ebook img

Approximate solutions of operator equations PDF

353 Pages·1997·21.509 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Approximate solutions of operator equations

APPROXIMATE SOLUTIONS OF OPERATOR EQUATIONS APPROXIMATIONS AND DECOMPOSITIONS Editor-in-Chief: CHARLES K. CHUI Vol. 1: Wavelets: An Elementary Treatment of Theory and Applications Tom H. Koornwinder, ed. Vol. 2: Approximate Kalman Filtering Guanrong Chen, ed. Vol. 3: Multivariate Approximation: From CAGD to Wavelets Kurt Jetter and Florencio I. Utreras, eds. Vol. 4: Advances in Computational Mathematics: New Delhi, India H. P. Dikshit and C. A. Micchelli, eds. Vol. 5: Computational Methods and Function Theory Proceedings of CMFT '94 Conference, Penang, Malaysia R. M. AH, St. Ruscheweyh and E. B. Saff, eds. Vol. 6: Approximation Theory VIII Approximation and Interpolation - Vol. 1 Wavelets and Multi-level Approximation - Vol. 2 C. K. Chui and L. L. Schumaker, eds. Vol. 7: Introduction to the Theory of Weighted Polynomial Approximation H. N. Mhaskar Vol. 8: Advanced Topics in Multivariate Approximation F. Fontanella, K. Jetter and P. J. Laurent, eds. Vol. 9: Approximate Solutions of Operator Equations M. J. Chen, Z. Y. Chen and G. R. Chen Series in Approximations and Decompositions - Vol. 9 APPROXIMATE SOLUTIONS OF OPERATOR EQUATIONS Mingjun Chen Department of Computer Science Zhongshan University, P P China Zhongying Chen Department of Computer Science Zhongshan University, P P China Guanrong Chen Department of Electrical Engineering University of Houston, ,SA World Scientific Singapore •New Jersey London• Hong Kong Published by World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd. P O Box 128, Farrer Road, Singapore 912805 USA office: Suite IB, 1060 Main Street, River Edge, NJ 07661 UK office: 57 Shelton Street, Covent Garden, London WC2H 9HE Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Chen, Mingjun, 1934- Approximate solutions of operator equations / by Mingjun Chen, Zhongying Chen, Guanrong Chen. p. cm. — (Series in approximations and decompositions; vol. 9) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 9810230648 (alk. paper) 1. Operator equations ~ Numerical solutions. 2. Approximation theory. I. Chen, Zhongying, 1946- II. Chen, G. (Guanrong) III. Title. IV. Series. QA329.C475 1997 515'.724--dc21 97-6029 CIP British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. Copyright © 1997 by World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd. All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without written permission from the Publisher. For photocopying of material in this volume, please pay a copying fee through the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc., 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, USA. In this case permission to photocopy is not required from the publisher. This book is printed on acid-free paper. Printed in Singapore by Uto-Print Approximations and Decompositions During the past decade, Approximation Theory has reached out to encompass the approximation-theoretic and computational aspects of several exciting areas in applied mathematics such as wavelets, fractals, neural networks, and computer-aided-geometric design, as well as the modern mathematical development in science and technology. The objective of this book series is to capture this exciting development in the form of monographs, lecture notes, reprint volumes, text books, edited review volumes, and conference proceedings. Approximate Solutions of Operator Equations, the 8th volume of this series, represents one of the computational aspects of Approximation Theory. It emphasizes on efficient algorithms for numerical solutions of differential and integral equations, including various linear and nonlinear as well as evolution equations. The series editor would like to thank the authors for their very fine contributions to this series. World Scientific Series in APPROXIMATIONS AND DECOMPOSITIONS Editor-in-Chief: CHARLES K. CHUI Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas TThhiiss ppaaggee is intentionally left blank Preface The rapid development in mathematical analysis of complex real-world phys­ ical systems has led to many kinds of linear and nonlinear, ordinary and partial differential, integral or integro-differential, and functional evolution equations, formulated in elementary or abstract function spaces, with initial- boundary value conditions and possible additional constraints. The classical approach to solving such equations for analytic solutions has proved impossi­ ble and, in reality, unnecessary with the great advances of modern computer facilities and technology. Approximate solutions to these problems by means of numerical computation have thus become the main stream of research and applications developed in recent years, in both academia and industry. In the endeavor of advancing efficient computational theories and methods, one