Nearby Words

Eigenvector

[ahy-guhn-vek-ter]

ei·gen·vec·tor

[ahy-guhn-vek-ter]
noun Mathematics.

Origin:
1955–60; < German Eigenvektor
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2012.
Cite This Source Link To Eigenvector

:10

:09

:08

:07

:06

:05

:04

:03

:02

:01

Eigenvector is always a great word to know.
So is divisible. Does it mean:
a system of calculation based on the properties of numbers; the discussion of a problem by algebra consisting of calculus and its higher developments
capable of being evenly divided, without remainder
Collins
World English Dictionary
eigenvector (ˈaɪɡənˌvɛktə)
 
n
maths, physics a vector x satisfying an equation Ax = λx, where A is a square matrix and λ is a constant

Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 10th Edition
2009 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009
Cite This Source
FOLDOC
Computing Dictionary

eigenvector definition

mathematics
A vector which, when acted on by a particular linear transformation, produces a scalar multiple of the original vector. The scalar in question is called the eigenvalue corresponding to this eigenvector.
It should be noted that "vector" here means "element of a vector space" which can include many mathematical entities. Ordinary vectors are elements of a vector space, and multiplication by a matrix is a linear transformation on them; smooth functions "are vectors", and many partial differential operators are linear transformations on the space of such functions; quantum-mechanical states "are vectors", and observables are linear transformations on the state space.
An important theorem says, roughly, that certain linear transformations have enough eigenvectors that they form a basis of the whole vector states. This is why Fourier analysis works, and why in quantum mechanics every state is a superposition of eigenstates of observables.
An eigenvector is a (representative member of a) fixed point of the map on the projective plane induced by a linear map.
(1996-09-27)

The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, © Denis Howe 2010 http://foldoc.org
Cite This Source
Dictionary.com, LLC. Copyright © 2012. All rights reserved.
  • Please Login or Sign Up to use the Recent Searches feature