Title The logarithmic norm. History and modern theory
Authors Gustaf Söderlind
Alternative Location http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s..., Restricted Access
Publication BIT NUMERICAL MATHEMATICS
Year 2006
Volume 46
Issue 3
Pages 631 - 652
Document type Article
Status Published
Quality controlled Yes
Language eng
Publisher Springer Netherlands
Abstract English In his 1958 thesis Stability and Error Bounds, Germund Dahlquist introduced the logarithmic norm in order to derive error bounds in initial value problems, using differential inequalities that distinguished between forward and reverse time integration. Originally defined for matrices, the logarithmic norm can be extended to bounded linear operators, but the extensions to nonlinear maps and unbounded operators have required a functional analytic redefinition of the concept. This compact survey is intended as an elementary, but broad and largely self-contained, introduction to the versatile and powerful modern theory. Its wealth of applications range from the stability theory of IVPs and BVPs, to the solvability of algebraic, nonlinear, operator, and functional equations.
Keywords difference method, differential inequality, monotonicity theorem, uniform, monotonicity, logarithmic norm, logarithmic Lipschitz constant, stability, error bound, Lax principle,
ISBN/ISSN/Other ISSN: 0006-3835

Questions: webmaster
Last update: 2013-04-11

Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Box 118, SE-22100, Lund. Telefon: +46 46-222 00 00 (vx)