successful and unified approach is to formulate various apparently different but intrinsically related equations as a certain type of operator equations in Banach spaces of real or complex functions. Approximate solutions to these operator equations can provide deep insights and feasible resolutions to many specific initial-boundary value problems of differential and integral equations. This book is designed as an elementary and self-contained introduc­ tion to some important notions such as the solvability issue, computational schemes, convergence analysis, stability conditions, and error estimates of approximate solutions for several types of operator equations in abstract Ba­ nach spaces. The operator equations studied in this treatise include various linear and nonlinear, ordinary and partial differential, integral and evolu­ tion equations that are frequently encountered in applied mathematics and engineering applications. The book serves also as a textbook for graduate students and as a refer­ ence for researchers and professionals in the fields of approximation theory, numerical analysis, scientific computation, applied mathematics, and engi­ neering. Among the many important and elegant results in the literature of approximate solutions of operator equations, we only include certain elemen­ tary and fundamental topics in this introductory text of modest size. Other results and more advanced topics can be found from the references provided vn Preface Vlll at the end of the book. The presentation is organized as follows. Chapter 1 is an overview of the projection approximation technique, which is of fundamental importance for operator equations throughout the entire text. Projection operators, projective approximation schemes, and their properties are discussed in this chapter. In Chapter 2, compact linear operator equations and their approximate solutions in a Banach space setting are investigated. Projection approxima­ tion of eigenvalues of self-adjoint compact linear operators in Hilbert spaces is also studied. The Fredholm integral equation is used as a case study of the theory and computational methods. General linear operator equations and their perturbation problems are the main topics in Chapter 3. Some sufficient and necessary conditions for unique approximate solvability and stability are derived for bounded linear operator equations in reflexive Banach spaces. Several general computational frameworks for finding generalized solutions of densely defined linear opera­ tor equations are established, in Banach space and/or Hilbert space settings. Applications of these schemes to numerical solutions of boundary value prob­ lems of linear ordinary and partial differential equations are discussed. The basic theory of topological degrees is presented in Chapter 4. It includes the topological degree of continuous operators in Euclidean spaces (the Brouwer degree), topological degree of compact fields in Banach spaces (the Leray-Schauder degree), and the generalized topological degree of the so-called A-proper operators. Some important fixed-point theorems are given in this chapter, with applications to projective approximate solutions of non­ linear integral equations. Chapter 5 provides a review of some fundamental concepts of Calculus in Banach space, and studies the projective approximate solvability problem for monotone and K-monotone nonlinear operator equations, including their perturbation problems. Numerical solutions of boundary value problems of some typical nonlinear elliptic differential equations are discussed along with several examples. Finally, in Chapter 6, both continuous-time and discrete-time (semi- discrete as well as fully discrete) projection approximation methods are de­ veloped for approximate solutions of first and second order abstract evolution equations. Their applications to initial-boundary values problems of differ­ ential evolution equations are illustrated via concrete examples. The present book is a significant expansion and revision of the text Operator Equations and Their Projection Approximate Solutions by the first two authors, published in Chinese by the Guangdong Scientific Publishing Company in 1992. The revision involves complete reorganization, filling in many details, updating with certain new techniques, and inclusion of many illustrative examples and exercises. Preface ix The authors wish to acknowledge several individuals, Professors Ronghua Li, Yuesheng Li, Guoshen Feng, and Jingan Lei, for their interest and en­ couragement during the preparation of this monograph. They would also like to express their gratitude to Professor Charles Chui, the series editor, for his continued support, and to Mrs. Margaret Chui for her assistance in the editorial work. Mingjun Chen Guangzhou Zhongying Chen Houston Guanrong Chen Summer, 1996 This page is intentionally left blank

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.