Spectrahedron

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A spectrahedron

In convex geometry, a spectrahedron is a shape that can be represented as a linear matrix inequality. Alternatively, the set of Template:Math positive semidefinite matrices forms a convex cone in Template:Math, and a spectrahedron is a shape that can be formed by intersecting this cone with an affine subspace.

Spectrahedra are the feasible regions of semidefinite programs.[1] The images of spectrahedra under linear or affine transformations are called projected spectrahedra or spectrahedral shadows. Every spectrahedral shadow is a convex set that is also semialgebraic, but the converse (conjectured to be true until 2017) is false.[2]

An example of a spectrahedron is the spectraplex, defined as

Spectn={X𝐒+nTr(X)=1},

where 𝐒+n is the set of Template:Math positive semidefinite matrices and Tr(X) is the trace of the matrix X.[3] The spectraplex is a compact set, and can be thought of as the "semidefinite" analog of the simplex.

See also

References

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