Skew-Hermitian
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
An by
complex or real matrix
is said to be anti-Hermitian, skew-Hermitian, or said to represent a skew-adjoint operator, or to be a skew-adjoint matrix, on the complex or real
dimensional space
, if its adjoint is the negative of itself: :
.
Note that the adjoint of an operator depends on the scalar product considered on the dimensional complex or real space
. If
denotes the scalar product on
, then saying
is skew-adjoint means that for all
one has
In the particular case of the canonical scalar products on , the matrix of a skew-adjoint operator satisfies
for all
.
Imaginary numbers can be thought of as skew-adjoint (since they are like 1-by-1 matrices), whereas real numbers correspond to self-adjoint operators.