Random band matrix
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Random band matrices are random matrices that are also band matrices, meaning that their non-zero entries are confined to a diagonal band, comprising the main diagonal and zero or more diagonals on each side.[1] They can be used to roughly model systems of interacting particles arranged roughly in a grid such that each particle is only allowed to interact with its neighbors, which is an improvement on the mean field model, corresponding to random Gaussian matrices, where no entries are necessarily zero and every particle interacts with every other.[1]
In one dimension, this means that if , where W is the band width.[1] Physically, this means that the amount by which particles i and j interact is 0 if their separation is over W.[1] In more than one dimension, i and j are no longer integers but nd vectors with integer components, and if , where indicates the taxicab distance between the two locations.[1]