eig and zero eigenvalues

I am working with a Laplacian matrix, L, and my understanding is that 0 will always be an eigenvalue of L with an algebraic multiplicity of at least 1. However, when I take
L = [2 -1 -1 0 0; 0 2 -1 -1 0; 0 0 2 -1 -1; -1 0 0 2 -1; -1 -1 0 0 2]
and compute eig(L), the result displays as
0.0000
2.5000 + 1.5388i
2.5000 - 1.5388i
2.5000 + 0.3633i
2.5000 - 0.3633i
but nnz(e) gives 5, and e > eps gives [1 1 1 1 1].
How do I get MATLAB to produce or recognize a truly 0 first/smallest eigenvalue? On my machine (MacBook Pro, OS X (10.6.8), MATLAB 7.12.0 (R2011a)), eps = 2.2204e-16 and that "zero" eigenvalue is actually 4.0392e-16.
I am interested in the algebraic multiplicity of the 0 eigenvalue and the smallest non-zero eigenvalue.

 Risposta accettata

Titus Edelhofer
Titus Edelhofer il 4 Lug 2011
Hi,
your test is slightly wrong:
abs(e)>eps
ans =
0
1
1
1
1
Titus

5 Commenti

Matt
Matt il 4 Lug 2011
I still get [1 1 1 1 1] when I try abs(e) > eps.
Titus Edelhofer
Titus Edelhofer il 4 Lug 2011
Hi Matt,
sorry, I did not read your post carefully enough. On my machine I got -6e-17 as the first entry (smaller then eps). The test needs to be somewhat more careful:
abs(e)>eps(2)
because you have values of 2 on your diagonal. Then it should work.
Titus
Matt
Matt il 4 Lug 2011
Ah, there we go. That works for me now.
Since values of 2 on my diagonal mean I need to compare to eps(2), would a max value of k on my diagonal mean I need to compare to eps(k)? Or equivalently, determine ((1.0/k)*e) > eps?
Titus Edelhofer
Titus Edelhofer il 4 Lug 2011
Hi Matt,
what the "exact" factor would be, I don't know (L_inf norm of L, L_2 norm of L, something like that). Using norm(L, inf) should be a good value.
Titus
Matt
Matt il 4 Lug 2011
Hi Titus,
That's working well. Thanks.

Accedi per commentare.

Più risposte (0)

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by