ON AUTOMORPHISMS OF THE ORDER STRUCTURE ON THE SET OF MATRIX NORMS
Unknown
Submitted 1966-01-01 | SovietRxiv: ru-196601.64201 | Translated from Russian

Abstract Generated abstract

This paper studies order-preserving automorphisms of the partially ordered set of submultiplicative norms on the ring of real square matrices of fixed order. It extends the setting to generalized norms associated with subrings, then analyzes the induced action on minimal one-dimensional subrings, rank-one matrices, and diagonalizable subrings. The main result gives a complete description of the automorphism group: every automorphism is induced either by similarity transformation of matrices or by similarity after transposition. The proof reduces the general case through invariance and comparison properties of generalized norms, including norms finite on rank-one and diagonal subrings.

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MATHEMATICS

G. R. BELITSKII

ON AUTOMORPHISMS OF THE ORDER STRUCTURE ON THE SET OF MATRIX NORMS

(Presented by Academician S. N. Bernstein on 21 V 1965)

Let \(\mathfrak M_p\) denote the ring of real square matrices of order \(p\), and let \(\mathfrak N_p\) denote the ordered (partially) set of norms\(^*\) in \(\mathfrak M_p\). The structure \(\mathfrak N_p\) has already been considered in the works \((^{1,2})\). Here we shall undertake its further study.

We shall call an automorphism of the structure \(\mathfrak N_p\) a mapping of the set \(\mathfrak N_p\) onto itself that preserves the order relation. An example of an automorphism is the mapping \(\varphi_u\), which assigns to each norm \(n(A)\) the norm \(\varphi_u n(A)=n(UAU^{-1})\), and also the mapping \(\varphi_u^*\): \(\varphi_u^* n(A)=n(UA'U^{-1})\), where \(U\) is any nonsingular matrix and the prime denotes transposition.

Theorem. The structure \(\mathfrak N_p\) has no automorphisms other than \(\varphi_u\) and \(\varphi_u^*\).

Thus we have a complete description of the automorphism group of the structure \(\mathfrak N_p\).

Before outlining the scheme of the proof, let us introduce one auxiliary notion, which will play a very important role in what follows.

Let \(\pi \subseteq \mathfrak M_p\) be any subring. Denote by \(\mathfrak N_p(\pi)\) the set of all functionals on \(\pi\), each of which is the lower bound of some chain of norms on \(\pi\). From the results of \((^2)\) it follows that \(\mathfrak N_p(\mathfrak M_p)=\mathfrak N_p\).

Definition. Let \(\pi \subseteq \mathfrak M_p\) be a subring and \(\nu \in \mathfrak N_p(\pi)\). The generalized norm \(n(A;\pi,\nu)\) \((A\in\mathfrak M_p)\) is the functional of \(A\) equal to \(\nu\) on \(\pi\) and to infinity outside \(\pi\). We shall denote the totality of all generalized norms by \(\overline{\mathfrak N}_p\). The set \(\overline{\mathfrak N}_p\) is considered ordered by the same principle as \(\mathfrak N_p\).

Thus, generalized norms formally have all the properties of matrix norms, except, perhaps, positivity and finiteness on each matrix.

Lemma 1. Let \(\varphi\) be any automorphism of the structure \(\mathfrak N_p\). There exists, and moreover uniquely, an automorphism \(\overline{\varphi}\) of the structure \(\overline{\mathfrak N}_p\) that coincides with \(\varphi\) on \(\mathfrak N_p\).

In what follows we shall identify the automorphism \(\overline{\varphi}\) with the automorphism \(\varphi\). By virtue of Lemma 1, our theorem is equivalent to the analogous assertion for the structure \(\overline{\mathfrak N}_p\). We shall prove precisely this assertion.

