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The Eigenspace Spectral Regularization Method for Solving Discrete Ill-Posed Systems
Author(s) -
Fredrick Asenso Wireko,
Benedict Barnes,
Charles Sebil,
Joseph Ackora-Prah
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of applied mathematics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.307
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1687-0042
pISSN - 1110-757X
DOI - 10.1155/2021/4373290
Subject(s) - mathematics , operator (biology) , matrix decomposition , matrix (chemical analysis) , circulant matrix , cholesky decomposition , eigenvalues and eigenvectors , compact operator , regularization (linguistics) , quasinormal operator , condition number , combinatorics , finite rank operator , pure mathematics , computer science , physics , artificial intelligence , materials science , repressor , banach space , chemistry , composite material , biochemistry , quantum mechanics , transcription factor , programming language , extension (predicate logic) , gene
This paper shows that discrete linear equations with Hilbert matrix operator, circulant matrix operator, conference matrix operator, banded matrix operator, TST matrix operator, and sparse matrix operator are ill-posed in the sense of Hadamard. Gauss least square method (GLSM), QR factorization method (QRFM), Cholesky decomposition method (CDM), and singular value decomposition (SVDM) failed to regularize these ill-posed problems. This paper introduces the eigenspace spectral regularization method (ESRM), which solves ill-posed discrete equations with Hilbert matrix operator, circulant matrix operator, conference matrix operator, and banded and sparse matrix operator. Unlike GLSM, QRFM, CDM, and SVDM, the ESRM regularizes such a system. In addition, the ESRM has a unique property, the norm of the eigenspace spectral matrix operator κ K = K − 1 K = 1 . Thus, the condition number of ESRM is bounded by unity, unlike the other regularization methods such as SVDM, GLSM, CDM, and QRFM.

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