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chol

Cholesky factorization

Description

T = chol(A) returns an upper triangular matrix T, such that T'*T = A. A must be a Hermitian positive definite matrix. Otherwise, this syntax throws an error.

example

[T,p] = chol(A) computes the Cholesky factorization of A. This syntax does not error if A is not a Hermitian positive definite matrix. If A is a Hermitian positive definite matrix, then p is 0. Otherwise, T is sym([]), and p is a positive integer (typically, p = 1).

example

[T,p,S] = chol(A) returns a permutation matrix S, such that T'*T = S'*A*S, and the value p = 0 if matrix A is Hermitian positive definite. Otherwise, it returns a positive integer p and an empty object S = sym([]).

example

[T,p,s] = chol(A,'vector') returns the permutation information as a vector s, such that A(s,s) = T'*T. If A is not recognized as a Hermitian positive definite matrix, then p is a positive integer and s = sym([]).

example

___ = chol(A,'lower') returns a lower triangular matrix T, such that T*T' = A.

example

___ = chol(A,'nocheck') skips checking whether matrix A is Hermitian positive definite. 'nocheck' lets you compute Cholesky factorization of a matrix that contains symbolic parameters without setting additional assumptions on those parameters.

example

___ = chol(A,'real') computes the Cholesky factorization of A using real arithmetic. In this case, chol computes a symmetric factorization A = T.'*T instead of a Hermitian factorization A = T'*T. This approach is based on the fact that if A is real and symmetric, then T'*T = T.'*T. Use 'real' to avoid complex conjugates in the result.

example

___ = chol(A,'lower','nocheck','real') computes the Cholesky factorization of A with one or more of these optional arguments: 'lower', 'nocheck', and 'real'. These optional arguments can appear in any order.

[T,p,s] = chol(A,'lower','vector','nocheck','real') computes the Cholesky factorization of A and returns the permutation information as a vector s. You can use one or more of these optional arguments: 'lower', 'nocheck', and 'real'. These optional arguments can appear in any order.

Examples

Compute Cholesky Factorization of Numeric and Symbolic Matrices

Compute the Cholesky factorization of the 3-by-3 Hilbert matrix. Because these numbers are not symbolic objects, you get floating-point results.

chol(hilb(3))
ans =
    1.0000    0.5000    0.3333
         0    0.2887    0.2887
         0         0    0.0745

Now convert this matrix to a symbolic object, and compute the Cholesky factorization:

chol(sym(hilb(3)))
ans =
[ 1,       1/2,        1/3]
[ 0, 3^(1/2)/6,  3^(1/2)/6]
[ 0,         0, 5^(1/2)/30]

Return Lower Triangular Matrix

Compute the Cholesky factorization of the 3-by-3 Pascal matrix returning a lower triangular matrix as a result:

chol(sym(pascal(3)), 'lower')
ans =
[ 1, 0, 0]
[ 1, 1, 0]
[ 1, 2, 1]

If Input is not Hermitian Positive Definite

Try to compute the Cholesky factorization of this matrix. Because this matrix is not Hermitian positive definite, chol used without output arguments or with one output argument throws an error:

A = sym([1 1 1; 1 2 3; 1 3 5]);
T = chol(A)
Error using sym/chol (line 132)
Cannot prove that input matrix is Hermitian positive definite.
Define a Hermitian positive definite matrix by setting
appropriate assumptions on matrix components, or use 'nocheck'
to skip checking whether the matrix is Hermitian positive definite.

To suppress the error, use two output arguments, T and p. If the matrix is not recognized as Hermitian positive definite, then this syntax assigns an empty symbolic object to T and the value 1 to p:

[T,p] = chol(A)
T =
[ empty sym ]
p =
     1

For a Hermitian positive definite matrix, p is 0:

[T,p] = chol(sym(pascal(3)))
T =
[ 1, 1, 1]
[ 0, 1, 2]
[ 0, 0, 1]
p =
     0

Alternatively, 'nocheck' lets you skip checking whether A is a Hermitian positive definite matrix. Thus, this flag lets you compute the Cholesky factorization of a symbolic matrix without setting additional assumptions on its components to make it Hermitian positive definite:

syms a
A = [a 0; 0 a];
chol(A,'nocheck')
ans =
[ a^(1/2),       0]
[       0, a^(1/2)]

If you use 'nocheck' for computing the Cholesky factorization of a matrix that is not Hermitian positive definite, chol can return a matrix T for which the identity T'*T = A does not hold. To make isAlways return logical 0 (false) for undecidable conditions, set Unknown to false.

