In mathematics, the Zassenhaus algorithm[1]
is a method to calculate a basis for the intersection and sum of two subspaces of a vector space.
It is named after Hans Zassenhaus, but no publication of this algorithm by him is known.[2] It is used in computer algebra systems.[3]
Algorithm
Let V be a vector space and U, W two finite-dimensional subspaces of V with the following spanning sets:

and

Finally, let
be linearly independent vectors so that
and
can be written as

and

Output
The algorithm computes the base of the sum
and a base of the intersection
.
Algorithm
The algorithm creates the following block matrix of size
:

Using elementary row operations, this matrix is transformed to the row echelon form. Then, it has the following shape:

Here,
stands for arbitrary numbers, and the vectors
for every
and
for every
are nonzero.
Then
with

is a basis of
and
with

is a basis of
.
Proof of correctness
First, we define
to be the projection to the first component.
Let
Then
and
.
Also,
is the kernel of
, the projection restricted to H.
Therefore,
.
The Zassenhaus algorithm calculates a basis of H. In the first m columns of this matrix, there is a basis
of
.
The rows of the form
(with
) are obviously in
. Because the matrix is in row echelon form, they are also linearly independent.
All rows which are different from zero (
and
) are a basis of H, so there are
such
s. Therefore, the
s form a basis of
.
Example
Consider the two subspaces
and
of the vector space
.
Using the standard basis, we create the following matrix of dimension
:

Using elementary row operations, we transform this matrix into the following matrix:
(Some entries have been replaced by "
" because they are irrelevant to the result.)
Therefore
is a basis of
, and
is a basis of
.
See also
References
- ^ Luks, Eugene M.; Rákóczi, Ferenc; Wright, Charles R. B. (April 1997), "Some algorithms for nilpotent permutation groups", Journal of Symbolic Computation, 23 (4): 335–354, doi:10.1006/jsco.1996.0092.
- ^ Fischer, Gerd (2012), Lernbuch Lineare Algebra und Analytische Geometrie (in German), Vieweg+Teubner, pp. 207–210, doi:10.1007/978-3-8348-2379-3, ISBN 978-3-8348-2378-6
- ^ The GAP Group (February 13, 2015), "24 Matrices", GAP Reference Manual, Release 4.7, retrieved 2015-06-11
External links