adjugate |
adjuvate |
As verbs the difference between adjugate and adjuvate
is that
adjugate is (obsolete) to yoke an animal to something while
adjuvate is to help; to further.
As a noun adjugate
is (mathematics) the transpose of the respective cofactor matrix, for a given matrix one of the factors in calculating the inverse of a matrix commonly notated as adj(
a'), where ' a is the given matrix.
adjugate |
adjugated |
As verbs the difference between adjugate and adjugated
is that
adjugate is to yoke an animal to something while
adjugated is past tense of adjugate.
As a noun adjugate
is the transpose of the respective cofactor matrix, for a given matrix. One of the factors in calculating the inverse of a matrix. Commonly notated as adj(
A), where
A is the given matrix.
adjoint |
adjugate |
In mathematics terms the difference between adjoint and adjugate
is that
adjoint is a matrix in which each element is the cofactor of an associated element of another matrix while
adjugate is the transpose of the respective cofactor matrix, for a given matrix. One of the factors in calculating the inverse of a matrix. Commonly notated as adj(
A), where
A is the given matrix.
As an adjective adjoint
is used in several situations with a meaning similar to helping.
As a verb adjugate is
to yoke an animal to something.
abjugate |
adjugate |
Adjugate is a antonym of abjugate.
As verbs the difference between abjugate and adjugate
is that
abjugate is to unyoke; set free; uncouple while
adjugate is to yoke an animal to something.
As a noun adjugate is
the transpose of the respective cofactor matrix, for a given matrix. One of the factors in calculating the inverse of a matrix. Commonly notated as adj(
A), where
A is the given matrix.