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378 lines
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378 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
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[section:remez The Remez Method]
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The [@http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remez_algorithm Remez algorithm]
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is a methodology for locating the minimax rational approximation
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to a function. This short article gives a brief overview of the method, but
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it should not be regarded as a thorough theoretical treatment, for that you
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should consult your favorite textbook.
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Imagine that you want to approximate some function f(x) by way of a rational
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function R(x), where R(x) may be either a polynomial P(x) or a ratio of two
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polynomials P(x)/Q(x) (a rational function). Initially we'll concentrate on the
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polynomial case, as it's by far the easier to deal with, later we'll extend
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to the full rational function case.
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We want to find the "best" rational approximation, where
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"best" is defined to be the approximation that has the least deviation
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from f(x). We can measure the deviation by way of an error function:
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E[sub abs](x) = f(x) - R(x)
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which is expressed in terms of absolute error, but we can equally use
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relative error:
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E[sub rel](x) = (f(x) - R(x)) / |f(x)|
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And indeed in general we can scale the error function in any way we want, it
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makes no difference to the maths, although the two forms above cover almost
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every practical case that you're likely to encounter.
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The minimax rational function R(x) is then defined to be the function that
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yields the smallest maximal value of the error function. Chebyshev showed
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that there is a unique minimax solution for R(x) that has the following
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properties:
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* If R(x) is a polynomial of degree N, then there are N+2 unknowns:
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the N+1 coefficients of the polynomial, and maximal value of the error
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function.
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* The error function has N+1 roots, and N+2 extrema (minima and maxima).
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* The extrema alternate in sign, and all have the same magnitude.
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That means that if we know the location of the extrema of the error function
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then we can write N+2 simultaneous equations:
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R(x[sub i]) + (-1)[super i]E = f(x[sub i])
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where E is the maximal error term, and x[sub i] are the abscissa values of the
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N+2 extrema of the error function. It is then trivial to solve the simultaneous
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equations to obtain the polynomial coefficients and the error term.
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['Unfortunately we don't know where the extrema of the error function are located!]
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[h4 The Remez Method]
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The Remez method is an iterative technique which, given a broad range of
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assumptions, will converge on the extrema of the error function, and therefore
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the minimax solution.
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In the following discussion we'll use a concrete example to illustrate
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the Remez method: an approximation to the function e[super x][space] over
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the range \[-1, 1\].
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Before we can begin the Remez method, we must obtain an initial value
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for the location of the extrema of the error function. We could "guess"
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these, but a much closer first approximation can be obtained by first
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constructing an interpolated polynomial approximation to f(x).
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In order to obtain the N+1 coefficients of the interpolated polynomial
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we need N+1 points (x[sub 0]...x[sub N]): with our interpolated form
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passing through each of those points
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that yields N+1 simultaneous equations:
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f(x[sub i]) = P(x[sub i]) = c[sub 0] + c[sub 1]x[sub i] ... + c[sub N]x[sub i][super N]
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Which can be solved for the coefficients c[sub 0]...c[sub N] in P(x).
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Obviously this is not a minimax solution, indeed our only guarantee is that f(x) and
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P(x) touch at N+1 locations, away from those points the error may be arbitrarily
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large. However, we would clearly like this initial approximation to be as close to
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f(x) as possible, and it turns out that using the zeros of an orthogonal polynomial
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as the initial interpolation points is a good choice. In our example we'll use the
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zeros of a Chebyshev polynomial as these are particularly easy to calculate,
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interpolating for a polynomial of degree 4, and measuring /relative error/
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we get the following error function:
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[$../graphs/remez-2.png]
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Which has a peak relative error of 1.2x10[super -3].
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While this is a pretty good approximation already, judging by the
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shape of the error function we can clearly do better. Before starting
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on the Remez method propper, we have one more step to perform: locate
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all the extrema of the error function, and store
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these locations as our initial ['Chebyshev control points].
