Given the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of a matrix $R^{n\times n}$ is that possible to recover the same matrix from smaller matrices $R^{(n-1) \times (n-1)}$ where one of its eigenvalues and eigenvectors had been eliminated?. I have a Matrix $A$ of $3 \times 3$ dimension and doing a process i have obtained three diferent matrices of dimension $2 \times 2$ where each one conserve two of the three original eigenvectors and eigenvalues.
The process what i have done is: Matrix $A$, has n eigenvalues, $n=3$ for explaining. Is possible to obtain three new matrices through this $A_k=(SMP^{k}S')S(MP^k)^{-1}A(MP^k)S'(SMP^kS')^{-1}$ and as well with $A_k=SMEP^kS^T(SMP^kS')^{-1}$ where: $S$ is a selection matrix to eliminate a row and a column, in the case of $n=3$ is the following:
$S=\begin{pmatrix}1&0&0\\0&1&0\end{pmatrix}$
$P$ is a permutation matrix for eigenvectors $P=\begin{pmatrix}0&0&1\\1&0&0\\0&1&0\end{pmatrix}$
$E$ is a diagonal Matrix which contains the eigenvalues $E=\begin{pmatrix}\lambda_{1}&0&0\\0&\lambda_2&0\\0&0&\lambda_3\end{pmatrix}$ M is the eigenvectors matrix, $M=\begin{pmatrix}v_{1}&v_{2}&v_{3}\end{pmatrix}$ and $k$ let us to find the $n+1$ solutions i mean $A_1$, $A_2$ and $A_3$ . Another way to express that solutions is $A_k=SAMP^kS^T(SMP^kS^T)^{-1}$ . What I have done is like a projection from $R^3$ over $R^2$ or $C^2$ eliminating one eigenvalue in each case to obtain $A_1$, $A_2$, $A_3$.
Thanks for your help!
Gina