Data-sparse approximation by adaptive \({\mathcal H}^2\)-matrices (Q1849565)
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English | Data-sparse approximation by adaptive \({\mathcal H}^2\)-matrices |
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Data-sparse approximation by adaptive \({\mathcal H}^2\)-matrices (English)
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1 December 2002
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The authors review the definition of \(\mathcal H\) and \({\mathcal H}^2\) matrices, the first ones with an underlying cluster tree and the second one with nested bases. The \({\mathcal H}^2\)-matrices have the following properties: (1) they are data-sparse in the sense that only \({\mathcal O}(n)\) data are needed for their representation; (2) the matrix-vector multiplication is of linear complexity; and (3) sums of these matrices can be computed with linear complexity after truncation to \({\mathcal H}^2\)-matrix format. In the case of sparse matrices \(A\) resulting from finite element discretizations of elliptic boundary value problems, the inverse \(A^{-1}\) approximated by the \({\mathcal H}^2\)-format may lead to a fast iteration. An efficient implementation of some basic operations of \({\mathcal H}^2\) is considered. An algorithm is presented that computes an optimal \({\mathcal H}^2\)-approximation with only \({\mathcal O}(n^2)\) operations. If the original matrix is given in \(\mathcal H\)-format, the algorithm can be modified to use only an almost linear amount of operations. Complexity and storage requirements are considered and examples are presented.
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hierarchical matrices
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nested bases
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fast matrix-vector multiplication
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numerical examples
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boundary element method
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linear complexity
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sparse matrices
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finite element discretizations
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elliptic boundary value problems
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fast iteration
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algorithm
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