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[note
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In the simple case of a polynomial approximation, by interpolating through
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the roots of a Chebyshev polynomial we have in fact created a ['Chebyshev
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approximation] to the function: in terms of /absolute error/
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this is the best a priori choice for the interpolated form we can
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achieve, and typically is very close to the minimax solution.
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However, if we want to optimise for /relative error/, or if the approximation
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is a rational function, then the initial Chebyshev solution can be quite far
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from the ideal minimax solution.
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A more technical discussion of the theory involved can be found in this
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[@http://math.fullerton.edu/mathews/n2003/ChebyshevPolyMod.html online course].]
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[h4 Remez Step 1]
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The first step in the Remez method, given our current set of
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N+2 Chebyshev control points x[sub i], is to solve the N+2 simultaneous
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equations:
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P(x[sub i]) + (-1)[super i]E = f(x[sub i])
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To obtain the error term E, and the coefficients of the polynomial P(x).
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This gives us a new approximation to f(x) that has the same error /E/ at
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each of the control points, and whose error function ['alternates in sign]
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at the control points. This is still not necessarily the minimax
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solution though: since the control points may not be at the extrema of the error
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function. After this first step here's what our approximation's error
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function looks like:
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[$../graphs/remez-3.png]
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Clearly this is still not the minimax solution since the control points
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are not located at the extrema, but the maximum relative error has now
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dropped to 5.6x10[super -4].
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[h4 Remez Step 2]
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The second step is to locate the extrema of the new approximation, which we do
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in two stages: first, since the error function changes sign at each
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control point, we must have N+1 roots of the error function located between
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each pair of N+2 control points. Once these roots are found by standard root finding
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techniques, we know that N extrema are bracketed between each pair of
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roots, plus two more between the endpoints of the range and the first and last roots.
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The N+2 extrema can then be found using standard function minimisation techniques.
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We now have a choice: multi-point exchange, or single point exchange.
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In single point exchange, we move the control point nearest to the largest extrema to
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the absissa value of the extrema.
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In multi-point exchange we swap all the current control points, for the locations
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of the extrema.
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In our example we perform multi-point exchange.
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[h4 Iteration]
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The Remez method then performs steps 1 and 2 above iteratively until the control
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points are located at the extrema of the error function: this is then
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the minimax solution.
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For our current example, two more iterations converges on a minimax
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solution with a peak relative error of
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5x10[super -4] and an error function that looks like:
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[$../graphs/remez-4.png]
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[h4 Rational Approximations]
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If we wish to extend the Remez method to a rational approximation of the form
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f(x) = R(x) = P(x) / Q(x)
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where P(x) and Q(x) are polynomials, then we proceed as before, except that now
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we have N+M+2 unknowns if P(x) is of order N and Q(x) is of order M. This assumes
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that Q(x) is normalised so that its leading coefficient is 1, giving
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N+M+1 polynomial coefficients in total, plus the error term E.
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The simultaneous equations to be solved are now:
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P(x[sub i]) / Q(x[sub i]) + (-1)[super i]E = f(x[sub i])
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Evaluated at the N+M+2 control points x[sub i].
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Unfortunately these equations are non-linear in the error term E: we can only
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solve them if we know E, and yet E is one of the unknowns!
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The method usually adopted to solve these equations is an iterative one: we guess the
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value of E, solve the equations to obtain a new value for E (as well as the polynomial
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coefficients), then use the new value of E as the next guess. The method is
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repeated until E converges on a stable value.
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These complications extend the running time required for the development
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of rational approximations quite considerably. It is often desirable
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to obtain a rational rather than polynomial approximation none the less:
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rational approximations will often match more difficult to approximate
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functions, to greater accuracy, and with greater efficiency, than their
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polynomial alternatives. For example, if we takes our previous example
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of an approximation to e[super x], we obtained 5x10[super -4] accuracy
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with an order 4 polynomial. If we move two of the unknowns into the denominator
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to give a pair of order 2 polynomials, and re-minimise, then the peak relative error drops
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to 8.7x10[super -5]. That's a 5 fold increase in accuracy, for the same number
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of terms overall.
