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In mathematics, the kth compound matrix (sometimes referred to as the kth multiplicative compound matrix) ,[1] of an matrixA is the matrix formed from the determinants of all submatrices of A, i.e., all minors, arranged with the submatrix index sets in lexicographic order.
The following properties hold:
If is viewed as the matrix of an operator in a basis then the compound matrix is the matrix of the -th exterior power in the basis . In this formulation, the multiplicativity property is equivalent to the functoriality of the exterior power. [2]
References
^R.A. Horn and C.R. Johnson, Matrix Analysis, Cambridge University Press, 1990, pp. 19–20. ISBN9780521386326
^Joseph P.S. Kung, Gian-Carlo Rota, and Catherine H. Yan, Combinatorics: the Rota way, Cambridge University Press, 2009, p. 306. ISBN9780521883894
External links
Gantmacher, F. R. and Krein, M. G., Oscillation Matrices and Kernels and Small Vibrations of Mechanical Systems, Revised Edition. American Mathematical Society, 2002. ISBN978-0-8218-3171-7