T = chol(sym([1 1; 2 1]), 'nocheck')
T =
[ 1,         2]
[ 0, 3^(1/2)*1i]
isAlways(A == T'*T,'Unknown','false')
ans =
  2×2 logical array
     0     0
     0     0

Return Permutation Matrix

Compute the Cholesky factorization of the 3-by-3 inverse Hilbert matrix returning the permutation matrix:

A = sym(invhilb(3));
[T, p, S] = chol(A)
T =
[ 3,       -12,         10]
[ 0, 4*3^(1/2), -5*3^(1/2)]
[ 0,         0,    5^(1/2)]

p =
     0

S =
     1     0     0
     0     1     0
     0     0     1

Return Permutation Information as Vector

Compute the Cholesky factorization of the 3-by-3 inverse Hilbert matrix returning the permutation information as a vector:

A = sym(invhilb(3));
[T, p, S] = chol(A, 'vector')
T =
[ 3,       -12,         10]
[ 0, 4*3^(1/2), -5*3^(1/2)]
[ 0,         0,    5^(1/2)]
p =
     0
S =
     1     2     3

Use Assumptions to Make Matrix Hermitian Positive Definite

Compute the Cholesky factorization of matrix A containing symbolic parameters. Without additional assumptions on the parameter a, this matrix is not Hermitian. To make isAlways return logical 0 (false) for undecidable conditions, set Unknown to false.

syms a
A = [a 0; 0 a];
isAlways(A == A','Unknown','false')
ans =
  2×2 logical array
     0     1
     1     0

By setting assumptions on a and b, you can define A to be Hermitian positive definite. Therefore, you can compute the Cholesky factorization of A:

assume(a > 0)
chol(A)
ans =
[ a^(1/2),       0]
[       0, a^(1/2)]

For further computations, remove the assumptions on a by recreating it using syms:

syms a

Return Real Result Without Complex Conjugates

Compute the Cholesky factorization of this matrix. To skip checking whether it is Hermitian positive definite, use 'nocheck'. By default, chol computes a Hermitian factorization A = T'*T. Thus, the result contains complex conjugates.

syms a b
A = [a b; b a];
T = chol(A, 'nocheck')
T =
[ a^(1/2),                    conj(b)/conj(a^(1/2))]
[       0, (a*abs(a) - abs(b)^2)^(1/2)/abs(a)^(1/2)]

To avoid complex conjugates in the result, use 'real':

T = chol(A, 'nocheck', 'real')
T =
[ a^(1/2),             b/a^(1/2)]
[       0, ((a^2 - b^2)/a)^(1/2)]

When you use this flag, chol computes a symmetric factorization A = T.'*T instead of a Hermitian factorization A = T'*T. To make isAlways return logical 0 (false) for undecidable conditions, set Unknown to false.

isAlways(A == T.'*T)
ans =
  2×2 logical array
     1     1
     1     1
isAlways(A == T'*T,'Unknown','false')
ans =
  2×2 logical array
     0     0
     0     0

Input Arguments

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Input, specified as a number, vector, matrix, or array, or a symbolic number, variable, array, function, or expression.

Output Arguments

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Upper triangular matrix, returned as a symbolic matrix such that T'*T = A. If T is a lower triangular matrix, then T*T' = A.

Flag, returned as a symbolic number. Value 0 if A is Hermitian positive definite or if you use 'nocheck'.

If chol does not identify A as a Hermitian positive definite matrix, then p is a positive integer. R is an upper triangular matrix of order q = p - 1, such that R'*R = A(1:q,1:q).

Permutation matrix returned as a symbolic matrix.

Permutation vector returned as a symbolic vector.

Limitations

Matrix computations involving many symbolic variables can be slow. To increase the computational speed, reduce the number of symbolic variables by substituting the given values for some variables.

More About

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Hermitian Positive Definite Matrix

A square complex matrix A is Hermitian positive definite if v'*A*v is real and positive for all nonzero complex vectors v, where v' is the conjugate transpose (Hermitian transpose) of v.

Cholesky Factorization of a Matrix

The Cholesky factorization of a Hermitian positive definite n-by-n matrix A is defined by an upper or lower triangular matrix with positive entries on the main diagonal. The Cholesky factorization of matrix A can be defined as T'*T = A, where T is an upper triangular matrix. Here T' is the conjugate transpose of T. The Cholesky factorization also can be defined as T*T' = A, where T is a lower triangular matrix. T is called the Cholesky factor of A.

Tips

  • Calling chol for numeric arguments that are not symbolic objects invokes the MATLAB® chol function.

  • If you use 'nocheck', then the identities T'*T = A (for an upper triangular matrix T) and T*T' = A (for a lower triangular matrix T) are not guaranteed to hold.

  • If you use 'real', then the identities T'*T = A (for an upper triangular matrix T) and T*T' = A (for a lower triangular matrix T) are only guaranteed to hold for a real symmetric positive definite A.

  • To use 'vector', you must specify three output arguments. Other flags do not require a particular number of output arguments.

  • If you use 'matrix' instead of 'vector', then chol returns permutation matrices, as it does by default.

  • If you use 'upper' instead of 'lower', then chol returns an upper triangular matrix, as it does by default.

  • If A is not a Hermitian positive definite matrix, then the syntaxes containing the argument p typically return p = 1 and an empty symbolic object T.

  • To check whether a matrix is Hermitian, use the operator ' (or its functional form ctranspose). Matrix A is Hermitian if and only if A'= A, where A' is the conjugate transpose of A.

Version History

Introduced in R2013a

See Also

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