Return the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of a complex Hermitian (conjugate symmetric) or a real symmetric matrix.
Returns two objects, a 1-D array containing the eigenvalues of a, and a 2-D square array or matrix (depending on the input type) of the corresponding eigenvectors (in columns).
Hermitian or real symmetric matrices whose eigenvalues and eigenvectors are to be computed.
Specifies whether the calculation is done with the lower triangular part of a (‘L’, default) or the upper triangular part (‘U’). Irrespective of this value only the real parts of the diagonal will be considered in the computation to preserve the notion of a Hermitian matrix. It therefore follows that the imaginary part of the diagonal will always be treated as zero.
The eigenvalues in ascending order, each repeated according to its multiplicity.
The column eigenvectors[:, i] is the normalized eigenvector corresponding to the eigenvalue eigenvalues[i]. Will return a matrix object if a is a matrix object.
If the eigenvalue computation does not converge.
See also
eigvalsheigenvalues of real symmetric or complex Hermitian (conjugate symmetric) arrays.
eigeigenvalues and right eigenvectors for non-symmetric arrays.
eigvalseigenvalues of non-symmetric arrays.
scipy.linalg.eighSimilar function in SciPy (but also solves the generalized eigenvalue problem).
Broadcasting rules apply, see the numpy.linalg documentation for details.
The eigenvalues/eigenvectors are computed using LAPACK routines _syevd, _heevd.
The eigenvalues of real symmetric or complex Hermitian matrices are always real. [1] The array eigenvalues of (column) eigenvectors is unitary and a, eigenvalues, and eigenvectors satisfy the equations dot(a,
eigenvectors[:, i]) = eigenvalues[i] * eigenvectors[:, i].
G. Strang, Linear Algebra and Its Applications, 2nd Ed., Orlando, FL, Academic Press, Inc., 1980, pg. 222.
>>> import numpy as np
>>> from numpy import linalg as LA
>>> a = np.array([[1, -2j], [2j, 5]])
>>> a
array([[ 1.+0.j, -0.-2.j],
[ 0.+2.j, 5.+0.j]])
>>> eigenvalues, eigenvectors = LA.eigh(a)
>>> eigenvalues
array([0.17157288, 5.82842712])
>>> eigenvectors
array([[-0.92387953+0.j , -0.38268343+0.j ], # may vary
[ 0. +0.38268343j, 0. -0.92387953j]])
>>> (np.dot(a, eigenvectors[:, 0]) - ... eigenvalues[0] * eigenvectors[:, 0]) # verify 1st eigenval/vec pair array([5.55111512e-17+0.0000000e+00j, 0.00000000e+00+1.2490009e-16j]) >>> (np.dot(a, eigenvectors[:, 1]) - ... eigenvalues[1] * eigenvectors[:, 1]) # verify 2nd eigenval/vec pair array([0.+0.j, 0.+0.j])
>>> A = np.matrix(a) # what happens if input is a matrix object
>>> A
matrix([[ 1.+0.j, -0.-2.j],
[ 0.+2.j, 5.+0.j]])
>>> eigenvalues, eigenvectors = LA.eigh(A)
>>> eigenvalues
array([0.17157288, 5.82842712])
>>> eigenvectors
matrix([[-0.92387953+0.j , -0.38268343+0.j ], # may vary
[ 0. +0.38268343j, 0. -0.92387953j]])
>>> # demonstrate the treatment of the imaginary part of the diagonal
>>> a = np.array([[5+2j, 9-2j], [0+2j, 2-1j]])
>>> a
array([[5.+2.j, 9.-2.j],
[0.+2.j, 2.-1.j]])
>>> # with UPLO='L' this is numerically equivalent to using LA.eig() with:
>>> b = np.array([[5.+0.j, 0.-2.j], [0.+2.j, 2.-0.j]])
>>> b
array([[5.+0.j, 0.-2.j],
[0.+2.j, 2.+0.j]])
>>> wa, va = LA.eigh(a)
>>> wb, vb = LA.eig(b)
>>> wa
array([1., 6.])
>>> wb
array([6.+0.j, 1.+0.j])
>>> va
array([[-0.4472136 +0.j , -0.89442719+0.j ], # may vary
[ 0. +0.89442719j, 0. -0.4472136j ]])
>>> vb
array([[ 0.89442719+0.j , -0. +0.4472136j],
[-0. +0.4472136j, 0.89442719+0.j ]])
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