- #1
karen03grae
- 79
- 0
Eigenvectors + Me= ?AHHHHHHHHHHH
I am really trying to understand Eigenvectors but you have to understand that my prof. only teaches about HOW to get the eigenvalues/vectors and how to use then to solve diff. eqs.
So far I can find the eigenvalues of a 2x2 and from there I can get the eigenvectors. And I can also take a coupled system of differential equations and decouple them using X=CY where C is the eigenvector matrix. Anyways, besides the definition Av=rv (where A is the coefficient matrix of the system and r is the matrix of eigenvectors) I have no idea what an eigenvector is. If I could SEE an eigenvector on a graph I think I would be much more enlightened. But here are some questions that may also do the trick:
1. What does an eigenvector look like (i.e. direction, what coordinate system would it belong on)?
2. How is an eigenvector different from regular vectors?
3. I checked out a book on linear algebra and on one example it gives a system of equations with matrix form
[x] [2 3]= [0]
[y] [4 -1]= [0]
It says that
[x] is a vector AND [2] is a vector! How? What is the
[y]......[3]
direction of
[2]? It has a magnitude, but by itself, where would it
[3]
go on a graph? Thanks
I am really trying to understand Eigenvectors but you have to understand that my prof. only teaches about HOW to get the eigenvalues/vectors and how to use then to solve diff. eqs.
So far I can find the eigenvalues of a 2x2 and from there I can get the eigenvectors. And I can also take a coupled system of differential equations and decouple them using X=CY where C is the eigenvector matrix. Anyways, besides the definition Av=rv (where A is the coefficient matrix of the system and r is the matrix of eigenvectors) I have no idea what an eigenvector is. If I could SEE an eigenvector on a graph I think I would be much more enlightened. But here are some questions that may also do the trick:
1. What does an eigenvector look like (i.e. direction, what coordinate system would it belong on)?
2. How is an eigenvector different from regular vectors?
3. I checked out a book on linear algebra and on one example it gives a system of equations with matrix form
[x] [2 3]= [0]
[y] [4 -1]= [0]
It says that
[x] is a vector AND [2] is a vector! How? What is the
[y]......[3]
direction of
[2]? It has a magnitude, but by itself, where would it
[3]
go on a graph? Thanks