Pages that link to "Item:Q5799044"
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The following pages link to Numerical Determination of Fundamental Modes (Q5799044):
Displayed 20 items.
- Composite convergence bounds based on Chebyshev polynomials and finite precision conjugate gradient computations (Q457037) (← links)
- Chebyshev semi-iterative methods, successive overrelaxation iterative methods, and second order Richardson iterative methods. I, II (Q773817) (← links)
- Explicit solutions of partial difference equations and random paths on plane nets (Q1131431) (← links)
- A method for the automatic evaluation of the dynamic relaxation parameters (Q1144993) (← links)
- On the accelerated SSOR method for solving large linear systems (Q1237500) (← links)
- On the general problem of formulation and optimization of a p-parametric extrapolated alternating direction implicit sheme (Q1255308) (← links)
- Computation of a few small eigenvalues of a large matrix with application to liquid crystal modeling (Q1275165) (← links)
- A historical overview of iterative methods (Q1330630) (← links)
- Time-step sequences for parabolic differential equations (Q1893548) (← links)
- Iterative methods for the computation of a few eigenvalues of a large symmetric matrix (Q1923866) (← links)
- Jordan-Elimination und Ausgleichung nach kleinsten Quadraten (Q2625943) (← links)
- Halting time is predictable for large models: a universality property and average-case analysis (Q2697399) (← links)
- Low-Rank Matrix Iteration Using Polynomial-Filtered Subspace Extraction (Q3300851) (← links)
- The extrapolated gauss-seidel plus semi-iterative method for generalized consistently ordered matrices (Q3813141) (← links)
- Convergence of a Constrained Vector Extrapolation Scheme (Q5089736) (← links)
- (Q5110504) (← links)
- Estimating Optimum Overrelaxation Parameters (Q5551865) (← links)
- Use of Tschebyscheff-Polynomial Operators in the Numerical Solution of Boundary-Value Problems (Q5817776) (← links)
- The Use of Large Scale Computing in Physics (Q5817816) (← links)
- Solving linear algebraic equations can be interesting (Q5818804) (← links)