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A positive determinant (Posted on 2023-08-11) Difficulty: 3 of 5
Let n≥1. Assume that A is a real n×n matrix which satisfies the equality

A7+A5+A3+A-I=0

Show that det(A)>0

No Solution Yet Submitted by Danish Ahmed Khan    
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Some Thoughts solution | Comment 1 of 3
Rewrite as A^7 + A^5 + A^3 + A = I. The determinant of the identity matrix is 1. The determinant of the product of matrices is the product of the matrices' determinants, so if the determinant of A were zero or negative, the given sum would be zero or negative respectively, rather than 1.

added:


there's a flaw in the above argument: it assumes that when two matrices are added together the determinant of the sum has the same sign as the sum of the determinants. I don't have a proof of that.

addendum 2:

That lemma is in fact not in general true, so back to the drawing board.

Edited on August 11, 2023, 11:30 pm
  Posted by Charlie on 2023-08-11 22:54:03

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