Overview
- Authors:
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Carl Boor
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Center for Mathematical Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, USA
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Klaus Höllig
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Math Institut A der Universität, Stuttgart 80, Germany
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Sherman Riemenschneider
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Department of Mathematics, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
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Table of contents (7 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-xvii
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- Carl de Boor, Klaus Höllig, Sherman Riemenschneider
Pages 1-31
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- Carl de Boor, Klaus Höllig, Sherman Riemenschneider
Pages 33-60
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- Carl de Boor, Klaus Höllig, Sherman Riemenschneider
Pages 61-78
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- Carl de Boor, Klaus Höllig, Sherman Riemenschneider
Pages 79-103
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- Carl de Boor, Klaus Höllig, Sherman Riemenschneider
Pages 105-136
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- Carl de Boor, Klaus Höllig, Sherman Riemenschneider
Pages 137-158
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- Carl de Boor, Klaus Höllig, Sherman Riemenschneider
Pages 159-174
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Back Matter
Pages 175-201
About this book
Compactly supported smooth piecewise polynomial functions provide an efficient tool for the approximation of curves and surfaces and other smooth functions of one and several arguments. Since they are locally polynomial, they are easy to evaluate. Since they are smooth, they can be used when smoothness is required, as in the numerical solution of partial differential equations (in the Finite Element method) or the modeling of smooth sur faces (in Computer Aided Geometric Design). Since they are compactly supported, their linear span has the needed flexibility to approximate at all, and the systems to be solved in the construction of approximations are 'banded'. The construction of compactly supported smooth piecewise polynomials becomes ever more difficult as the dimension, s, of their domain G ~ IRs, i. e. , the number of arguments, increases. In the univariate case, there is only one kind of cell in any useful partition, namely, an interval, and its boundary consists of two separated points, across which polynomial pieces would have to be matched as one constructs a smooth piecewise polynomial function. This can be done easily, with the only limitation that the num ber of smoothness conditions across such a breakpoint should not exceed the polynomial degree (since that would force the two joining polynomial pieces to coincide). In particular, on any partition, there are (nontrivial) compactly supported piecewise polynomials of degree ~ k and in C(k-l), of which the univariate B-spline is the most useful example.
Authors and Affiliations
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Center for Mathematical Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, USA
Carl Boor
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Math Institut A der Universität, Stuttgart 80, Germany
Klaus Höllig
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Department of Mathematics, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
Sherman Riemenschneider