Consider the structure, ordered by inclusion, of the set of subrings of the ring \(\mathfrak M_p\). The automorphism \(\varphi\) (henceforth fixed) induces a certain mapping \(\Phi\) of this structure onto itself. Namely, if
\[ \varphi n(A;\pi,\nu) \equiv n(A;\pi',\nu'), \]
then put \(\Phi(\pi,\nu)=\pi'\). The images of one and the same subring \(\pi\) may be different subrings \(\pi'\), depending on the “parameter” \(\nu\). The mapping \(\Phi\), in a certain sense, preserves the relation—

\(^*\) Recall that a norm in a ring is, by definition, “submultiplicative”:
\[ \|AB\|\leq \|A\|\,\|B\|. \]
The order relation is defined in the natural way: if \(\nu_1,\nu_2\in\mathfrak N_p\), then
\[ \nu_1<\nu_2 \Longleftrightarrow \nu_1(A)\leq \nu_2(A),\quad (A\in\mathfrak M_p)\ \&\ \nu_1(A)\ne\nu_2(A). \]

the order of the subring structure. Namely, if \(\pi_1 \subseteq \pi_2\) and \(\nu_1(A) \geq \nu_2(A)\), \(A \in \pi_1\), then \(\Phi(\pi_1,\nu_1) \subseteq \Phi(\pi_2,\nu_2)\). The minimal elements of the subring structure will be the one-dimensional subrings \(G_X\) with one generator \(X\) such that \(X^2=\mu X\), and only these. Therefore it is clear that the set \(G=\bigcup_X G_X\) is invariant with respect to \(\Phi\). Consequently, the set \(\overline{\mathfrak N}_p^{(0)}\) of all norms of the form \(n(A;G_X,\nu)\) is invariant with respect to the automorphism \(\varphi\). In fact, one can prove somewhat more.

Lemma 2. The set \(*\,\mathfrak N_X\) of all generalized norms of the form \(n(A;G_X,\nu)\) for fixed \(X\) is carried by the automorphism \(\varphi\) into the set \(\mathfrak N_Y\) of all norms of the form \(n(A;G_Y,\nu)\) with some \(Y=Y(\varphi,X)\).

In other words, \(\Phi(G_X,\nu)=G_Y\) does not depend on \(\nu\). Thus, to each matrix \(X\in G\), up to a factor, there corresponds a matrix \(Y=\Phi_0(X)\in G\). Imposing on this correspondence the requirement of homogeneity: \(\Phi_0(\lambda X)=\lambda\Phi_0(X)\), we obtain a single-valued operator \(\Phi_0\) on the set \(G\). It is easy to see that if a subring \(\pi\subset G\), then

\[ \Phi(\pi,\nu)=\bigcup \Phi_0(X). \]

Lemma 3. If two norms \(n_1,n_2\in\overline{\mathfrak N}_p\) coincide on the matrix \(X\in G\), then their images coincide on the matrix \(\Phi_0(X)\).

Proof. It is clearly sufficient to prove the lemma for the case when \(n_2=n(A;G_X,\nu)\), \(\nu=n_1(X)\). In this case \(n_2>n_1\), and therefore \(\varphi n_2>\varphi n_1\equiv n_1'\). Suppose that \(\varphi n_2(\Phi_0(X))>n_1'(\Phi_0(X))\equiv\nu'\). Consider the norm \(n_2'=n(A;G_{\Phi_0(X)},\nu')\). Then \(\varphi n_2>n_2'>n_1'\). Applying the inverse automorphism, we obtain: \(n_2>\varphi^{-1}n_2'>n_1\). At the same time certainly \(n_2(X)>\varphi^{-1}n_2'(X)\geq n_1(X)\), contrary to the condition.

From Lemma 2 it follows that \(\varphi n(A;G_X,\nu)=n(A;G_{\Phi_0(X)},\nu')\), where \(\nu'=f(X,\nu)\geq 0\) is some monotone function in \(\nu\), finite everywhere. Moreover, the mapping \(\Phi\) generates a certain automorphism of the structure of subrings lying in \(G\). Investigation of this automorphism shows that it leaves invariant the set \(\mathfrak M_p^{(1)}\subset G\) of matrices of rank one. Using Lemma 3, we arrive at the following result.

