Math, asked by jammynaveen7, 5 months ago

Define Cayley Hamilton Theorem.?​

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Answered by themakerqueries
1

Answer:

In linear algebra, the Cayley–Hamilton theorem (named after the mathematicians Arthur Cayley and William Rowan Hamilton) states that every square matrix over a commutative ring (such as the real or complex field) satisfies its own characteristic equation.

Answered by itzjuno
1

the Cayley–Hamilton theorem (termed after the mathematicians Arthur Cayley and William Rowan Hamilton) says that every square matrix over a commutative ring (for instance the real or complex field) satisfies its own characteristic equation. If A is a provided as n×n matrix and In is the n×n identity matrix, then the distinctive polynomial of A is articulated as:

p(x) = det(xIn – A)

Where the determinant operation is ‘det’ and for the scalar element of the base ring, the variable is taken as x. As the entries of the matrix are (linear or constant) polynomials in x, the determinant is also an n-th order monic polynomial in x.

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