Solving the linear equation

2 views (last 30 days)
Salad Box
Salad Box on 7 Jun 2022
Answered: Torsten on 7 Jun 2022
Hi,
For a simple explanation, an example is 21 = m x 7. m = 21/7 = 3. If I use the m I obtained to time 7, it should be equal to 21.
But above is just numbers, not matrix.
For solving similar problem on matrix, I would like to do a linear conversion from one matrix (P) to another (T).
My equation is T = MP, while T and P are both 3 by 24 matrices. I need to work out M.
My understanding is that M = T/P and M is a 3 x 3 matrix.
But why after I obtained M, I use M*P, it doesn't equal to T anymore. Why is that?
  1 Comment
Ranjan Sonalkar
Ranjan Sonalkar on 7 Jun 2022
I would reframe the equation as y = Ax, where y contains the 9 terms of T, x contains the 9 unknowns from M and A would be the reformatted T. Then it is a least-squares solution.

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

Matt J
Matt J on 7 Jun 2022
Edited: Matt J on 7 Jun 2022
Because you have 72 equations and only 9 unknowns. The system is over-determined.

More Answers (1)

Torsten
Torsten on 7 Jun 2022
M = T*P.'*inv(P*P.')
is the least-squares solution.
But you cannot expect that T=M*P is exactly satisfied.

Categories

Find more on Linear Algebra in Help Center and File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!