Physics, asked by shekh13ar, 8 months ago

what is leading matrices?​

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Answered by Avartanathlay
0

Answer:

A matrix is in reduced row echelon form (also called row canonical form) if it satisfies the following conditions: It is in row echelon form. The leading entry in each nonzero row is a 1 (called a leading 1). Each column containing a leading 1 has zeros everywhere else.

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Answered by ns158158
0

Answer:

A matrix is in row-echelon form when the following conditions are met. If there is a row of all zeros, then it is at the bottom of the matrix. The first non-zero element of any row is a one. That element is called the leading one. The leading one of any row is to the right of the leading one of the previous row

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