A202872 Array: row n shows the coefficients of the characteristic polynomial of the n-th principal submatrix of the symmetric matrix A202871; by antidiagonals.
1, -1, 1, -11, 1, 1, -46, 37, -1, 1, -181, 298, -112, 1, 1, -716, 1784, -1368, 308, -1, 1, -2851, 9495, -11119, 5286, -828, 1, 1, -11386, 47431, -74940, 55235, -18546, 2189, -1, 1, -45521, 227592, -453206, 455080, -239360, 61185, -5759
Offset: 1
Examples
The 1st principal submatrix (ps) of A202871 is {{1}} (using Mathematica matrix notation), with p(1)=1-x and zero-set {1}. ... The 2nd ps is {{1,3},{3,10}}, with p(2)=1-11x+x^2 and zero-set {0.091..., 10.908...}. ... The 3rd ps is {{1,3,4},{3,10,15},{4,15,26}}, with p(3)=1-46x+37x^2-x^3 and zero-set {0.022..., 1.265..., 35.712...}. ... Top of the array: 1...-1 1...-11....1 1...-46....37....-1 1...-181...298...-112...1
Links
- S.-G. Hwang, Cauchy's interlace theorem for eigenvalues of Hermitian matrices, American Mathematical Monthly 111 (2004) 157-159.
- A. Mercer and P. Mercer, Cauchy's interlace theorem and lower bounds for the spectral radius, International Journal of Mathematics and Mathematical Sciences 23, no. 8 (2000) 563-566.
Programs
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Mathematica
f[k_] := LucasL[k]; U[n_] := NestList[Most[Prepend[#, 0]] &, #, Length[#] - 1] &[Table[f[k], {k, 1, n}]]; L[n_] := Transpose[U[n]]; F[n_] := CharacteristicPolynomial[L[n].U[n], x]; c[n_] := CoefficientList[F[n], x] TableForm[Flatten[Table[F[n], {n, 1, 10}]]] Table[c[n], {n, 1, 12}] Flatten[%] TableForm[Table[c[n], {n, 1, 10}]]
Comments