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Jordan canonical form
From: |
Daniel J Sebald |
Subject: |
Jordan canonical form |
Date: |
Wed, 26 May 2010 23:21:43 -0500 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.7.3) Gecko/20041020 |
However, it appears that Octave doesn't have the jordan function implemented.
Does anyone have a better method?
John,
I recall a long time ago implementing a transform for Jordan form for a class
at Marquette. It was challenging for me at the time, of course, having not
done anything like that before. It was kind of tricky with (from what I'm
remembering) manipulations along rows and some type of swapping of
elements...not sure really, it's been such a long time now. I may have done
something unique in addition to what the paper had described. The algorithm
seemed efficient, but what did I know back then?
I do remember the Journal (Franklin Institute) and the author (Chi Tsong Chen).
An Internet search brought it right up:
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6V04-463GR03-27&_user=10&_coverDate=12%2F31%2F1974&_rdoc=1&_fmt=high&_orig=search&_sort=d&_docanchor=&view=c&_searchStrId=1349761342&_rerunOrigin=google&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=3f5dc2907e748e845f4e35a4864e4bf5
Unfortunately, it was the days when the PC was just catching on and I had no
means of keeping an electronic copy from a main frame.
Dan