Date
Thu, 23 Oct 2003
Time
14:00 - 15:00
Location
Comlab
Speaker
Prof Arieh Iserles
Organisation
DAMPT, University of Cambridge

Rapidly oscillating problems, whether differential equations or

integrals, ubiquitous in applications, are allegedly difficult to

compute. In this talk we will endeavour to persuade the audience that

this is false: high oscillation, properly understood, is good for

computation! We describe methods for differential equations, based on

Magnus and Neumann expansions of modified systems, whose efficacy

improves in the presence of high oscillation. Likewise, we analyse

generalised Filon quadrature methods, showing that also their error

sharply decreases as the oscillation becomes more rapid.

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