To get dominant eigen vector
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In Matlab/Octave, [A B] = eig(C) returns a matrix of eigen vectors and a diagonal matrix of eigen values of C. Even though the values may be theoretically real, these are given to be complex with very low imaginary values. Due to this, the eigen values are not put in a decreasing order. Hence to find the eigen vectors corresponding to dominant eigen values, some calculations are required, which take up processing time in a big loop. Is there a remedy to this to find dominant eigen vectors?
3 Comments
Bjorn Gustavsson
on 28 Aug 2011
I can't for the life of me believe that finding the largest few real eigenvalues (or the eigenvalues with the larges magnitude or whatever sorting you might need to do on the eigenvalue matrix) might be all that computational intensive compared to the calculations of the eigen-decomposition. That surely has to be a very minor time wasted on doing something like:
[EigvSorted,idx4ES] = sort(diag(real(EigV)));
Pannir Selvam Elamvazhuthi
on 29 Aug 2011
Pannir Selvam Elamvazhuthi
on 29 Aug 2011
Accepted Answer
More Answers (2)
Riley Manfull
on 9 Feb 2018
4 votes
[A,B]=eigs(C,1)
1 Comment
Savas Erdim
on 6 Apr 2021
That worked very well. Thank you Riley!
Christine Tobler
on 12 May 2017
I realize this is an old post, but this might be helpful to others:
One reason for EIG to return complex values with very small imaginary part, could be that A is very close to, but not exactly, symmetric. In this case,
[U, D] = eig( ( A + A')/2 );
will make EIG treat the input as symmetric, and always return real eigenvalues.
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