HP 49g+ User Manual

Page 361

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Page 11-39

To see the intermediate steps in calculating and inverse, just enter the matrix
A from above, and press Y, while keeping the step-by-step option active in
the calculator’s CAS. Use the following:

[[ 1,2,3],[3,-2,1],[4,2,-1]] `Y


After going through the different steps, the solution returned is:


What the calculator showed was not exactly a Gauss-Jordan elimination with
full pivoting, but a way to calculate the inverse of a matrix by performing a
Gauss-Jordan elimination, without pivoting. This procedure for calculating
the inverse is based on the augmented matrix (

A

aug

)

n

×

n

= [

A

n

×

n

|

I

n

×

n

].


The calculator showed you the steps up to the point in which the left-hand half
of the augmented matrix has been converted to a diagonal matrix. From
there, the final step is to divide each row by the corresponding main diagonal
pivot. In other words, the calculator has transformed (

A

aug

)

n

×

n

= [

A

n

×

n

|

I

n

×

n

],

into [

I |A

-1

].


Inverse matrices and determinants
Notice that all the elements in the inverse matrix calculated above are divided
by the value 56 or one of its factors (28, 7, 8, 4 or 1). If you calculate the
determinant of the matrix

A, you get det(A) = 56.

We could write,

A

-1

=

C/det(A), where C is the matrix

.

8

6

14

8

13

7

8

8

0

=

C


The result (

A

-1

)

n

×

n

=

C

n

×

n

/det(A

n

×

n

), is a general result that applies to any non-

singular matrix

A. A general form for the elements of C can be written based

on the Gauss-Jordan algorithm.

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