Quadratic Forms - Maple Help
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Quadratic Forms

Main Concept

Let A be an  symmetric matrix with real entries , and let  be an  column vector of the form . Therefore,   is said to be the quadratic form of A.

The expansion of

        

                   

        

        

 

A quadratic form, Q, and its corresponding symmetric matrix, A, can be classified as follows:

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Positive definite if  for all

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Positive semi-definite if  for all  and  for some

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Negative definite if  for all

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Negative semi-definite if  for all  and  for some

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Indefinite if  for some  and  for some other .

 

Graphical Representation

If  has only two elements, , then we can graphically represent the quadratic form, , as a function .  This is shown in the plot below.

This also allows us to visually determine the classification of the  symmetric matrix A as:

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Positive definite if  is bounded below by  and intersects this plane at only a single point,

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Positive semi-definite if  is bounded below by  and intersects this plane along a straight line.

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Negative definite if  is bounded above by  and intersects this plane at only a single point,

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Negative semi-definite if  is bounded above by  and intersects this plane along a straight line.

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Indefinite if  lies above  for some values of  and below  for other values of , thereby intersecting this plane along a curve which is not a straight line.

Application in Multivariable Calculus

Using quadratic forms to classify matrices as definite, semi-definite, or indefinite can be useful in performing the multivariable second derivative test.

Let  have continuous second partial derivatives in some neighborhood of a critical point  and let  be the Hessian matrix of  evaluated at .

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If  is positive definite, then  is a local minimum.

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If  is negative definite, then  is a local maximum.

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If  is indefinite, then  is a saddle point.

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If is positive semi-definite or negative semi-definite, then the second derivative test is inconclusive as to the nature of the point

 

Change the values in the symmetric matrix, A, and observe how the plot and formula of its quadratic form, , change in response. The 3-D plot below can be rotated for visual representation.

 

Try to find a 2 × 2 symmetric matrix of each type: positive definite, positive semi-definite, negative definite, negative semi-definite, and indefinite.

 

 

 

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