Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
440602 Computer Aided Geometric Design 2014 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A structured matrix method is used to deconvolve two Bernstein basis polynomials.•The solution is obtained by solving a constrained optimisation problem.•The solution in the paper is better than the solutions from other methods.•The computational results are analysed theoretically.

This paper describes the application of a structure-preserving matrix method to the deconvolution of two Bernstein basis polynomials. Specifically, the deconvolution hˆ/fˆ yields a polynomial gˆ provided the exact polynomial fˆ is a divisor of the exact polynomial hˆ and all computations are performed symbolically. In practical situations, however, inexact forms, h and f   of, respectively, hˆ and fˆ are specified, in which case g=h/fg=h/f is a rational function and not a polynomial. The simplest method to calculate the coefficients of g is the least squares minimisation of an over-determined system of linear equations in which the coefficient matrix is Tœplitz, but the solution is a polynomial approximation of a rational function. It is shown in this paper that an improved result for g   is obtained when the Tœplitz structure of the coefficient matrix is preserved, that is, a structure-preserving matrix method is used. In particular, this method guarantees that a polynomial solution to the deconvolution h/fh/f is obtained, and thus an essential property of the theoretically exact solution is retained in the computed solution. Computational examples that show the improvement in the solution obtained from the structure-preserving matrix method with respect to the least squares solution are presented.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design
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