Weinstein–Aronszajn identity
In mathematics, the Weinstein–Aronszajn identity states that if and are matrices of size m × n and n × m respectively (either or both of which may be infinite) then, provided (and hence, also ) is of trace class,
where is the k × k identity matrix.
It is closely related to the matrix determinant lemma and its generalization. It is the determinant analogue of the Woodbury matrix identity for matrix inverses.
Proof
[edit]The identity may be proved as follows.[1] Let be a matrix consisting of the four blocks , , and :
Because Im is invertible, the formula for the determinant of a block matrix gives
Because In is invertible, the formula for the determinant of a block matrix gives
Thus
Substituting for then gives the Weinstein–Aronszajn identity.
Applications
[edit]Let . The identity can be used to show the somewhat more general statement that
It follows that the non-zero eigenvalues of and are the same.
This identity is useful in developing a Bayes estimator for multivariate Gaussian distributions.
The identity also finds applications in random matrix theory by relating determinants of large matrices to determinants of smaller ones.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ Pozrikidis, C. (2014), An Introduction to Grids, Graphs, and Networks, Oxford University Press, p. 271, ISBN 9780199996735
- ^ "The mesoscopic structure of GUE eigenvalues | What's new". Terrytao.wordpress.com. Retrieved 2016-01-16.