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Walter Gautschi has written extensively on topics ranging from
special functions, quadrature and orthogonal polynomials to
difference and differential equations, software implementations,
and the history of mathematics. He is world renowned for his
pioneering work in numerical analysis and constructive orthogonal
polynomials, including a definitive textbook in the former, and a
monograph in the latter area. This three-volume set, Walter
Gautschi: Selected Works with Commentaries, is a compilation of
Gautschi s most influential papers and includes commentaries by
leading experts. The work begins with a detailed biographical
section and ends with a section commemorating Walter s prematurely
deceased twin brother. This title will appeal to graduate students
and researchers in numerical analysis, as well as to historians of
science. Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 1 Numerical
Conditioning Special Functions Interpolation and Approximation
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 2 Orthogonal Polynomials on
the Real Line Orthogonal Polynomials on the Semicircle Chebyshev
Quadrature Kronrod and Other Quadratures Gauss-type Quadrature
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 3 Linear Difference
Equations Ordinary Differential Equations Software History and
Biography Miscellanea Works of Werner Gautschi Numerical
Conditioning Special Functions Interpolation and Approximation
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 2 Orthogonal Polynomials on
the Real Line Orthogonal Polynomials on the Semicircle Chebyshev
Quadrature Kronrod and Other Quadratures Gauss-type Quadrature
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 3 Linear Difference
Equations Ordinary Differential Equations Software History and
Biography Miscellanea Works of Werner Gautschi
This book paints a fresco of the field of extrapolation and
rational approximation over the last several centuries to the
present through the works of their primary contributors. It can
serve as an introduction to the topics covered, including
extrapolation methods, Pade approximation, orthogonal polynomials,
continued fractions, Lanczos-type methods etc.; it also provides in
depth discussion of the many links between these subjects. A
highlight of this book is the presentation of the human side of the
fields discussed via personal testimonies from contemporary
researchers, their anecdotes, and their exclusive remembrances of
some of the "actors." This book shows how research in this domain
started and evolved. Biographies of other scholars encountered have
also been included. An important branch of mathematics is described
in its historical context, opening the way to new developments.
After a mathematical introduction, the book contains a precise
description of the mathematical landscape of these fields spanning
from the 19th century to the first part of the 20th. After an
analysis of the works produced after that period (in particular
those of Richardson, Aitken, Shanks, Wynn, and others), the most
recent developments and applications are reviewed.
This book traces the life of Cholesky (1875-1918), and gives his
family history. After an introduction to topography, an English
translation of an unpublished paper by him where he explained his
method for linear systems is given, studied and replaced in its
historical context. His other works, including two books, are also
described as well as his involvement in teaching at a superior
school by correspondence. The story of this school and its founder,
Leon Eyrolles, are addressed. Then, an important unpublished book
of Cholesky on graphical calculation is analyzed in detail and
compared to similar contemporary publications. The biography of
Ernest Benoit, who wrote the first paper where Choleskys method is
explained, is provided. Various documents, highlighting the life
and the personality of Cholesky, end the book."
The history of continued fractions is certainly one of the longest
among those of mathematical concepts, since it begins with Euclid's
algorithm for the great est common divisor at least three centuries
B.C. As it is often the case and like Monsieur Jourdain in
Moliere's "Ie bourgeois gentilhomme" (who was speak ing in prose
though he did not know he was doing so), continued fractions were
used for many centuries before their real discovery. The history of
continued fractions and Pade approximants is also quite im portant,
since they played a leading role in the development of some
branches of mathematics. For example, they were the basis for the
proof of the tran scendence of 11' in 1882, an open problem for
more than two thousand years, and also for our modern spectral
theory of operators. Actually they still are of great interest in
many fields of pure and applied mathematics and in numerical
analysis, where they provide computer approximations to special
functions and are connected to some convergence acceleration
methods. Con tinued fractions are also used in number theory,
computer science, automata, electronics, etc ..."
