Numerical Methods in Approximation Theory, Vol. 9 | ISBN 9783034897020

Numerical Methods in Approximation Theory, Vol. 9

herausgegeben von D. Braess und L.L. Schumaker
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonD. Braess
Herausgegeben vonL.L. Schumaker
Buchcover Numerical Methods in Approximation Theory, Vol. 9  | EAN 9783034897020 | ISBN 3-0348-9702-2 | ISBN 978-3-0348-9702-0

Numerical Methods in Approximation Theory, Vol. 9

herausgegeben von D. Braess und L.L. Schumaker
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonD. Braess
Herausgegeben vonL.L. Schumaker
This book is the official proceedings of a conference on Numerical Methods in Approximation Theory which was held at the Mathematisches Forschungs institut in Oberwolfach during the week of November 24~30, 1991. It contains refereed and edited papers by 20 of the 49 participants. The book is dedicated to the memory of Prof. Lothar Collatz who main tained a long and active interest in numerical approximation. It is the ninth in a series of volumes published by Birkhiiuser resulting from conferences on the subject held at Oberwolfach, and co-organized by Prof. Collatz. We now briefly describe the contents of the book. The paper of BASZEN SKI, DELVOS and JESTER deals with blending using sine double series expan sions of functions defined on the unit square. In addition to giving explicit error estimates for partial sums and for interpolating sine polynomials, they also show that Boolean sums yield almost the same asymptotic error estimates as the conventional tensor-product approach, but with a reduced number of terms. The paper of BEATSON and LIGHT discusses approximation by quasi interpolants which are sums of scaled translates of a one-parameter family of functions. They do not require reproduction of low degree polynomials, but nevertheless are able to give error bounds and analyze quasi-interpolation based on Gaussians and exponentials. BINEV and JETTER deal with multivariate interpolation using shifts of a single basis function. They treat both gridded data and scattered data. As examples, they consider box splines and certain radial basis functions.