Similarity invariance

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  1. REDIRECT Template:More citations neededIn linear algebra, similarity invariance is a property exhibited by a function whose value is unchanged under similarities of its domain. That is, f is invariant under similarities if f(A)=f(B1AB) where B1AB is a matrix similar to A. Examples of such functions include the trace, determinant, characteristic polynomial, and the minimal polynomial.

A more colloquial phrase that means the same thing as similarity invariance is "basis independence", since a matrix can be regarded as a linear operator, written in a certain basis, and the same operator in a new basis is related to one in the old basis by the conjugation B1AB, where B is the transformation matrix to the new basis.

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