In mathematics, Fischer's inequality gives an upper bound for the determinant of a positive-semidefinite matrix whose entries are complex numbers in terms of the determinants of its principal diagonal blocks. Suppose A, C are respectively p×p, q×q positive-semidefinite complex matrices and B is a p×q complex matrix.Let
M:=\left[\begin{matrix}A&B\ B*&C\end{matrix}\right]
Then Fischer's inequality states that
\det(M)\le\det(A)\det(C).
Assume that A and C are positive-definite. We have
A-1
C-1
D:=\left[\begin{matrix}A&0\ 0&C\end{matrix}\right].
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D |
M
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D |
=\left[\begin{matrix}
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A |
&0\ 0&
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C |
\end{matrix}\right]\left[\begin{matrix}A&B\ B*&C\end{matrix}\right]\left[\begin{matrix}
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A |
&0\ 0&
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C |
\end{matrix}\right]=\left[\begin{matrix}Ip&
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A |
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BC |
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\ C |
B*A
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&Iq\end{matrix}\right]
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D |
M
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D |
\det
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(D |
M
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D |
)\le\left({1\overp+q}tr
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(D |
M
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D |
)\right)p+q=1p+q=1.
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\begin{align} \det(D |
)\det(M)
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\det(D |
)\le1\\ \Longrightarrow\det(M)\le\det(D)=\det(A)\det(C). \end{align}
For
\varepsilon>0
A+\varepsilonIp
C+\varepsilonIq
\det(M+\varepsilonIp+q)\le\det(A+\varepsilonIp)\det(C+\varepsilonIq).
Taking the limit as
\varepsilon → 0
If M can be partitioned in square blocks Mij, then the following inequality by Thompson is valid:[1]
\det(M)\leq\det([\det(Mij)])
where [det(''M<sub>ij</sub>'')] is the matrix whose (i,j) entry is det(Mij).
In particular, if the block matrices B and C are also square matrices, then the following inequality by Everett is valid:[2]
\det(M)\le\det\begin{bmatrix}\det(A)&&\det(B)\ \det(B*)&&\det(C)\end{bmatrix}
Thompson's inequality can also be generalized by an inequality in terms of the coefficients of the characteristic polynomial of the block matrices. Expressing the characteristic polynomial of the matrix A as
pA(t)=
n | |
\sum | |
k=0 |
tn-k(-1)k\operatorname{tr}(ΛkA)
and supposing that the blocks Mij are m x m matrices, the following inequality by Lin and Zhang is valid:[3]
\det(M)\le\left(
\det([\operatorname{tr | |
(Λ |
rMij]))}{\binom{m}r}
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\right) |
, r=1,\ldots,m
Note that if r = m, then this inequality is identical to Thompson's inequality.