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Re: Help-gsl Digest, Vol 229, Issue 1
From: |
Brorson, Stuart |
Subject: |
Re: Help-gsl Digest, Vol 229, Issue 1 |
Date: |
Fri, 5 Jan 2024 18:45:43 +0000 |
I looked at your two matrices of eigenvectors. Thank you for sending them.
Upon my investigation, I found that the column vectors (the eigenvectors) which
look different are actually scalar multiples of each other. However, since you
are dealing with complex eigenvectors, the multiple is not +/-1, but is rather
a phase, exp(i*phi).
I suggest you form ratios of each of the column pairs (column i from C++ and
column i from Python) and observe that the ratio is the same for all elements.
That says each column vector is just a scalar multiple of the other one, and
both are valid eigenvectors. In fact, they are the same set of eigenvectors,
except they can differ by a phase factor.
Best regards,
Stuart Brorson
Northeastern University
Boston, Mass
________________________________
From: Jiasen Guo <jiasenguo1993@gmail.com>
Sent: Friday, January 5, 2024 10:59 AM
To: Brorson, Stuart <s.brorson@northeastern.edu>
Subject: Re: Help-gsl Digest, Vol 229, Issue 1
Hi,
Thanks for the reply. The eigenvectors are not just differed by a sign
actually. I am attaching the two eigenvector matrixes here. Thanks for your
kind help.
BTW, does my reply to a specific person open to all the subscribers?
Best,
Jiasen
r