Bohemian matrices
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A Bohemian matrix family[1] is a set of matrices, all of whose entries come from a fixed, usually finite, population. The term was first used to refer to matrices whose entries are integers of bounded height, hence the name, derived from the acronym BOunded Height Matrix of Integers (BOHEMI).[2] Since then, other populations have been studied. There is no single family of Bohemian matrices. Instead, a matrix can be said to be Bohemian with respect to a set from which its entries are drawn. Bohemian matrices may possess additional structure. For example, they may be Toeplitz matrices or upper Hessenberg matrices.
Applications
Software testing
One application of Bohemian matrices is to test software applied in linear algebra. Bohemian matrices are typically distinctly represented on computers,[3] and are identifiable for extreme behavior either by exhaustive search (for small dimensions), random sampling, or optimization techniques. For example, Steven E. Thornton used this tool to solve over two trillion eigenvalue problems. In doing so, he uncovered instances of convergence failure in some popular software systems. [4]
An anymatrix is an extensible MATLAB matrix collection capturing a set of optimal classes of Bohemian matrices.
Improved bounds
In a talk given at the 2018 Bohemian Matrices and Applications Workshop, Nick Higham explained how he utilized genetic algorithms on Bohemian matrices with population P={-1, 0, 1} to sharpen lower bounds on the maximal growth factor for rook pivoting.[5]
Connections to other fields
Random matrices
Bohemian matrices can be studied through random sampling. Such studies might be considered part of the field of random matrices. However, the study of random matrices to date has mostly focused on real symmetric or Hermitian matrices, or on matrices whose entries are drawn from a continuous distribution (such as Gaussian ensembles). Notable exceptions include the work of Terence Tao and Van Vu.[6][7]
Bernoulli and Hadamard matrices
Matrices with entries only from ±1 are sometimes called Bernoulli matrices[8] and are therefore examples of Bohemian matrices. A Hadamard matrix is a Bernoulli matrix that satisfies a further property, namely that its determinant is maximal. Therefore, Hadamard matrices are also Bohemian. Hadamard matrices (and indeed Bernoulli matrices) have been studied for much longer than the name "Bohemian matrix" has existed, but the kinds of questions one can ask about Hadamard matrices (the original question was which matrices have maximal determinant) can also be asked about other Bohemian matrices. One of the first generalizations of Hadamard matrices was to what are sometimes called Butson-type Hadamard matrices, whose entries are qth roots of unity for q > 2. These can also be considered prototypical Bohemian matrices.
Graph theory
Matrices with discrete entries, particularly incidence matrices, play a crucial role in understanding graph theory. The outcomes of graph theory aid in explaining certain phenomena encountered in Bohemian matrix experiments. Conversely, experiments conducted in the manner advocated by Bohemian matrix workers can provide useful information for graphs.[9]
Combinatorics
Numerous open problems listed in the Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences under Bohemian matrices are combinatorial in nature. For instance, A306782 lists a table of the number of distinct minimal polynomials for Bernoulli matrices (that is, Bohemian matrices with population ±1) up to and including dimension 5. The numbers for higher dimensions are not known. The number of Bernoulli matrices of dimension 6 is 236=68,719,476,736; while this set could likely be searched exhaustively (it is delightfully parallel), the greater-than-exponential growth of the number of matrices soon defeats brute force. There are symmetries that might be taken advantage of, as is done [9] for zero-one matrices, but these require sophisticated combinatorial knowledge.
Number theory
Number theorists have worked on polynomials with restricted coefficients over the years. For instance, Littlewood polynomials have coefficients ±1 when expressed in the monomial basis. Kurt Mahler was concerned with the problem,[10] as were Andrew Odlyzko, Bjorn Poonen[11] and Peter Borwein.[12]
By using companion matrices, each of these restricted-coefficient polynomial problems can be considered to be a Bohemian matrix problem. However, the characteristic polynomial of a Bohemian matrix might have coefficients that are exponentially large in the dimension, so the converse is not true and these areas of study are not equivalent.[13]
Connections to Magic Squares are explored in Kathleen Ollerenshaw's book with D. Brée.[14] The following paper explicitly connects Bohemian matrices to quadratic forms.[15]
Solution of polynomial equations
A commonly-used technique to find polynomial roots is to construct a companion matrix for it and use numerical eigenvalue solvers to find the eigenvalues, which are then the roots of the original polynomial. While seemingly counterintuitive and wasteful, this technique can be practical. This is the default method of NumPy's Polynomial package. The method is frequently numerically stable,[16] but occasionally does not work well if the polynomial coefficients are large or the polynomial is otherwise ill-conditioned.
