Frobenius norm: Difference between revisions

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# It is the sum of squares of the moduli of the entries of <math>A</math>, i.e., it is the sum <math>\sum_{i=1}^m \sum_{j=1}^n |a_{ij}|^2</math>.
# It is the sum of squares of the moduli of the entries of <math>A</math>, i.e., it is the sum <math>\sum_{i=1}^m \sum_{j=1}^n |a_{ij}|^2</math>.
# It is the trace of the matrix <math>AA^*</math>.
# It is the trace of the matrix <math>AA^*</math> where <math>A^*</math> is the [[matrix conjugate transpose]] of <math>A</math>.
# It is the trace of the matrix <math>A^*A</math>.
# It is the trace of the matrix <math>A^*A</math> where <math>A^*</math> is the [[matrix conjugate transpose]] of <math>A</math>.

Revision as of 16:35, 9 May 2014

Definition

For a matrix with real entries

Suppose are positive integers and is a matrix. The Frobenius norm of , denoted , can be defined in the following equivalent ways:

  1. It is the sum of squares of all the entries of , i.e., it is the sum .
  2. It is the trace of the matrix , where is the matrix transpose of .
  3. It is the trace of the matrix , where is the matrix transpose of .

The Frobenius norm is invariant under orthogonal transformations (and in particular, under rotations) and is an easy-to-compute invariant.

For a matrix with complex entries

Suppose are positive integers and is a matrix. The Frobenius norm of , denoted , can be defined in the following equivalent ways:

  1. It is the sum of squares of the moduli of the entries of , i.e., it is the sum .
  2. It is the trace of the matrix where is the matrix conjugate transpose of .
  3. It is the trace of the matrix where is the matrix conjugate transpose of .