Don't shoot the messenger
Sangoku said:
i can vaguely understand the concept , a NOn-linear system (Polyomial) solution can be obtained if its Hyperdeterminant is non-vanishing or similar
I have no idea what you mean by "nonlinear system (polynomial) solution". The point of my post was to urge you to rethink what you are looking for, if only so that you can restate your question so that we can (perhaps) help you answer it.
I sense you are frustrated that I am throwing questions back at you; maybe you didn't understand what I meant, so let me try again. Your questions don't make sense unless you define your terms. Indeed, your real question seems to be "what are the definitions of my terms?"
I don't know either, and in fact I was trying to get you to discover why no creature with all the properties you demand may exist at all. To find out, I suggest that if you think hard about questions like the following you may be able to start answering your own questions:
Sangoku said:
An Hypermatrix can be Diagonalized / Diagonal by 'Hyperblocks'
After reviewing the definitions and formal properties of matrix, block, diagonalization of a matrix, ask yourself: what do you mean by hypermatrix? Hyperblock? Diagonalization of a hypermatrix? What formal properties if any do you demand that these things possess?
Sangoku said:
There exist a Charasteristic Polynomial of an Hypermatrix
After reviewing the definition and properties of characteristic polynomial of a matrix, ask yourself: what do you mean by characteristic polynomial of a hypermatrix? What properties if any do you demand that these things possess?
Sangoku said:
As i pointed above perhaps we can define the 'Eigenvalues' (in any case) as the numbers that make the Hyperdeterminant of A_{íjkl}-\lambda I_{ijkl} so 'I? is the identity matrix with diagonal terms equal to 1 and 0 elsewhere
After reviewing the definition and formal properties of eigenvalues, eigenvectors of a matrix, identity matrix, ask yourself: what do you mean by eigenvalues, eigenvectors of a hypermatrix, identity hypermatrix? What properties if any do you demand that these things possess?
Sangoku said:
There is an analogue to 'Fredholm alternative theorem' with Non-linear equations of the form g(x)+f(x)=\lambda\int_{a}^{b}dyK(y,x)(f^{2}(y)+f(y))
After reviewing the statement, proof, and some applications of the version of the Fredholm alternative theorem which you have in mind, and after noting down how the other concepts you have mentioned enter in, formulate and try to answer questions similar to those I suggested above.
Did you notice that you used the word "hyperdeterminant" again, but at this point you do not know how you want to define this term? We can't possibly answer your question without knowing the definition you have in mind, can we? I've already pointed out that the definition you saw at mathworld is probably not the one you want, and I am suggesting that there simply may not be anything with all the properties you appear to demand, except perhaps if you come up with a much more sophisticated definition of
hypermatrix than what you found at mathworld.
Sangoku said:
i have taken a look to 'Mathworld' and understood basic idea but i would need to know if there is a method to develop the Hyperdeterminant of Hypermatrix (in more than 2 dimension)
Just noticed something: you appear to be confusing
dimension of a vector space with
rank of a tensor. I have to ask: are you really sure you "understand the basic idea"?
Sangoku said:
Yes, HIllman.. but unfortunately Algebra is not my forte
And yet you are throwing around terms like "characteristic polynomial", "hyperdeterminant", "eigenvalue", "Fredholm alternative"?
I am not sure what you are objecting to. The suggestion that you look up a paper by Gelfand et al? The suggestion that (if you are unable or unwilling to find what you need in the literature) you must figure out for yourself what you are looking for, and be prepared to prove for yourself that it doesn't exist (if in fact it does not exist)? Only you can decide what properties you are willing to give up if necessary in order to concoct a "hyperdeterminant" possessing the properties you really need (if this is even possible).