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Hadamard matrices : ウィキペディア英語版
Hadamard matrix

In mathematics, a Hadamard matrix, named after the French mathematician Jacques Hadamard, is a square matrix whose entries are either +1 or −1 and whose rows are mutually orthogonal. In geometric terms, this means that each pair of rows in a Hadamard matrix represents two perpendicular vectors, while in combinatorial terms, it means that each pair of rows has matching entries in exactly half of their columns and mismatched entries in the remaining columns. It is a consequence of this definition that the corresponding properties hold for columns as well as rows. The ''n''-dimensional parallelotope spanned by the rows of an ''n''×''n'' Hadamard matrix has the maximum possible ''n''-dimensional volume among parallelotopes spanned by vectors whose entries are bounded in absolute value by 1. Equivalently, a Hadamard matrix has maximal determinant among matrices with entries of absolute value less than or equal to 1 and so, is an extremal solution of Hadamard's maximal determinant problem.
Certain Hadamard matrices can almost directly be used as an error-correcting code using a Hadamard code (generalized in Reed–Muller codes), and are also used in balanced repeated replication (BRR), used by statisticians to estimate the variance of a parameter estimator.
==Properties==
Let ''H'' be a Hadamard matrix of order ''n''. The transpose of ''H'' is closely related to its inverse. The correct formula is:
: H H^(H) = \pm n^},
where det(''H'') is the determinant of ''H''.
Suppose that ''M'' is a complex matrix of order ''n'', whose entries are bounded by |''Mij''| ≤1, for each ''i'', ''j'' between 1 and ''n''. Then Hadamard's determinant bound states that
: |\operatorname(M)| \leq n^.
Equality in this bound is attained for a real matrix ''M'' if and only if ''M'' is a Hadamard matrix.
The order of a Hadamard matrix must be 1, 2, or a multiple of 4.

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