A note on products of finite-dimensional quadratic matrices

Abstract

Let FF be a field, nn be a positive integer, and q(x)=(xλ1)(xλ2)q(x) = (x-\lambda_1)(x-\lambda_2), where λ1\lambda_1 and λ2\lambda_2 are two nonzero elements in FF. Denote by Mn(F)\mathbb{M}_n(F) the ring of all n×nn \times n matrices over FF. A matrix AMn(F)A \in \mathbb{M}_n(F) is called quadratic with respect to q(x)q(x) if q(A)=0q(A) = 0. In this paper, we investigate the question of when a matrix in Mn(F)\mathbb{M}_n(F) can be expressed as a product of quadratic matrices with respect to q(x)q(x). First, we prove that if FF is a field with more than n+1n+1 elements, k0k \ge 0 is an integer, and AMn(F)A \in \mathbb{M}_n(F) has determinant λ1s+2nλ2t+2n\lambda_1^{s+2n}\lambda_2^{t+2n}, where s,t0s, t \ge 0 are integers such that s+t=kns + t = kn, then AA can be expressed as a product of k+4k+4 quadratic matrices with respect to q(x)q(x). In particular, if λ1=1\lambda_1 = 1, λ2r=1\lambda_2^r = 1 for some integer r2r \geq 2, and AMn(F)A \in \mathbb{M}_n(F) has a determinant that is a power of λ2\lambda_2, then AA can be expressed as a product of at most 2r2r quadratic matrices with respect to q(x)q(x). As a corollary, we derive results on the factorization of matrices as products of certain special quadratic matrices

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University of Wyoming Open Journals

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Last time updated on 12/08/2025

This paper was published in University of Wyoming Open Journals.

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