A generalized eigenvector for an matrix
is a vector
for which
for some positive integer . Here,
denotes the
identity matrix.
The smallest such
is known as the generalized
eigenvector order of the generalized eigenvector. In this case, the value
is the generalized eigenvalue to which
is associated and the linear span of all generalized
eigenvectors associated to some generalized
eigenvalue
is known as the generalized eigenspace
for
.
As the name suggests, generalized eigenvectors are generalizations of eigenvectors of the usual kind; more precisely, an eigenvector
is a generalized eigenvector corresponding to .
Generalized eigenvectors are of particular importance for matrices
which fail to be diagonalizable.
Indeed, for such matrices, at least one eigenvalue
has geometric multiplicity larger than its algebraic
multiplicity, thereby implying that the collection
of linearly independent eigenvectors
of
is "too small" to be a basis of
. In particular, the aim of determining the generalized eigenvectors
of an
matrix
is to "enlarge" the set of linearly
independent eigenvectors of such a matrix
in order to form a basis for
.