ahmethungari Posted May 25, 2009 Share Posted May 25, 2009 (edited) Hi, Is there any solution for the following problem: [math]Ax = \lambda x + b[/math] Here [math]x[/math] seems to be an eigenvector of [math]A[/math] but with an extra translation vector [math]b[/math]. I cannot say whether [math]b[/math] is parallel to [math]x \quad[/math], ([math]b = cx[/math]). Thank you in advance for your help... Birkan Edited May 25, 2009 by ahmethungari Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bignose Posted May 25, 2009 Share Posted May 25, 2009 This forum doesn't support using $ as the math tags like regular LaTeX. You need to use (math) and (/math) but with square brackets in place of the beginning and ending $'s and the LaTeX will appear correctly. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Severian Posted May 25, 2009 Share Posted May 25, 2009 If [math]A- \lambda \mathbf{1}[/math] has an inverse, then the solution is [math]x= \left[ A- \lambda \mathbf{1} \right]^{-1} b[/math] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ahmethungari Posted May 26, 2009 Author Share Posted May 26, 2009 If [math]A- \lambda \mathbf{1}[/math] has an inverse, then the solution is [math]x= \left[ A- \lambda \mathbf{1} \right]^{-1} b[/math] The problem is we do not know the [math]\lambda[/math] either. Only [math]A[/math] and [math]b[/math] are knowns. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Severian Posted May 26, 2009 Share Posted May 26, 2009 Then you don't have enough information. If x is an N-dimensional vector, you have N+1 unknowns with only N equations. In a traditional eigenvalue problem, this doesn't matter because you don't need the magnitude of x (since every term is linear in x), but here the b term sets a scale. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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