In linear algebra, Cramer's rule is an explicit formula for the solution of a system of linear equations with as many equations as unknowns, valid whenever the system has a unique solution. It expresses the solution in terms of the determinants of the (square) coefficient matrix and of matrices obtained from it by replacing one column by the column vector of right-sides of the equations. It is named after Gabriel Cramer, who published the rule for an arbitrary number of unknowns in 1750,[1][2] although Colin Maclaurin also published special cases of the rule in 1748,[3] and possibly knew of it as early as 1729.[4][5][6]
Cramer's rule, implemented in a naive way, is computationally inefficient for systems of more than two or three equations.[7] In the case of n equations in n unknowns, it requires computation of n + 1 determinants, while Gaussian elimination produces the result with the same computational complexity as the computation of a single determinant.[8][9][verification needed] Cramer's rule can also be numerically unstable even for 2×2 systems.[10] However, Cramer's rule can be implemented with the same complexity as Gaussian elimination,[11][12] (consistently requires twice as many arithmetic operations and has the same numerical stability when the same permutation matrices are applied).
Consider a system of n linear equations for n unknowns, represented in matrix multiplication form as follows:
where the n × n matrix A has a nonzero determinant, and the vector is the column vector of the variables. Then the theorem states that in this case the system has a unique solution, whose individual values for the unknowns are given by:
where is the matrix formed by replacing the i-th column of A by the column vector b.
A more general version of Cramer's rule[13] considers the matrix equation
where the n × n matrix A has a nonzero determinant, and X, B are n × m matrices. Given sequences and , let be the k × k submatrix of X with rows in and columns in . Let be the n × n matrix formed by replacing the column of A by the column of B, for all . Then
In the case , this reduces to the normal Cramer's rule.
The rule holds for systems of equations with coefficients and unknowns in any field, not just in the real numbers.
The proof for Cramer's rule uses the following properties of the determinants: linearity with respect to any given column and the fact that the determinant is zero whenever two columns are equal, which is implied by the property that the sign of the determinant flips if you switch two columns.
Fix the index j of a column, and consider that the entries of the other columns have fixed values. This makes the determinant a function of the entries of the jth column. Linearity with respect of this column means that this function has the form
where the are coefficients that depend on the entries of A that are not in column j. So, one has
(Laplace expansion provides a formula for computing the but their expression is not important here.)
If the function is applied to any other column k of A, then the result is the determinant of the matrix obtained from A by replacing column j by a copy of column k, so the resulting determinant is 0 (the case of two equal columns).
Now consider a system of n linear equations in n unknowns , whose coefficient matrix is A, with det(A) assumed to be nonzero:
If one combines these equations by taking C1,j times the first equation, plus C2,j times the second, and so forth until Cn,j times the last, then for every k the resulting coefficient of xk becomes
So, all coefficients become zero, except the coefficient of that becomes Similarly, the constant coefficient becomes and the resulting equation is thus
which gives the value of as
As, by construction, the numerator is the determinant of the matrix obtained from A by replacing column j by b, we get the expression of Cramer's rule as a necessary condition for a solution.
It remains to prove that these values for the unknowns form a solution. Let M be the n × n matrix that has the coefficients of as jth row, for (this is the adjugate matrix for A). Expressed in matrix terms, we have thus to prove that
Let A be an n × n matrix with entries in a fieldF. Then
where adj(A) denotes the adjugate matrix, det(A) is the determinant, and I is the identity matrix. If det(A) is nonzero, then the inverse matrix of A is
This gives a formula for the inverse of A, provided det(A) ≠ 0. In fact, this formula works whenever F is a commutative ring, provided that det(A) is a unit. If det(A) is not a unit, then A is not invertible over the ring (it may be invertible over a larger ring in which some non-unit elements of F may be invertible).
In particular, Cramer's rule can be used to prove that the divergence operator on a Riemannian manifold is invariant with respect to change of coordinates. We give a direct proof, suppressing the role of the Christoffel symbols.
Let be a Riemannian manifold equipped with local coordinates. Let be a vector field. We use the summation convention throughout.
Cramer's rule can be used to prove that an integer programming problem whose constraint matrix is totally unimodular and whose right-hand side is integer, has integer basic solutions. This makes the integer program substantially easier to solve.
Cramer's rule has a geometric interpretation that can be considered also a proof or simply giving insight about its geometric nature. These geometric arguments work in general and not only in the case of two equations with two unknowns presented here.
Given the system of equations
it can be considered as an equation between vectors
The area of the parallelogram determined by and is given by the determinant of the system of equations:
In general, when there are more variables and equations, the determinant of n vectors of length n will give the volume of the parallelepiped determined by those vectors in the n-th dimensional Euclidean space.
Therefore, the area of the parallelogram determined by and has to be times the area of the first one since one of the sides has been multiplied by this factor. Now, this last parallelogram, by Cavalieri's principle, has the same area as the parallelogram determined by and
Equating the areas of this last and the second parallelogram gives the equation
This is a restatement of the proof above in abstract language.
Consider the map where is the matrix with substituted in the th column, as in Cramer's rule. Because of linearity of determinant in every column, this map is linear. Observe that it sends the th column of to the th basis vector (with 1 in the th place), because determinant of a matrix with a repeated column is 0. So we have a linear map which agrees with the inverse of on the column space; hence it agrees with on the span of the column space. Since is invertible, the column vectors span all of , so our map really is the inverse of . Cramer's rule follows.
A short proof of Cramer's rule [15] can be given by noticing that is the determinant of the matrix
On the other hand, assuming that our original matrix A is invertible, this matrix has columns , where is the n-th column of the matrix A. Recall that the matrix has columns , and therefore . Hence, by using that the determinant of the product of two matrices is the product of the determinants, we have
A system of equations is said to be inconsistent when there are no solutions and it is called indeterminate when there is more than one solution. For linear equations, an indeterminate system will have infinitely many solutions (if it is over an infinite field), since the solutions can be expressed in terms of one or more parameters that can take arbitrary values.
Cramer's rule applies to the case where the coefficient determinant is nonzero. In the 2×2 case, if the coefficient determinant is zero, then the system is incompatible if the numerator determinants are nonzero, or indeterminate if the numerator determinants are zero.
For 3×3 or higher systems, the only thing one can say when the coefficient determinant equals zero is that if any of the numerator determinants are nonzero, then the system must be inconsistent. However, having all determinants zero does not imply that the system is indeterminate. A simple example where all determinants vanish (equal zero) but the system is still incompatible is the 3×3 system x+y+z=1, x+y+z=2, x+y+z=3.
^G.I.Malaschonok (1983). "Solution of a System of Linear Equations in an Integral Ring". USSR J. Of Comput. Math. And Math. Phys. 23: 1497–1500. arXiv:1711.09452.