Volume 52, pp. 480-508, 2020.
On pole-swapping algorithms for the eigenvalue problem
Daan Camps, Thomas Mach, Raf Vandebril, and David S. Watkins
Abstract
Pole-swapping algorithms, which are generalizations of the QZ algorithm for the generalized eigenvalue problem, are studied. A new modular (and therefore more flexible) convergence theory that applies to all pole-swapping algorithms is developed. A key component of all such algorithms is a procedure that swaps two adjacent eigenvalues in a triangular pencil. An improved swapping routine is developed, and its superiority over existing methods is demonstrated by a backward error analysis and numerical tests. The modularity of the new convergence theory and the generality of the pole-swapping approach shed new light on bi-directional chasing algorithms, optimally packed shifts, and bulge pencils, and allow the design of novel algorithms.
Full Text (PDF) [376 KB], BibTeX
Key words
eigenvalue, QZ algorithm, pole swapping, convergence
AMS subject classifications
65F15, 15A18
Links to the cited ETNA articles
[27] | Vol. 40 (2013), pp. 17-35 Raf Vandebril and David S. Watkins: An extension of the QZ algorithm beyond the Hessenberg-upper triangular pencil |
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