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If $A$ and $B$ are two real $2\times 2$ matrices with $\det A = 0 $ and $\det B = 0 $ and $\mathrm{tr}(B)$ is non zero. then what will be limit of $\lim_{t\to0}\frac{\det(A+tI)}{\det(B+tI)}$ I used the formula $\lambda^2-\mathrm{tr} A+\det A = 0$. then i think answer is $\dfrac{\mathrm{tr}(A)}{\mathrm{tr}(B)}$. Am I correct?

What would be expansion of $\det(A+tI)$ for a $2\times 2$ matrices?

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Let $A$ be an $n \times n$ matrix. Then, one may check that $\det (A + t I) = t^n + t^{n-1} \operatorname{tr} A + \cdots + t \, \lambda(A) + \det A$ where $\lambda (A)$ is a certain constant depending on the eigenvalues of the matrix $A$. In the case $n = 2$, $\lambda (A) = \operatorname{tr} A$. So, if $A$ and $B$ are both $n \times n$ matrices, $\frac{\det (A + t I)}{\det (B + t I)} = \frac{t^n + t^{n-1} \operatorname{tr} A + \cdots + t \, \lambda(A) + \det A}{t^n + t^{n-1} \operatorname{tr} B + \cdots + t \, \lambda(B) + \det B}$ Thus, if $\det A = \det B = 0$, and $\lambda (B) \ne 0$, $\lim_{t \to 0} \frac{\det (A + t I)}{\det (B + t I)} = \frac{\lambda (A)}{\lambda (B)}$ and in the special case $n = 2$ this reduces to exactly what you guessed.

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    ya sir i was thinking the same..perhaps beacuse i am not aware of its proof?2012-05-10