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[h4 Practical Considerations]
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Most treatises on approximation theory stop at this point. However, from
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a practical point of view, most of the work involves finding the right
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approximating form, and then persuading the Remez method to converge
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on a solution.
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So far we have used a direct approximation:
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f(x) = R(x)
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But this will converge to a useful approximation only if f(x) is smooth. In
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addition round-off errors when evaluating the rational form mean that this
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will never get closer than within a few epsilon of machine precision.
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Therefore this form of direct approximation is often reserved for situations
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where we want efficiency, rather than accuracy.
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The first step in improving the situation is generally to split f(x) into
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a dominant part that we can compute accurately by another method, and a
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slowly changing remainder which can be approximated by a rational approximation.
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We might be tempted to write:
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f(x) = g(x) + R(x)
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where g(x) is the dominant part of f(x), but if f(x)\/g(x) is approximately
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constant over the interval of interest then:
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f(x) = g(x)(c + R(x))
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Will yield a much better solution: here /c/ is a constant that is the approximate
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value of f(x)\/g(x) and R(x) is typically tiny compared to /c/. In this situation
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if R(x) is optimised for absolute error, then as long as its error is small compared
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to the constant /c/, that error will effectively get wiped out when R(x) is added to
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/c/.
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The difficult part is obviously finding the right g(x) to extract from your
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function: often the asymptotic behaviour of the function will give a clue, so
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for example the function __erfc becomes proportional to
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e[super -x[super 2]]\/x as x becomes large. Therefore using:
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erfc(z) = (C + R(x)) e[super -x[super 2]]/x
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as the approximating form seems like an obvious thing to try, and does indeed
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yield a useful approximation.
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However, the difficulty then becomes one of converging the minimax solution.
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Unfortunately, it is known that for some functions the Remez method can lead
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to divergent behaviour, even when the initial starting approximation is quite good.
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Furthermore, it is not uncommon for the solution obtained in the first Remez step
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above to be a bad one: the equations to be solved are generally "stiff", often
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very close to being singular, and assuming a solution is found at all, round-off
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errors and a rapidly changing error function, can lead to a situation where the
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error function does not in fact change sign at each control point as required.
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If this occurs, it is fatal to the Remez method. It is also possible to
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obtain solutions that are perfectly valid mathematically, but which are
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quite useless computationally: either because there is an unavoidable amount
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of roundoff error in the computation of the rational function, or because
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the denominator has one or more roots over the interval of the approximation.
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In the latter case while the approximation may have the correct limiting value at
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the roots, the approximation is nonetheless useless.
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Assuming that the approximation does not have any fatal errors, and that the only
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issue is converging adequately on the minimax solution, the aim is to
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get as close as possible to the minimax solution before beginning the Remez method.
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Using the zeros of a Chebyshev polynomial for the initial interpolation is a
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good start, but may not be ideal when dealing with relative errors and\/or
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rational (rather than polynomial) approximations. One approach is to skew
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the initial interpolation points to one end: for example if we raise the
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roots of the Chebyshev polynomial to a positive power greater than 1
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then the roots will be skewed towards the middle of the \[-1,1\] interval,
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while a positive power less than one
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will skew them towards either end. More usefully, if we initially rescale the
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points over \[0,1\] and then raise to a positive power, we can skew them to the left
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or right. Returning to our example of e[super x][space] over \[-1,1\], the initial
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interpolated form was some way from the minimax solution:
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[$../graphs/remez-2.png]
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However, if we first skew the interpolation points to the left (rescale them
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to \[0, 1\], raise to the power 1.3, and then rescale back to \[-1,1\]) we
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reduce the error from 1.3x10[super -3][space]to 6x10[super -4]:
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[$../graphs/remez-5.png]
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It's clearly still not ideal, but it is only a few percent away from
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our desired minimax solution (5x10[super -4]).
