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1: 1.3 Determinants, Linear Operators, and Spectral Expansions
§1.3(i) Determinants: Elementary Properties
Relationships Between Determinants
§1.3(ii) Special Determinants
Vandermonde Determinant or Vandermondian
Cauchy Determinant
2: 24.14 Sums
These identities can be regarded as higher-order recurrences. Let det [ a r + s ] denote a Hankel (or persymmetric) determinant, that is, an ( n + 1 ) × ( n + 1 ) determinant with element a r + s in row r and column s for r , s = 0 , 1 , , n . …
24.14.11 det [ B r + s ] = ( 1 ) n ( n + 1 ) / 2 ( k = 1 n k ! ) 6 / ( k = 1 2 n + 1 k ! ) ,
24.14.12 det [ E r + s ] = ( 1 ) n ( n + 1 ) / 2 ( k = 1 n k ! ) 2 .
3: 21.5 Modular Transformations
21.5.3 det 𝚪 = 1 ,
21.5.4 θ ( [ [ 𝐂 𝛀 + 𝐃 ] 1 ] T 𝐳 | [ 𝐀 𝛀 + 𝐁 ] [ 𝐂 𝛀 + 𝐃 ] 1 ) = ξ ( 𝚪 ) det [ 𝐂 𝛀 + 𝐃 ] e π i 𝐳 [ [ 𝐂 𝛀 + 𝐃 ] 1 𝐂 ] 𝐳 θ ( 𝐳 | 𝛀 ) .
θ ( 𝛀 1 𝐳 | 𝛀 1 ) = det [ i 𝛀 ] e π i 𝐳 𝛀 1 𝐳 θ ( 𝐳 | 𝛀 ) ,
21.5.9 θ [ 𝐃 𝜶 𝐂 𝜷 + 1 2 diag [ 𝐂 𝐃 T ] 𝐁 𝜶 + 𝐀 𝜷 + 1 2 diag [ 𝐀 𝐁 T ] ] ( [ [ 𝐂 𝛀 + 𝐃 ] 1 ] T 𝐳 | [ 𝐀 𝛀 + 𝐁 ] [ 𝐂 𝛀 + 𝐃 ] 1 ) = κ ( 𝜶 , 𝜷 , 𝚪 ) det [ 𝐂 𝛀 + 𝐃 ] e π i 𝐳 [ [ 𝐂 𝛀 + 𝐃 ] 1 𝐂 ] 𝐳 θ [ 𝜶 𝜷 ] ( 𝐳 | 𝛀 ) ,
4: 1.2 Elementary Algebra
The Determinant
The matrix 𝐀 has a determinant, det ( 𝐀 ) , explored further in §1.3, denoted, in full index form, as …where det ( 𝐀 ) is defined by the Leibniz formula … A square matrix 𝑨 is singular if det ( 𝐀 ) = 0 , otherwise it is non-singular. …
Relation of Eigenvalues to the Determinant and Trace
5: 1.1 Special Notation
x , y real variables.
det ( 𝐀 ) determinant of the square matrix 𝐀
6: 19.31 Probability Distributions
19.31.2 n ( 𝐱 T 𝐀 𝐱 ) μ exp ( 𝐱 T 𝐁 𝐱 ) d x 1 d x n = π n / 2 Γ ( μ + 1 2 n ) det 𝐁 Γ ( 1 2 n ) R μ ( 1 2 , , 1 2 ; λ 1 , , λ n ) , μ > 1 2 n .
7: 3.9 Acceleration of Convergence
3.9.9 t n , 2 k = H k + 1 ( s n ) H k ( Δ 2 s n ) , n = 0 , 1 , 2 , ,
where H m is the Hankel determinant
3.9.10 H m ( u n ) = | u n u n + 1 u n + m 1 u n + 1 u n + 2 u n + m u n + m 1 u n + m u n + 2 m 2 | .
The ratio of the Hankel determinants in (3.9.9) can be computed recursively by Wynn’s epsilon algorithm: …
8: 32.8 Rational Solutions
P II P VI  possess hierarchies of rational solutions for special values of the parameters which are generated from “seed solutions” using the Bäcklund transformations and often can be expressed in the form of determinants. … where τ n ( z ) is the n × n Wronskian determinantFor determinantal representations see Kajiwara and Masuda (1999). … For determinantal representations see Kajiwara and Ohta (1998) and Noumi and Yamada (1999). … For determinantal representations see Masuda et al. (2002). …
9: 32.10 Special Function Solutions
where τ n ( z ) is the n × n Wronskian determinantFor determinantal representations see Forrester and Witte (2002) and Okamoto (1987c). … For determinantal representations see Forrester and Witte (2001) and Okamoto (1986). … For determinantal representations see Forrester and Witte (2002), Masuda (2004), and Okamoto (1987b). … For determinantal representations see Forrester and Witte (2004) and Masuda (2004). …
10: 1.11 Zeros of Polynomials
D 2 = | a 1 a 3 a 0 a 2 | ,
D 3 = | a 1 a 3 a 5 a 0 a 2 a 4 0 a 1 a 3 | ,
1.11.26 D k = det [ h k ( 1 ) , h k ( 3 ) , , h k ( 2 k 1 ) ] ,