z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
On the performance of tensor methods for solving ill-conditioned problems.
Author(s) -
Robert B. Schnabel,
Brett W. Bader
Publication year - 2004
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/919164
Subject(s) - jacobian matrix and determinant , tensor (intrinsic definition) , mathematics , convergence (economics) , scale (ratio) , newton's method , nonlinear system , pure mathematics , physics , quantum mechanics , economics , economic growth
This paper investigates the performance of tensor methods for solving small- and large-scale systems of nonlinear equations where the Jacobian matrix at the root is ill-conditioned or singular. This condition occurs on many classes of problems, such as identifying or approaching turning points in path following problems. The singular case has been studied more than the highly ill-conditioned case, for both Newton and tensor methods. It is known that Newton-based methods do not work well with singular problems because they converge linearly to the solution and, in some cases, with poor accuracy. On the other hand, direct tensor methods have performed well on singular problems and have superlinear convergence on such problems under certain conditions. This behavior originates from the use of a special, restricted form of the second-order term included in the local tensor model that provides information lacking in a (nearly) singular Jacobian. With several implementations available for large-scale problems, tensor methods now are capable of solving larger problems. We compare the performance of tensor methods and Newton-based methods for both small- and large-scale problems over a range of conditionings, from well-conditioned to ill-conditioned to singular. Previous studies with tensor methods only concerned the ends of this spectrum. Our results show that tensor methods are increasingly superior to Newton-based methods as the problem grows more ill-conditioned

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here