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[h4 Remez Method Checklist]
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The following lists some of the things to check if the Remez method goes wrong,
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it is by no means an exhaustive list, but is provided in the hopes that it will
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prove useful.
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* Is the function smooth enough? Can it be better separated into
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a rapidly changing part, and an asymptotic part?
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* Does the function being approximated have any "blips" in it? Check
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for problems as the function changes computation method, or
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if a root, or an infinity has been divided out. The telltale
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sign is if there is a narrow region where the Remez method will
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not converge.
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* Check you have enough accuracy in your calculations: remember that
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the Remez method works on the difference between the approximation
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and the function being approximated: so you must have more digits of
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precision available than the precision of the approximation
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being constructed. So for example at double precision, you
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shouldn't expect to be able to get better than a float precision
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approximation.
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* Try skewing the initial interpolated approximation to minimise the
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error before you begin the Remez steps.
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* If the approximation won't converge or is ill-conditioned from one starting
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location, try starting from a different location.
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* If a rational function won't converge, one can minimise a polynomial
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(which presents no problems), then rotate one term from the numerator to
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the denominator and minimise again. In theory one can continue moving
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terms one at a time from numerator to denominator, and then re-minimising,
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retaining the last set of control points at each stage.
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* Try using a smaller interval. It may also be possible to optimise over
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one (small) interval, rescale the control points over a larger interval,
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and then re-minimise.
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* Keep absissa values small: use a change of variable to keep the abscissa
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over, say \[0, b\], for some smallish value /b/.
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[h4 References]
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The original references for the Remez Method and it's extension
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to rational functions are unfortunately in Russian:
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Remez, E.Ya., ['Fundamentals of numerical methods for Chebyshev approximations],
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"Naukova Dumka", Kiev, 1969.
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Remez, E.Ya., Gavrilyuk, V.T., ['Computer development of certain approaches
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to the approximate construction of solutions of Chebyshev problems
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nonlinearly depending on parameters], Ukr. Mat. Zh. 12 (1960), 324-338.
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Gavrilyuk, V.T., ['Generalization of the first polynomial algorithm of
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E.Ya.Remez for the problem of constructing rational-fractional
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Chebyshev approximations], Ukr. Mat. Zh. 16 (1961), 575-585.
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Some English language sources include:
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Fraser, W., Hart, J.F., ['On the computation of rational approximations
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to continuous functions], Comm. of the ACM 5 (1962), 401-403, 414.
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Ralston, A., ['Rational Chebyshev approximation by Remes' algorithms],
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Numer.Math. 7 (1965), no. 4, 322-330.
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A. Ralston, ['Rational Chebyshev approximation, Mathematical
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Methods for Digital Computers v. 2] (Ralston A., Wilf H., eds.),
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Wiley, New York, 1967, pp. 264-284.
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Hart, J.F. e.a., ['Computer approximations], Wiley, New York a.o., 1968.
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Cody, W.J., Fraser, W., Hart, J.F., ['Rational Chebyshev approximation
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using linear equations], Numer.Math. 12 (1968), 242-251.
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Cody, W.J., ['A survey of practical rational and polynomial
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approximation of functions], SIAM Review 12 (1970), no. 3, 400-423.
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Barrar, R.B., Loeb, H.J., ['On the Remez algorithm for non-linear
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families], Numer.Math. 15 (1970), 382-391.
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Dunham, Ch.B., ['Convergence of the Fraser-Hart algorithm for rational
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Chebyshev approximation], Math. Comp. 29 (1975), no. 132, 1078-1082.
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G. L. Litvinov, ['Approximate construction of rational
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approximations and the effect of error autocorrection],
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Russian Journal of Mathematical Physics, vol.1, No. 3, 1994.
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[endsect][/section:remez The Remez Method]
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[/
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Copyright 2006 John Maddock and Paul A. Bristow.
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Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0.
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(See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
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http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt).
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]
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