Lemma 4. There exists such a nonsingular matrix \(U\) that either

\[ \Phi_0(T)=\varepsilon(T)U^{-1}TU \qquad (T\in\mathfrak M_p^{(1)}),\ |\varepsilon(T)|=1, \]

or

\[ \Phi_0(T)=\varepsilon(T)U^{-1}T' U \qquad (T\in\mathfrak M_p^{(1)}), \]

where \(\varepsilon(T)\) is a scalar, \(|\varepsilon(T)|=1\). Moreover, \(f(\nu,T)=\nu\) for \(T\in\mathfrak M_p^{(1)}\).

From Lemma 4 there immediately follows the validity of our theorem for the subset of norms from \(\mathfrak N_p^{(0)}\) that are finite on matrices of rank one. This, in turn, entails its validity for a fairly broad class of norms, first of all for those \(n\in\overline{\mathfrak N}_p\) which are the structural lower bound of norms from the indicated subset. Further, we shall call a norm \(n\in\overline{\mathfrak N}_p\) minimal with respect to a set \(M\subset\mathfrak N_p\) if from the conditions: a) \(n_1\in\mathfrak N_p\), b) \(n_1(A)=n(A)\) \((A\in M)\), it follows that c) \(n_1>n\). It is not difficult now to understand that our theorem is valid for norms minimal with respect to the set \(\mathfrak M_p^{(1)}\) and, in particular (see (1)), for operator norms.

To complete the proof of the theorem, consider the subring \(D_V\) of all matrices of the form \(Y=VXV^{-1}\), where \(X\) is a diagonal matrix and \(V\) is a fixed nonsingular matrix.

Lemma 5. The domain of finiteness of the norm \(\varphi n(A;D_V,\nu)\) is the subring \(D_{U^{-1}V}\) (or \(D_{U^{-1}V'}\)).

This assertion follows in an obvious way from the fact that any norm \(n(A;D_V,\nu)\) is majorized and minorized by norms with the same domain of finiteness \(D_V\), for which the validity of our theorem has already been established—

* It is a chain.

the theorem. Namely,

\[ n_1 \equiv n(A; D_\nu, \nu_1) = \inf_{T \in D_\nu \cap \mathfrak{M}_p^{(1)}} n(A; G_T, \nu) \ge \]

\[ \ge n(A; D_\nu, \nu) \ge n_2(A) \equiv n(A; D_\nu, \nu_2), \]

where \(\nu_2(A) = r(A)\) is the spectral radius of the matrix \(A \in D_\nu\). It is not difficult to verify that \(n_2\) is minimal with respect to the set \(\mathfrak{M}_p^{(1)}\), so that the theorem is valid for this norm.

Corollary. If two norms \(n_1, n_2 \in \overline{\mathfrak{M}}_p\) coincide on the subring \(D_\nu\), then their images coincide on the subring \(D_{U^{-1}\nu}\) (or on \(D_{U^{-1}\nu}\)).

The proof of this assertion does not differ in any way from the proof of Lemma 3.

From Lemma 5 and its corollary it follows that our theorem is valid for norms of the form \(n(A; D_\nu, \nu)\).

Finally, let \(n \in \mathfrak{M}_p\). From the equality \(n(A) = \inf_\nu n(A; D_\nu, \nu_\nu)\), where \(\nu_\nu(A)=n(A)\) \((A \in D_\nu)\), the validity of the theorem for the norm \(n \in \mathfrak{M}_p\) follows, and consequently also for all norms in \(\mathfrak{M}_p\).

Received
20 V 1965

CITED LITERATURE

  1. Yu. I. Lyubich, UMN, 18, No. 4, 161 (1963).
  2. G. R. Belitskii, DAN, 151, No. 1, 9 (1963).

Submission history

ON AUTOMORPHISMS OF THE ORDER STRUCTURE ON THE SET OF MATRIX NORMS