Question 376126:  Question:
 
Matrix A is said to be skew symmetric if A^T = -A. Show that if a matrix is skew symmetric, then its diagonal entries must be 0.
 
Thanks in advance. 
 Answer by robertb(5830)      (Show Source): 
You can  put this solution on YOUR website! Consider the matrix A = [a(j,k)], where a(j,k) is the entry in the jth row and kth column. It must follow that A must be a square matrix.  The diagonal entries of A are a(1,1), a(2,2), a(3,3), ..., a(n,n).  If we take the transpose of A, the diagonal entries remain fixed. Now  , and the diagonal entries of -A are -a(1,1), -a(2,2), -a(3,3), ..., -a(n,n).  
 Thus a(1,1) = -a(1,1), a(2,2) = -a(2,2), a(3,3) = -a(3,3), ...,  
a(n,n) = -a(n,n).  These imply that  a(1,1) = 0, a(2,2) = 0, a(3,3) = 0, ..., 
 a(n,n) = 0, and the proof is complete.   
 
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