Walter Gautschi has written extensively on topics ranging from
special functions, quadrature and orthogonal polynomials to
difference and differential equations, software implementations,
and the history of mathematics. He is world renowned for his
pioneering work in numerical analysis and constructive orthogonal
polynomials, including a definitive textbook in the former, and a
monograph in the latter area. This three-volume set, Walter
Gautschi: Selected Works with Commentaries, is a compilation of
Gautschi s most influential papers and includes commentaries by
leading experts. The work begins with a detailed biographical
section and ends with a section commemorating Walter s prematurely
deceased twin brother. This title will appeal to graduate students
and researchers in numerical analysis, as well as to historians of
science. Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 1 Numerical
Conditioning Special Functions Interpolation and Approximation
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 2 Orthogonal Polynomials on
the Real Line Orthogonal Polynomials on the Semicircle Chebyshev
Quadrature Kronrod and Other Quadratures Gauss-type Quadrature
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 3 Linear Difference
Equations Ordinary Differential Equations Software History and
Biography Miscellanea Works of Werner Gautschi Numerical
Conditioning Special Functions Interpolation and Approximation
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 2 Orthogonal Polynomials on
the Real Line Orthogonal Polynomials on the Semicircle Chebyshev
Quadrature Kronrod and Other Quadratures Gauss-type Quadrature
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 3 Linear Difference
Equations Ordinary Differential Equations Software History and
Biography Miscellanea Works of Werner Gautschi
Many devices (we say dynamical systems or simply systems) behave
like black boxes: they receive an input, this input is transformed
following some laws (usually a differential equation) and an output
is observed. The problem is to regulate the input in order to
control the output, that is for obtaining a desired output. Such a
mechanism, where the input is modified according to the output
measured, is called feedback. The study and design of such
automatic processes is called control theory. As we will see, the
term system embraces any device and control theory has a wide
variety of applications in the real world. Control theory is an
interdisci plinary domain at the junction of differential and
difference equations, system theory and statistics. Moreover, the
solution of a control problem involves many topics of numerical
analysis and leads to many interesting computational problems:
linear algebra (QR, SVD, projections, Schur complement, structured
matrices, localization of eigenvalues, computation of the rank,
Jordan normal form, Sylvester and other equations, systems of
linear equations, regulariza tion, etc), root localization for
polynomials, inversion of the Laplace transform, computation of the
matrix exponential, approximation theory (orthogonal poly nomials,
Pad6 approximation, continued fractions and linear fractional
transfor mations), optimization, least squares, dynamic
programming, etc. So, control theory is also a. good excuse for
presenting various (sometimes unrelated) issues of numerical
analysis and the procedures for their solution. This book is not a
book on control."
This book explores the use of the concept of biorthogonality and
discusses the various recurrence relations for the generalizations
of the method of moments, the method of Lanczos, and the
biconjugate gradient method. It is helpful for researchers in
numerical analysis and approximation theory.
Walter Gautschi has written extensively on topics ranging from
special functions, quadrature and orthogonal polynomials to
difference and differential equations, software implementations,
and the history of mathematics. He is world renowned for his
pioneering work in numerical analysis and constructive orthogonal
polynomials, including a definitive textbook in the former, and a
monograph in the latter area. This three-volume set, Walter
Gautschi: Selected Works with Commentaries, is a compilation of
Gautschi s most influential papers and includes commentaries by
leading experts. The work begins with a detailed biographical
section and ends with a section commemorating Walter s prematurely
deceased twin brother. This title will appeal to graduate students
and researchers in numerical analysis, as well as to historians of
science. Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 1 Numerical
Conditioning Special Functions Interpolation and Approximation
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 2 Orthogonal Polynomials on
the Real Line Orthogonal Polynomials on the Semicircle Chebyshev
Quadrature Kronrod and Other Quadratures Gauss-type Quadrature
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 3 Linear Difference
Equations Ordinary Differential Equations Software History and
Biography Miscellanea Works of Werner Gautschi Numerical
Conditioning Special Functions Interpolation and Approximation
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 2 Orthogonal Polynomials on
the Real Line Orthogonal Polynomials on the Semicircle Chebyshev
Quadrature Kronrod and Other Quadratures Gauss-type Quadrature
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 3 Linear Difference
Equations Ordinary Differential Equations Software History and
Biography Miscellanea Works of Werner Gautschi
This book paints a fresco of the field of extrapolation and
rational approximation over the last several centuries to the
present through the works of their primary contributors. It can
serve as an introduction to the topics covered, including
extrapolation methods, Pade approximation, orthogonal polynomials,
continued fractions, Lanczos-type methods etc.; it also provides in
depth discussion of the many links between these subjects. A
highlight of this book is the presentation of the human side of the
fields discussed via personal testimonies from contemporary
researchers, their anecdotes, and their exclusive remembrances of
some of the "actors." This book shows how research in this domain
started and evolved. Biographies of other scholars encountered have
also been included. An important branch of mathematics is described
in its historical context, opening the way to new developments.
After a mathematical introduction, the book contains a precise
description of the mathematical landscape of these fields spanning
from the 19th century to the first part of the 20th. After an
analysis of the works produced after that period (in particular
those of Richardson, Aitken, Shanks, Wynn, and others), the most
recent developments and applications are reviewed.