It is possible to improve the situation by finding a minimal height companion matrix for the polynomial by looking for such in a Bohemian matrix family.[17] However, no efficient general-purpose techniques are known.
History
The name "Bohemian matrices", together with the idea that it might be useful to categorize problems in this way, appeared in print by ISSAC 2016.[18] The name arises from the mnemonic BOunded HEight Matrix of Integers (BOHEMI), although the classification has since been extended to other discrete populations including non-integer populations[19] (including for example Gaussian integers). The breadth and utility of making this categorization is becoming increasingly apparent: the first significant journal publication was[20] although smaller publications appeared before that. As of March 2022, publications explicitly using the name, aside from those cited elsewhere in this article, include[21][22][23]
The first workshop on the subject was held in 2018 at the University of Manchester and was entitled Bohemian Matrices and Applications. The idea can be considered to be a specialization in the sense of George Pólya, in that Bohemian matrix families are restricted to having certain entries and are thus special matrices. The idea can also be considered a generalization, as instead of merely having entries either 0 or 1 as in an incidence matrix of a graph or -1 and 1 as in the companion matrix of a Littlewood polynomial, the Bohemian family can have entries that are otherwise bounded, discrete, or (usually) both.
The idea is somewhat similar to that of sign pattern matrices, in which two matrices with real entries are considered equivalent if the corresponding entries have the same sign, and that theory looks for common properties.[24] A Bohemian matrix with population P={-1, 0, 1} is an example of a sign pattern matrix, and so it has all the properties of such matrices, but it may also have special properties owing to its Bohemian nature.
References
- ^ Higham, Nicholas J (December 2018). "Rhapsodizing about Bohemian Matrices". Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. Archived from the original on 28 February 2022. Retrieved 1 March 2022.
- ^ Corless, Robert; Labahn, George; Piponi, Dan; Rafiee Sevyeri, Leili (2022-07-05). "Bohemian Matrix Geometry". Proceedings of the 2022 International Symposium on Symbolic and Algebraic Computation. ISSAC '22. New York, NY, USA: Association for Computing Machinery: 361–370. arXiv:2202.07769. doi:10.1145/3476446.3536177. ISBN 978-1-4503-8688-3.
- ^ Higham, Nicholas J. "Bohemian Matrices in Numerical Linear Algebra" (PDF). Nick Higham—Conferences. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 November 2020. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
- ^ Thornton, Steven E (April 2019). Algorithms for Bohemian Matrices (PhD thesis). Western University. Archived from the original on 7 March 2022. Retrieved 1 March 2022.
- ^ Higham, Nicholas J. "Bohemian Matrices in Numerical Linear Algebra" (PDF). Nick Higham—Conferences. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 November 2020. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
- ^ Tao, Terence; Vu, Van (January 2006). "On random ±1 matrices: Singularity and determinant". Random Structures and Algorithms. 28 (1): 1–23. arXiv:math/0411095. doi:10.1002/rsa.20109. S2CID 5361802. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
- ^ Vu, Van (2008). "Random Discrete Matrices". Horizons of Combinatorics. Bolyai Society Mathematical Studies. Vol. 17. pp. 257–289. arXiv:math/0611321. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-77200-2_13. ISBN 978-3-540-77199-9. S2CID 118703720.
- ^ Tao, Terence; Vu, Van (January 2006). "On random ±1 matrices: Singularity and determinant". Random Structures and Algorithms. 28 (1): 1–23. arXiv:math/0411095. doi:10.1002/rsa.20109. S2CID 5361802. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
- ^ a b Živković, Miodrag (2006). "Classification of small (0, 1) matrices". Linear Algebra and Its Applications. 414 (1): 310–346. arXiv:math/0511636. doi:10.1016/j.laa.2005.10.010.
