This book contains a large amount of information not found in standard textbooks. Written for the advanced undergraduate/beginning graduate student, it combines the modern mathematical standards of numerical analysis with an understanding of the needs of the computer scientist working on practical a
Introduction to numerical analysis
β Scribed by R. Bulirsch, J. Stoer
- Book ID
- 127434089
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 5 MB
- Series
- Texts in Applied Mathematics, No 12
- Edition
- 2nd
- Category
- Library
- ISBN-13
- 9780387978789
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book contains a large amount of information not found in standard textbooks. Written for the advanced undergraduate/beginning graduate student, it combines the modern mathematical standards of numerical analysis with an understanding of the needs of the computer scientist working on practical applications. 35 illustrations.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Well-known, respected introduction, updated to integrate concepts and procedures associated with computers. Computation, approximation, interpolation, numerical differentiation and integration, smoothing of data, other topics in lucid presentation. 150 additional problems in this edition. Bibliograp
This book contains a large amount of information not found in standard textbooks. Written for the advanced undergraduate/beginning graduate student, it combines the modern mathematical standards of numerical analysis with an understanding of the needs of the computer scientist working on practical a
This book contains a large amount of information not found in standard textbooks. Written for the advanced undergraduate/beginning graduate student, it combines the modern mathematical standards of numerical analysis with an understanding of the needs of the computer scientist working on practical a
This textbook is written primarily for undergraduate mathematicians and also appeals to students working at an advanced level in other disciplines. The text begins with a clear motivation for the study of numerical analysis based on real-world problems. The authors then develop the necessary machine