DGGEV(3S)DGGEV(3S)NAME
DGGEV - compute for a pair of N-by-N real nonsymmetric matrices (A,B)
SYNOPSIS
SUBROUTINE DGGEV( JOBVL, JOBVR, N, A, LDA, B, LDB, ALPHAR, ALPHAI, BETA,
VL, LDVL, VR, LDVR, WORK, LWORK, INFO )
CHARACTER JOBVL, JOBVR
INTEGER INFO, LDA, LDB, LDVL, LDVR, LWORK, N
DOUBLE PRECISION A( LDA, * ), ALPHAI( * ), ALPHAR( * ), B(
LDB, * ), BETA( * ), VL( LDVL, * ), VR( LDVR, * ),
WORK( * )
IMPLEMENTATION
These routines are part of the SCSL Scientific Library and can be loaded
using either the -lscs or the -lscs_mp option. The -lscs_mp option
directs the linker to use the multi-processor version of the library.
When linking to SCSL with -lscs or -lscs_mp, the default integer size is
4 bytes (32 bits). Another version of SCSL is available in which integers
are 8 bytes (64 bits). This version allows the user access to larger
memory sizes and helps when porting legacy Cray codes. It can be loaded
by using the -lscs_i8 option or the -lscs_i8_mp option. A program may use
only one of the two versions; 4-byte integer and 8-byte integer library
calls cannot be mixed.
PURPOSE
DGGEV computes for a pair of N-by-N real nonsymmetric matrices (A,B) the
generalized eigenvalues, and optionally, the left and/or right
generalized eigenvectors.
A generalized eigenvalue for a pair of matrices (A,B) is a scalar lambda
or a ratio alpha/beta = lambda, such that A - lambda*B is singular. It is
usually represented as the pair (alpha,beta), as there is a reasonable
interpretation for beta=0, and even for both being zero.
The right eigenvector v(j) corresponding to the eigenvalue lambda(j) of
(A,B) satisfies
A * v(j) = lambda(j) * B * v(j).
The left eigenvector u(j) corresponding to the eigenvalue lambda(j) of
(A,B) satisfies
u(j)**H * A = lambda(j) * u(j)**H * B .
where u(j)**H is the conjugate-transpose of u(j).
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DGGEV(3S)DGGEV(3S)ARGUMENTS
JOBVL (input) CHARACTER*1
= 'N': do not compute the left generalized eigenvectors;
= 'V': compute the left generalized eigenvectors.
JOBVR (input) CHARACTER*1
= 'N': do not compute the right generalized eigenvectors;
= 'V': compute the right generalized eigenvectors.
N (input) INTEGER
The order of the matrices A, B, VL, and VR. N >= 0.
A (input/output) DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (LDA, N)
On entry, the matrix A in the pair (A,B). On exit, A has been
overwritten.
LDA (input) INTEGER
The leading dimension of A. LDA >= max(1,N).
B (input/output) DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (LDB, N)
On entry, the matrix B in the pair (A,B). On exit, B has been
overwritten.
LDB (input) INTEGER
The leading dimension of B. LDB >= max(1,N).
ALPHAR (output) DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (N)
ALPHAI (output) DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (N) BETA
(output) DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (N) On exit,
(ALPHAR(j) + ALPHAI(j)*i)/BETA(j), j=1,...,N, will be the
generalized eigenvalues. If ALPHAI(j) is zero, then the j-th
eigenvalue is real; if positive, then the j-th and (j+1)-st
eigenvalues are a complex conjugate pair, with ALPHAI(j+1)
negative.
Note: the quotients ALPHAR(j)/BETA(j) and ALPHAI(j)/BETA(j) may
easily over- or underflow, and BETA(j) may even be zero. Thus,
the user should avoid naively computing the ratio alpha/beta.
However, ALPHAR and ALPHAI will be always less than and usually
comparable with norm(A) in magnitude, and BETA always less than
and usually comparable with norm(B).
VL (output) DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (LDVL,N)
If JOBVL = 'V', the left eigenvectors u(j) are stored one after
another in the columns of VL, in the same order as their
eigenvalues. If the j-th eigenvalue is real, then u(j) = VL(:,j),
the j-th column of VL. If the j-th and (j+1)-th eigenvalues form
a complex conjugate pair, then u(j) = VL(:,j)+i*VL(:,j+1) and
u(j+1) = VL(:,j)-i*VL(:,j+1). Each eigenvector will be scaled so
the largest component have abs(real part)+abs(imag. part)=1. Not
referenced if JOBVL = 'N'.
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DGGEV(3S)DGGEV(3S)
LDVL (input) INTEGER
The leading dimension of the matrix VL. LDVL >= 1, and if JOBVL =
'V', LDVL >= N.
VR (output) DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (LDVR,N)
If JOBVR = 'V', the right eigenvectors v(j) are stored one after
another in the columns of VR, in the same order as their
eigenvalues. If the j-th eigenvalue is real, then v(j) = VR(:,j),
the j-th column of VR. If the j-th and (j+1)-th eigenvalues form
a complex conjugate pair, then v(j) = VR(:,j)+i*VR(:,j+1) and
v(j+1) = VR(:,j)-i*VR(:,j+1). Each eigenvector will be scaled so
the largest component have abs(real part)+abs(imag. part)=1. Not
referenced if JOBVR = 'N'.
LDVR (input) INTEGER
The leading dimension of the matrix VR. LDVR >= 1, and if JOBVR =
'V', LDVR >= N.
WORK (workspace/output) DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (LWORK)
On exit, if INFO = 0, WORK(1) returns the optimal LWORK.
LWORK (input) INTEGER
The dimension of the array WORK. LWORK >= max(1,8*N). For good
performance, LWORK must generally be larger.
If LWORK = -1, then a workspace query is assumed; the routine
only calculates the optimal size of the WORK array, returns this
value as the first entry of the WORK array, and no error message
related to LWORK is issued by XERBLA.
INFO (output) INTEGER
= 0: successful exit
< 0: if INFO = -i, the i-th argument had an illegal value.
= 1,...,N: The QZ iteration failed. No eigenvectors have been
calculated, but ALPHAR(j), ALPHAI(j), and BETA(j) should be
correct for j=INFO+1,...,N. > N: =N+1: other than QZ iteration
failed in DHGEQZ.
=N+2: error return from DTGEVC.
SEE ALSOINTRO_LAPACK(3S), INTRO_SCSL(3S)
This man page is available only online.
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