Nineteen Dubious Ways to Compute the Exponential of a Matrix, Twenty-Five Years Later
MathWorks (United States) · Cornell University
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Abstract
In principle, the exponential of a matrix could be computed in many ways. Methods involving approximation theory, differential equations, the matrix eigenvalues, and the matrix characteristic polynomial have been proposed. In practice, consideration of computational stability and efficiency indicates that some of the methods are preferable to others but that none are completely satisfactory. Most of this paper was originally published in 1978. An update, with a separate bibliography, describes a few recent developments.
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Topics
Keywords
- Eigenvalues and eigenvectors
- Matrix exponential
- Matrix (chemical analysis)
- Mathematics
- Applied mathematics
- Exponential function
- Matrix differential equation
- Polynomial matrix
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