Forward error analysis of Gaussian elimination. I: Error and residual estimates (Q760168)
From MaRDI portal
| This is the item page for this Wikibase entity, intended for internal use and editing purposes. Please use this page instead for the normal view: Forward error analysis of Gaussian elimination. I: Error and residual estimates |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3883512
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Forward error analysis of Gaussian elimination. I: Error and residual estimates |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3883512 |
Statements
Forward error analysis of Gaussian elimination. I: Error and residual estimates (English)
0 references
1985
0 references
Part I of this work deals with the forward error analysis of Gaussian elimination for general linear algebraic systems. The error analysis is based on a linearization method which determines first order approximations of the absolute errors exactly. Superposition and cancellation of error effects, structure and sparsity of the coefficient matrices are completely taken into account by this method. The most important results of the paper are new condition numbers and associated optimal component-wise error and residual estimates for the solutions of linear algebraic systems under data perturbations and perturbations by rounding errors in the arithmetic floating-point operations. The estimate do not use vector or matrix norms. The relative data and rounding condition numbers as well as the associated backward and residual stability constants are scaling-invariant. The condition numbers can be computed approximately from the input data, the intermediate results, and the solution of the linear system. Numerical examples show that by these means realistic bounds of the errors and the residuals of approximate solutions can be obtained. Using the forward error analysis, also typical results of backward error analysis are deduced. Stability theorems and a priori error estimates for special classes of linear systems are proved in Part II of this work (reviewed below).
0 references
forward error analysis
0 references
Gaussian elimination
0 references
linearization method
0 references
superposition
0 references
cancellation
0 references
condition numbers
0 references
optimal componentwise error and residual estimates
0 references
data perturbations
0 references
rounding errors
0 references
arithmetic floating-point operations
0 references
residual stability constants
0 references
scaling-invariant
0 references
numerical examples
0 references
backward error analysis
0 references