Finding the smallest eigenvalue by the inverse Monte Carlo method with refinement

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Abstract

Finding the smallest eigenvalue of a given square matrix A of order n is computationally very intensive problem. The most popular method for this problem is the Inverse Power Method which uses LU-decomposition and forward and backward solving of the factored system at every iteration step. An alternative to this method is the Resolvent Monte Carlo method which uses representation of the resolvent matrix [I - qA]-m as a series and then performs Monte Carlo iterations (random walks) on the elements of the matrix. This leads to great savings in computations, but the method has many restrictions and a very slow convergence. In this paper we propose a method that includes fast Monte Carlo procedure for finding the inverse matrix, refinement procedure to improve approximation of the inverse if necessary, and Monte Carlo power iterations to compute the smallest eigenvalue. We provide not only theoretical estimations about accuracy and convergence but also results from numerical tests performed on a number of test matrices. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2005.

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APA

Alexandrov, V., & Karaivanova, A. (2005). Finding the smallest eigenvalue by the inverse Monte Carlo method with refinement. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (Vol. 3516, pp. 766–774). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/11428862_104

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