Bisymmetric matrix

Symmetry pattern of a bisymmetric 5 × 5 matrix

In mathematics, a bisymmetric matrix is a square matrix that is symmetric about both of its main diagonals. More precisely, an n × n matrix A is bisymmetric if it satisfies both A = AT (it is its own transpose), and AJ = JA, where J is the n × n exchange matrix.

For example, any matrix of the form

is bisymmetric. The associated exchange matrix for this example is

Properties

  • Bisymmetric matrices are both symmetric centrosymmetric and symmetric persymmetric.
  • The product of two bisymmetric matrices is a centrosymmetric matrix.
  • Real-valued bisymmetric matrices are precisely those symmetric matrices whose eigenvalues remain the same aside from possible sign changes following pre- or post-multiplication by the exchange matrix.
  • If A is a real bisymmetric matrix with distinct eigenvalues, then the matrices that commute with A must be bisymmetric.
  • The inverse of bisymmetric matrices can be represented by recurrence formulas.

References


Uses material from the Wikipedia article Bisymmetric matrix, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.