Walter Gautschi has written extensively on topics ranging from
special functions, quadrature and orthogonal polynomials to
difference and differential equations, software implementations,
and the history of mathematics. He is world renowned for his
pioneering work in numerical analysis and constructive orthogonal
polynomials, including a definitive textbook in the former, and a
monograph in the latter area. This three-volume set, Walter
Gautschi: Selected Works with Commentaries, is a compilation of
Gautschi's most influential papers and includes commentaries by
leading experts. The work begins with a detailed biographical
section and ends with a section commemorating Walter's prematurely
deceased twin brother. This title will appeal to graduate students
and researchers in numerical analysis, as well as to historians of
science. Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 1 Numerical
Conditioning Special Functions Interpolation and Approximation
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 2 Orthogonal Polynomials on
the Real Line Orthogonal Polynomials on the Semicircle Chebyshev
Quadrature Kronrod and Other Quadratures Gauss-type Quadrature
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 3 Linear Difference
Equations Ordinary Differential Equations Software History and
Biography Miscellanea Works of Werner Gautschi
Walter Gautschi has written extensively on topics ranging from
special functions, quadrature and orthogonal polynomials to
difference and differential equations, software implementations,
and the history of mathematics. He is world renowned for his
pioneering work in numerical analysis and constructive orthogonal
polynomials, including a definitive textbook in the former, and a
monograph in the latter area. This three-volume set, Walter
Gautschi: Selected Works with Commentaries, is a compilation of
Gautschi's most influential papers and includes commentaries by
leading experts. The work begins with a detailed biographical
section and ends with a section commemorating Walter's prematurely
deceased twin brother. This title will appeal to graduate students
and researchers in numerical analysis, as well as to historians of
science. Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 1 Numerical
Conditioning Special Functions Interpolation and Approximation
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 2 Orthogonal Polynomials on
the Real Line Orthogonal Polynomials on the Semicircle Chebyshev
Quadrature Kronrod and Other Quadratures Gauss-type Quadrature
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 3 Linear Difference
Equations Ordinary Differential Equations Software History and
Biography Miscellanea Works of Werner Gautschi
This book traces the life of Cholesky (1875-1918), and gives his
family history. After an introduction to topography, an English
translation of an unpublished paper by him where he explained his
method for linear systems is given, studied and replaced in its
historical context. His other works, including two books, are also
described as well as his involvement in teaching at a superior
school by correspondence. The story of this school and its founder,
Leon Eyrolles, are addressed. Then, an important unpublished book
of Cholesky on graphical calculation is analyzed in detail and
compared to similar contemporary publications. The biography of
Ernest Benoit, who wrote the first paper where Choleskys method is
explained, is provided. Various documents, highlighting the life
and the personality of Cholesky, end the book.
Walter Gautschi has written extensively on topics ranging from
special functions, quadrature and orthogonal polynomials to
difference and differential equations, software implementations,
and the history of mathematics. He is world renowned for his
pioneering work in numerical analysis and constructive orthogonal
polynomials, including a definitive textbook in the former, and a
monograph in the latter area. This three-volume set, Walter
Gautschi: Selected Works with Commentaries, is a compilation of
Gautschi's most influential papers and includes commentaries by
leading experts. The work begins with a detailed biographical
section and ends with a section commemorating Walter's prematurely
deceased twin brother. This title will appeal to graduate students
and researchers in numerical analysis, as well as to historians of
science. Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 1 Numerical
Conditioning Special Functions Interpolation and Approximation
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 2 Orthogonal Polynomials on
the Real Line Orthogonal Polynomials on the Semicircle Chebyshev
Quadrature Kronrod and Other Quadratures Gauss-type Quadrature
Selected Works with Commentaries, Vol. 3 Linear Difference
Equations Ordinary Differential Equations Software History and
Biography Miscellanea Works of Werner Gautschi
The history of continued fractions is certainly one of the longest
among those of mathematical concepts, since it begins with Euclid's
algorithm for the great est common divisor at least three centuries
B.C. As it is often the case and like Monsieur Jourdain in
Moliere's "Ie bourgeois gentilhomme" (who was speak ing in prose
though he did not know he was doing so), continued fractions were
used for many centuries before their real discovery. The history of
continued fractions and Pade approximants is also quite im portant,
since they played a leading role in the development of some
branches of mathematics. For example, they were the basis for the
proof of the tran scendence of 11' in 1882, an open problem for
more than two thousand years, and also for our modern spectral
theory of operators. Actually they still are of great interest in
many fields of pure and applied mathematics and in numerical
analysis, where they provide computer approximations to special
functions and are connected to some convergence acceleration
methods. Con tinued fractions are also used in number theory,
computer science, automata, electronics, etc ..."
Many devices (we say dynamical systems or simply systems) behave
like black boxes: they receive an input, this input is transformed
following some laws (usually a differential equation) and an output
is observed. The problem is to regulate the input in order to
control the output, that is for obtaining a desired output. Such a
mechanism, where the input is modified according to the output
measured, is called feedback. The study and design of such
automatic processes is called control theory. As we will see, the
term system embraces any device and control theory has a wide
variety of applications in the real world. Control theory is an
interdisci plinary domain at the junction of differential and
difference equations, system theory and statistics. Moreover, the
solution of a control problem involves many topics of numerical
analysis and leads to many interesting computational problems:
linear algebra (QR, SVD, projections, Schur complement, structured
matrices, localization of eigenvalues, computation of the rank,
Jordan normal form, Sylvester and other equations, systems of
linear equations, regulariza tion, etc), root localization for
polynomials, inversion of the Laplace transform, computation of the
matrix exponential, approximation theory (orthogonal poly nomials,
Pad6 approximation, continued fractions and linear fractional
transfor mations), optimization, least squares, dynamic
programming, etc. So, control theory is also a. good excuse for
presenting various (sometimes unrelated) issues of numerical
analysis and the procedures for their solution. This book is not a
book on control."
Sn Sn+1. . . . Sn+k Sn+k Sn+k+1 . . Sn+2k k, n"
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