(a) Find a matrix M over C with both minimal polynomial and characteristic polynomial equal to (x−2)3(x+1)2. Furthermore find two matrices M1 and M2 over C which have the same characteristic polynomial, (x−3)5(x−1)2, and the same minimal polynomial, (x−3)2(x−1)2, but which are not conjugate to one another. Is it possible to find a third such matrix, M3, neither conjugate to M1 nor to M2 ? Justify your answer.
(b) Suppose A is an n×n matrix over R which has minimal polynomial of the form (x−λ1)(x−λ2) for distinct roots λ1=λ2 in R. Show that the vector space V=Rn on which A defines an endomorphism α:V→V decomposes as a direct sum into V=ker(α−λ1ι)⊕ker(α−λ2ι), where ι is the identity.
[Hint: Express v∈V in terms of (α−λ1ι)(v) and (α−λ2ι)(v).]
Now suppose that A has minimal polynomial (x−λ1)(x−λ2)…(x−λm) for distinct λ1,…,λm∈R. By induction or otherwise show that
V=ker(α−λ1ι)⊕ker(α−λ2ι)⊕…⊕ker(α−λmι)
Use this last statement to prove that an arbitrary matrix A∈Mn×n(R) is diagonalizable if and only if all roots of its minimal polynomial lie in R and have multiplicity 1.