- ^ Mahler, Kurt (1963). "On two extremum properties of polynomials". Illinois Journal of Mathematics. 7 (4): 681–701. doi:10.1215/ijm/1255645104. S2CID 118793107.
- ^ Odlyzko, Andrew (September 1992). "Zeros of polynomials with 0,1 coefficients". Algorithms Seminar: 169. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.47.9327.
- ^ Borwein, Peter B.; Jörgenson, Loki (December 2001). "Visible Structures in Number Theory". American Mathematical Monthly. 108 (10): 897–910. doi:10.1080/00029890.2001.11919824. JSTOR 2695413. S2CID 454318. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
- ^ Calkin, Neil J; Chan, Eunice Y.S.; Corless, Robert M. (2 June 2021). "Some facts and conjectures about Mandelbrot polynomials". Maple Transactions. 1 (1): 13. doi:10.5206/mt.v1i1.14037. S2CID 242158547.
- ^ Ollerenshaw, Kathleen; Brée, D (1998). Most-perfect pandiagonal magic squares. IMA.
- ^ Higham, Nicholas J; Lettington, Matthew (2022). "Optimizing and Factorizing the Wilson Matrix". The American Mathematical Monthly. 129 (5): 454–465. doi:10.1080/00029890.2022.2038006. S2CID 233322415. Archived from the original on 3 March 2022. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
- ^ Edelman, Alan; Murakami, H (April 1995). "Polynomial roots from companion matrix eigenvalues" (PDF). Mathematics of Computation. 64 (210): 763–776. Bibcode:1995MaCom..64..763E. doi:10.1090/S0025-5718-1995-1262279-2. Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 January 2022. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
- ^ Chan, Eunice Y.S.; Corless, Robert M. (6 February 2017). "A new kind of companion matrix". Electronic Journal of Linear Algebra. 32: 335–342. doi:10.13001/1081-3810.3400.
- ^ Corless, Robert M.; Thornton, Steven E. (2017). "The Bohemian Eigenvalue Project". ACM Communications in Computer Algebra. 50 (4): 158–160. doi:10.1145/3055282.3055289. S2CID 34583673. Archived from the original on 1 March 2022. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
- ^ Corless, Robert (2 June 2021). "What can we learn from Bohemian Matrices". Maple Transactions. 1 (1). doi:10.5206/mt.v1i1.14039. S2CID 241595165.
- ^ Chan, Eunice Y.S.; Corless, Robert M.; Gonzalez-Vega, Laureano; Sendra, J. Rafael; Sendra, Juana; Thornton, Steven E. (September 2020). "Upper Hessenberg and Toeplitz Bohemians". Linear Algebra and Its Applications. 601: 72–100. arXiv:1907.10677. doi:10.1016/j.laa.2020.03.037. S2CID 198899515. Archived from the original on 13 August 2023. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
- ^ Fasi, Massimiliano; Negri Porzio, Gian Maria (2020). "Determinants of normalized Bohemian upper Hessenberg matrices". The Electronic Journal of Linear Algebra. 36 (36): 352–366. doi:10.13001/ela.2020.5053. S2CID 191136476.
- ^ Chan, Eunice Y.S.; Corless, Robert M.; Gonzalez-Vega, Laureano; Sendra, J. Rafael; Sendra, Juana (May 2022). "Inner Bohemian Inverses". Applied Mathematics and Computation. 421 (15): 126945. doi:10.1016/j.amc.2022.126945. S2CID 246318540.
- ^ Bogoya, Manuel; Serra-Capizzano, Stefano; Trotti, Ken (2022). "Upper Hessenberg and Toeplitz Bohemian matrix sequences: a note on their asymptotical eigenvalues and singular values" (PDF). Electronic Transactions on Numerical Analysis. 55: 76–91. doi:10.1553/etna_vol55s76. S2CID 243772914. Archived (PDF) from the original on 3 March 2022. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
- ^ Hall, Frank J; Li, Zhongshan (2013). Hogben, Leslie (ed.). Sign Pattern Matrices (2nd ed.). Handbook of Linear Algebra: CRC Press. pp. 42-1–42-32.