Skew-Hamiltonian matrix

In linear algebra, skew-Hamiltonian matrices are special matrices which correspond to skew-symmetric bilinear forms on a symplectic vector space.

Let V be a vector space, equipped with a symplectic form \Omega. Such a space must be even-dimensional. A linear map A:\; V \mapsto V is called a skew-Hamiltonian operator with respect to \Omega if the form x, y \mapsto \Omega(A(x), y) is skew-symmetric.

Choose a basis  e_1, ... e_{2n} in V, such that \Omega is written as \sum_i e_i \wedge e_{n+i}. Then a linear operator is skew-Hamiltonian with respect to \Omega if and only if its matrix A satisfies A^T J = J A, where J is the skew-symmetric matrix

J=
\begin{bmatrix}
0 & I_n \\
-I_n & 0 \\
\end{bmatrix}

and In is the n\times n identity matrix.[1] Such matrices are called skew-Hamiltonian.

The square of a Hamiltonian matrix is skew-Hamiltonian. The converse is also true: every skew-Hamiltonian matrix can be obtained as the square of a Hamiltonian matrix.[1][2]

Notes

  1. 1 2 William C. Waterhouse, The structure of alternating-Hamiltonian matrices, Linear Algebra and its Applications, Volume 396, 1 February 2005, Pages 385-390
  2. Heike Faßbender, D. Steven Mackey, Niloufer Mackey and Hongguo Xu Hamiltonian Square Roots of Skew-Hamiltonian Matrices, Linear Algebra and its Applications 287, pp. 125 - 159, 1999


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