Defect and equivalence of unitary matrices. The Fourier case
Abstract
Consider the real space DU of directions moving into which from a unitary N x N matrix U we do not disturb its unitarity and the moduli of its entries in the first order. dim( DU ) is called the defect of U and denoted D(U). We give an account of Alexander Karabegov's theory where DU is parametrized by the imaginary subspace of the eigenspace, associated with lambda = 1, of a certain unitary operator IU on the N x N complex matrices, and where D(U) is the multiplicity of 1 in the spectrum of IU. This characterization allows us to establish dependence of D(U1 x ... x Ur) - where x stands for the Kronecker product - on D(Uk)'s, to derive formulas expressing D(F) for a Fourier matrix F of the size being a power of a prime number, as well as to show the multiplicativity of D(F) with respect to Kronecker factors of F if their sizes are pairwise relatively prime. Also partly due to the role of symmetries of U in the determination of the eigenspaces of IU we study the 'permute and enphase' symmetries and equivalence of Fourier matrices, associated with arbitrary finite abelian groups.
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