ScienceDirect® Home Skip Main Navigation Links
You have guest access to ScienceDirect. Find out more.
 
Home
Browse
My Settings
Alerts
Help
 Quick Search
 Search tips (Opens new window)
    Clear all fields    
advertisementadvertisement
Journal of Complexity
Volume 15, Issue 3, September 1999, Pages 299-316
 
Font Size: Decrease Font Size  Increase Font Size
 Abstract - selected
Purchase PDF (146 K)

 
 
 
Related Articles in ScienceDirect
View More Related Articles
 
View Record in Scopus
 
doi:10.1006/jcom.1999.0507    How to Cite or Link Using DOI (Opens New Window)
Copyright © 1999 Academic Press. All rights reserved.

Regular Article

Intractability Results for Positive Quadrature Formulas and Extremal Problems for Trigonometric Polynomials

Erich Novak

Mathematisches Institut, Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Bismarckstrasse 1Image , 91054, Erlangen, Germanyf1

Received 6 June 1998. 
Available online 1 April 2002.

Purchase the full-text article



References and further reading may be available for this article. To view references and further reading you must purchase this article.

Abstract

Lower bounds for the error of quadrature formulas with positive weights are proved. We get intractability results for quasi-Monte Carlo methods and, more generally, for positive formulas. We consider general classes of functions but concentrate on lower bounds for relatively small classes of trigonometric polynomials. We also conjecture that similar lower bounds hold for arbitrary quadrature formulas and state different equivalent conjectures concerning positive definiteness of certain matrices and certain extremal problems for trigonometric polynomials. We also study classes of functions with weighted norms where some variables are “more important” than others. Positive quadrature formulas are then tractable iff the sum of the weights is bounded.


Journal of Complexity
Volume 15, Issue 3, September 1999, Pages 299-316
 
Home
Browse
My Settings
Alerts
Help
Elsevier.com (Opens new window)
About ScienceDirect  |  Contact Us  |  Information for Advertisers  |  Terms & Conditions  |  Privacy Policy
Copyright © 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. ScienceDirect® is a registered trademark of Elsevier B.V.