The motivation of my calculation is to get the inverse for the following matrix
c={{806187941679782.0, 218884444558405.0, -44574352.7996484,
263790009.291711, -7043899062155.16 , 101619269971218.0},
{218884444558405.0, 59429013469996.9, -12139526.3237759,
71717183.1728141, -1913730353321.76, 27580785304831.0},
{-44574352.7996484, -12139526.3237759,
5.06604715779434, -20.0242999918957,
455028.9823731, -5189609.42411989},
{263790009.291711, 71717183.1728141, -20.0242999918957,
100.006624596537, -2482688.13923785, 31962666.0977317},
{-7043899062155.16, -1913730353321.76,
455028.9823731, -2482688.13923785 ,
63930635211.802, -869762434934.025},
{101619269971218.0, 27580785304831.0, -5189609.42411989,
31962666.0977317, -869762434934.025, 12957503435300.3}}
A direct "b=Inverse[m]""b=Inverse[c]" gives the following warning
Inverse::luc: Result for Inverse of badly conditioned matrix (<<1>>) may contain significant numerical errors.
Not surprisingly, the diverge of "b.c" from the identity matrix is large. Then I try to use the matrix
a=Inverse[Inverse[m]a=Inverse[Inverse[c].m]c]
as a correction. The new Inverse is "a.b". When I test the new inverse, Mathematica gives the following results
which are obviously different.
Why do this happen? Besides, is there any better way to perform the matrix inversion in this case?