In numerical analysis and applied mathematics, sinc numerical methods are numerical techniques[1] for finding approximate solutions of partial differential equations and integral equations based on the translates of sinc function and Cardinal function C(f,h) which is an expansion of f defined by
where the step size h>0 and where the sinc function is defined by
Sinc approximation methods excel for problems whose solutions may have singularities, or infinite domains, or boundary layers.
The truncated Sinc expansion of f is defined by the following series:
- .
Sinc numerical methods cover
edit- function approximation,
- approximation of derivatives,
- approximate definite and indefinite integration,
- approximate solution of initial and boundary value ordinary differential equation (ODE) problems,
- approximation and inversion of Fourier and Laplace transforms,
- approximation of Hilbert transforms,
- approximation of definite and indefinite convolution,
- approximate solution of partial differential equations,
- approximate solution of integral equations,
- construction of conformal maps.
Indeed, Sinc are ubiquitous for approximating every operation of calculus
In the standard setup of the sinc numerical methods, the errors (in big O notation) are known to be with some c>0, where n is the number of nodes or bases used in the methods. However, Sugihara[2] has recently found that the errors in the Sinc numerical methods based on double exponential transformation are with some k>0, in a setup that is also meaningful both theoretically and practically and are found to be best possible in a certain mathematical sense.
Reading
edit- Stenger, Frank (2011). Handbook of Sinc Numerical Methods. Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press. ISBN 9781439821596.
- Lund, John; Bowers, Kenneth (1992). Sinc Methods for Quadrature and Differential Equations. Philadelphia: Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM). ISBN 9780898712988.
References
edit- ^ Stenger, F. (2000). "Summary of sinc numerical methods". Journal of Computational and Applied Mathematics. 121 (1–2): 379–420. doi:10.1016/S0377-0427(00)00348-4.
- ^ Sugihara, M.; Matsuo, T. (2004). "Recent developments of the Sinc numerical methods". Journal of Computational and Applied Mathematics. 164–165: 673–689. doi:10.1016/j.cam.2003.09.016.