What Is the Correct Way to Calculate the Inverse of a 3x3 Matrix?

Click For Summary
To calculate the inverse of a 3x3 matrix, one must use the adjoint method rather than simply multiplying the matrix by the reciprocal of its determinant. The adjoint is found by calculating the cofactors for each element and then transposing the resulting matrix. In the case of matrix A, the determinant is 1, and the cofactors lead to the adjoint matrix. Dividing the adjoint by the determinant yields the correct inverse, confirming that the initial misunderstanding stemmed from confusing the matrix with its adjoint. Understanding these steps is crucial for accurately finding the inverse of larger matrices.
mr_coffee
Messages
1,613
Reaction score
1
Hello everyone, i have no idea why i can't grasp this simple concept...
i have:
A =
1 4 9
0 1 9
0 0 1


I have to find A^-1, A inverse.
So I found the determinant along row 3,
1*det(B) = 1;
B =
1 4
0 1
det(B) = (1)(1) - (4)(0) = 1;
so i take 1/det * A now wouldn't that just be A itself?
When i submitted the answer
A inverse =
1 4 9
0 1 9
0 0 1

it said,
Entered Answer Preview Result
1 1 correct
4 4 incorrect
9 9 incorrect
0 0 correct
1 1 correct
9 9 incorrect
0 0 correct
0 0 correct
1 1 correct
 
Physics news on Phys.org
simply write the matrix [A|I] and row-reduce until you get [I|A^-1]
 
thats a harder method, he taught us that one, he is showing us a new way, by multiplying the adjoint by 1/determinant, ur way will work but its very time consuming.
 
mr_coffee said:
so i take 1/det * A now wouldn't that just be A itself?

No, it's the adjoint of A you have to multiply, not A...
 
how do u find the adjoint of A if its more t hen a 2x2?
I know how to find it if its a 2x2, by negating the b and c, and switching the a and d. But how would i find the adjoint of a 3 x3?
 
mr_coffee said:
how do u find the adjoint of A if its more t hen a 2x2?
I know how to find it if its a 2x2, by negating the b and c, and switching the a and d. But how would i find the adjoint of a 3 x3?

Check your other thread :smile:
 
You start by knowing the definition of "adjoint"!
The "i,j" entry in the adjoint is the "cofactor" of the "j,i" entry in the original matrix.
The "cofactor" of an "j,i" entry is the determinant of the matrix formed by dropping the row and column that entry is in, times 1 or -1 depending on the parity of i+j.
When you have more experience, especially with larger order matrices than "2 by 2", you will realize that "row reduction" is far easier!
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Thanks everyone! :)
 
Ivy... Say you have a huge matrix, your allowed to use ur calculator, wouldn't it be easier to find the determinant, because a calcualtor can do that quite easily, rather then row reducing?
 
  • #10
Matrix Inversion

So, letting matrix A =A

A= 1 4 9
0 1 9
0 0 1

The Determinant of A = 1

Taking the cofactors of A:
c(1,1) = '+' * determinant of | 1 9 |
| 0 1 |
= 1*1 - 0*9 = +1 (indicating positive 1)

c(1,2) = '-' * determinant of | 0 9 |
| 0 1 |
= '-' 0 = 0

Following the same logic ie + - + - + - + , etc till c(3,3)
The cofactors in matrix form are:
| 1 0 0 |
| -4 1 0 |
| 27 -9 1 |

Switching the rows with columns:

| 1 -4 27|
| 0 1 -9 |
| 0 0 1 |

Then dividing by the determinant of A:

| 1 -4 27|
| 0 1 -9 |
| 0 0 1 |

gives you the inverse of A

Checking with my handy dandy TI89

It checks out!
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
12
Views
2K
  • · Replies 9 ·
Replies
9
Views
4K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
1K
Replies
6
Views
2K
  • · Replies 17 ·
Replies
17
Views
2K
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • · Replies 6 ·
Replies
6
Views
3K
Replies
6
Views
2K
  • · Replies 9 ·
Replies
9
Views
2K