Determinants are mathematical objects which are very useful in the analysis and solution of systems of linear equations. As
shown in Cramer's Rule, a nonhomogeneous system of linear equations has a nontrivial solution Iff the
determinant of the system's Matrix is Nonzero (so that the Matrix is nonsingular). A
determinant is defined to be
 |
(1) |
A
determinant can be expanded by Minors to obtain
|
|
|
(2) |
A general determinant for a Matrix A has a value
 |
(3) |
with no implied summation over
and where
is the Cofactor of
defined by
 |
(4) |
Here, C is the
Matrix formed by eliminating row
and column
from A, i.e., by
Determinant Expansion by Minors.
Given an
determinant, the additive inverse is
 |
(5) |
Determinants are also Distributive, so
 |
(6) |
This means that the determinant of a Matrix Inverse can be found as follows:
 |
(7) |
where I is the Identity Matrix, so
 |
(8) |
Determinants are Multilinear in rows and columns, since
 |
(9) |
and
 |
(10) |
The determinant of the Similarity Transformation of a matrix is equal to the determinant of the original
Matrix
 |
(11) |
The determinant of a similarity transformation minus a multiple of the unit Matrix is given by
The determinant of a Matrix Transpose equals the determinant of the original Matrix,
 |
(13) |
and the determinant of a Complex Conjugate is equal to the Complex Conjugate of the determinant
 |
(14) |
Let
be a small number. Then
 |
(15) |
where
is the Trace of A. The determinant takes on a particularly simple form for a
Triangular Matrix
 |
(16) |
Important properties of the determinant include the following.
- 1. Switching two rows or columns changes the sign.
- 2. Scalars can be factored out from rows and columns.
- 3. Multiples of rows and columns can be added together without changing the determinant's value.
- 4. Scalar multiplication of a row by a constant
multiplies the determinant by
.
- 5. A determinant with a row or column of zeros has value 0.
- 6. Any determinant with two rows or columns equal has value 0.
Property 1 can be established by induction. For a
Matrix, the determinant is
For a
Matrix, the determinant is
Property 2 follows likewise. For
and
matrices,
 |
(19) |
and
 |
(20) |
Property 3 follows from the identity
|
|
|
(21) |
If
is an
Matrix with
Real Numbers, then
has the interpretation as the oriented
-dimensional Content of the Parallelepiped spanned
by the column vectors
, ...,
in
. Here, ``oriented'' means that, up to a change of
or
Sign, the number is the
-dimensional Content, but the Sign depends on the ``orientation'' of
the column vectors involved. If they agree with the standard orientation, there is a
Sign; if not, there is a
Sign. The Parallelepiped spanned by the
-D vectors
through
is the collection
of points
 |
(22) |
where
is a Real Number in the Closed Interval [0,1].
There are an infinite number of
determinants with no 0 or
entries having unity determinant. One
parametric family is
 |
(23) |
Specific examples having small entries include
 |
(24) |
(Guy 1989, 1994).
See also Circulant Determinant, Cofactor, Hessian Determinant, Hyperdeterminant, Immanant,
Jacobian, Knot Determinant, Matrix, Minor, Permanent, Vandermonde Determinant,
Wronskian
References
Arfken, G. ``Determinants.'' §4.1 in Mathematical Methods for Physicists, 3rd ed.
Orlando, FL: Academic Press, pp. 168-176, 1985.
Guy, R. K. ``Unsolved Problems Come of Age.'' Amer. Math. Monthly 96, 903-909, 1989.
Guy, R. K. ``A Determinant of Value One.'' §F28 in
Unsolved Problems in Number Theory, 2nd ed. New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. 265-266, 1994.
© 1996-9 Eric W. Weisstein
1999-05-24