and Victor Klee for organizing this workshop and editing the proceedings. The financial support of the National Science Foundation made the workshop possible. A vner Friedman Willard Miller, Jr. PREFACE The 1991-1992 program of the Institute for Mathematics and its Applications (IMA) was Applied Linear Algebra. As part of this program, a workshop on Comยญ binatorial and Graph-theoretical Problems in Linear Algebra was held on November 11-15, 1991. The purpose of the workshop was to bring together in an informal setting the diverse group of people who work on problems in linear algebra and matrix theory in which combinatorial or graph~theoretic analysis is a major comยญ ponent. Many of the participants of the workshop enjoyed the hospitality of the IMA for the entire fall quarter, in which the emphasis was discrete matrix analysis.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xv
Symbolic Dynamics and Matrices....Pages 1-38
Mixed Matrices: Irreducibility and Decomposition....Pages 39-71
A Geometric Approach to the Laplacian Matrix of a Graph....Pages 73-98
Qualitative Semipositivity....Pages 99-105
Eigenvalues in Combinatorial Optimization....Pages 107-151
Eutactic Stars and Graph Spectra....Pages 153-164
Some Matrix Patterns Arising in Queuing Theory....Pages 165-174
Laplacian Unimodular Equivalence of Graphs....Pages 175-180
Rank Incrementation via Diagonal Perturbations....Pages 181-187
Eigenvalues of Almost Skew Symmetric Matrices and Tournament Matrices....Pages 189-206
Combinatorial Orthogonality....Pages 207-218
The Symmetric Group as a Polynomial Space....Pages 219-227
Completely Positive Graphs....Pages 229-233
Hadamard Matrices....Pages 235-243
Self-Inverse Sign Patterns....Pages 245-256
Open Problems....Pages 257-260
โฆ Subjects
Linear and Multilinear Algebras, Matrix Theory
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
This book contains the basics of linear algebra with an emphasis on nonstandard and neat proofs of known theorems. Many of the theorems of linear algebra obtained mainly during the past 30 years are usually ignored in text-books but are quite accessible for students majoring or minoring in mathemati
Part 1: Statement of problems -- Combinatorial identities -- The principle of inclusion and exclusion: inversion formulas -- Stirling, Bell, Fibonacci, and Catalan numbers -- Problems in combinatorial set theory -- Partitions of integers -- Trees -- Parity -- Connectedness -- Extremal problems for