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Wild problem

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In the mathematical areas of linear algebra and representation theory, a problem is wild if it contains the problem of classifying pairs of square matrices up to simultaneous similarity. Examples of wild problems are classifying indecomposable representations of any quiver that is neither a Dynkin quiver (i.e. the underlying undirected graph of the quiver is a (finite) Dynkin diagram) nor a Euclidean quiver (i.e., the underlying undirected graph of the quiver is an affine Dynkin diagram).

Necessary and sufficient conditions have been proposed to check the simultaneously block triangularization and diagonalization of a finite set of matrices under the assumption that each matrix is diagonalizable over the field of the complex numbers.

See also

References

  1. Nazarova, L. A. (1974), "Representations of partially ordered sets of infinite type", Funkcional'nyi Analiz i ego Priloženija, 8 (4): 93–94, MR 0354455
  2. Gabriel, P.; Nazarova, L. A.; Roĭter, A. V.; Sergeĭchuk, V. V.; Vossieck, D. (1993), "Tame and wild subspace problems", Akademīya Nauk Ukraïni, 45 (3): 313–352, doi:10.1007/BF01061008, MR 1238674, S2CID 122603779
  3. Shavarovskiĭ, B. Z. (2004), "On some "tame" and "wild" aspects of the problem of semiscalar equivalence of polynomial matrices", Matematicheskie Zametki, 76 (1): 119–132, doi:10.1023/B:MATN.0000036747.26055.cb, MR 2099848, S2CID 120324840
  4. Drozd, Yuriy A.; Golovashchuk, Natalia S.; Zembyk, Vasyl V. (2017), "Representations of nodal algebras of type E", Algebra and Discrete Mathematics, 23 (1): 16–34, hdl:123456789/155928, MR 3634499
  5. Mesbahi, Afshin; Haeri, Mohammad (2015), "Conditions on decomposing linear systems with more than one matrix to block triangular or diagonal form", IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, 60 (1): 233–239, doi:10.1109/TAC.2014.2326292, MR 3299432, S2CID 27053281


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