The Symmetric Eigenvalue Problem (Classics in Applied Mathematics)
โ Scribed by Beresford N. Parlett
- Publisher
- Society for Industrial Mathematics
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 426
- Series
- Classics in Applied Mathematics
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
A droll explication of techniques that can be applied to understand some of the most important engineering problems: those dealing with vibrations, buckling, and earthquake resistance. While containing substantial theory, this is an applied mathematics text that reads as if you are eavesdropping on the author talking out loud to himself. What sets it off from the crowd of math books are the inside references to Parlett's friends in the business, and the dry wit. It contains NO CODE, yet discusses algorithms in detail, describing where they are good, and where they flop. The reader must pay attention, however, and work through some of the exercises with a calculator (a spreadsheet is handier, in my view). If you are looking for eigenvalues, this text is a necessary part of your toolkit.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
First published in 1985, Lanczos Algorithms for Large Symmetric Eigenvalue Computations; Vol. I: Theory presents background material, descriptions, and supporting theory relating to practical numerical algorithms for the solution of huge eigenvalue problems. This book deals with "symmetric" problems
First published in 1985, Lanczos Algorithms for Large Symmetric Eigenvalue Computations; Vol. I: Theory presents background material, descriptions, and supporting theory relating to practical numerical algorithms for the solution of huge eigenvalue problems. This book deals with "symmetric" problems
Perturbation Bounds for Matrix Eigenvalues contains a unified exposition of spectral variation inequalities for matrices. The text provides a complete and self-contained collection of bounds for the distance between the eigenvalues of two matrices, which could be arbitrary or restricted to special c
A droll explication of techniques that can be applied to understand some of the most important engineering problems: those dealing with vibrations, buckling, and earthquake resistance. While containing substantial theory, this is an applied mathematics text that reads as if you are eavesdropping
A droll explication of techniques that can be applied to understand some of the most important engineering problems: those dealing with vibrations, buckling, and earthquake resistance. While containing substantial theory, this is an applied mathematics text that reads as if you are eavesdropping