For fixed $C \in \mathrm{\mathbf{GL}}_n(\mathbb{R})$, we defined $\varphi, \psi: \mathrm{\mathbf{SL}}_n(\mathbb{R}) \rightarrow \mathrm{\mathbf{SL}}_n(\mathbb{R})$ as $$\varphi(A) = CAC^{-1}, \quad \psi(A) = (A^{\mathrm{\mathbf{t}}})^{-1}, \qquad (A\in \mathrm{\mathbf{SL}}_n(\mathbb{R}))$$
My question is, for the case where $C \notin \mathrm{\mathbf{SL}}_n(\mathbb{R})$,
Is $\varphi, \psi$ an outer automorphism of $\mathrm{\mathbf{SL}}_n(\mathbb{R})$?
I can see that $\varphi, \psi \in \mathrm{Aut}(\mathrm{\mathbf{SL}}_n(\mathbb{R}))$, so what I tried was the following.
If $\varphi, \psi$ is an inner automorphism of $\mathrm{\mathbf{SL}}_n(\mathbb{R})$, there exists $B\in \mathrm{\mathbf{SL}}_n(\mathbb{R})$, such that $$BAB^{-1}=\varphi(A)=CAC^{-1}, \quad BAB^{-1} = \psi(A) = (A^{\mathrm{\mathbf{t}}})^{-1}$$ But from here, I cannot get any further.
It seems like $\varphi \in \mathrm{Inn}(\mathrm{\mathbf{SL}}_n(\mathbb{R}))$ and $\psi \in \mathrm{Out}(\mathrm{\mathbf{SL}}_n(\mathbb{R}))$ but I cannot prove it. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
Note: I have read an answer from Transpose inverse automorphism is not inner, but I couldn't understand the answer.