Zhurnal Vychislitel'noi Matematiki i Matematicheskoi Fiziki
RUS  ENG    JOURNALS   PEOPLE   ORGANISATIONS   CONFERENCES   SEMINARS   VIDEO LIBRARY   PACKAGE AMSBIB  
General information
Latest issue
Archive
Impact factor

Search papers
Search references

RSS
Latest issue
Current issues
Archive issues
What is RSS



Zh. Vychisl. Mat. Mat. Fiz.:
Year:
Volume:
Issue:
Page:
Find






Personal entry:
Login:
Password:
Save password
Enter
Forgotten password?
Register


Zhurnal Vychislitel'noi Matematiki i Matematicheskoi Fiziki, 2024, Volume 64, Number 7, Pages 1128–1144
DOI: https://doi.org/10.31857/S0044466924070038
(Mi zvmmf11783)
 

General numerical methods

The MDM algorithm and the Sylvester problem

V. N. Malozemova, N. A. Solovyevab, G. Sh. Tamasyancd

a St. Petersburg State University, 199034, St. Petersburg, Russia
b St. Petersburg State Economics University, 191023, St. Petersburg, Russia
c Mozhayskii Military-Space Academy, 197198, St. Petersburg, Russia
d Institute for Problems in Mechanical Engineering of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 198178, St. Petersburg, Russia
Abstract: When developing numerical methods for solving nonlinear minimax problems, the following auxiliary problem arose: in the convex hull of a certain finite set in Euclidean space, find a point that has the smallest norm. In 1971, B. Mitchell, V. Demyanov and V. Malozemov proposed a non-standard algorithm for solving this problem, which was later called the MDM algorithm (based on the first letters of the authors' last names). This article considers a specific minimax problem: finding the smallest volume ball containing a given finite set of points. It is called the Sylvester problem and is a special case of the problem about the Chebyshev center of a set. The Sylvester problem is associated with a convex quadratic programming problem with simplex constraints. To solve this problem, it is proposed to use a variant of the MDM algorithm. With its help, a minimizing sequence of feasible solutions is constructed such that two consecutive feasible solutions differ in only two components. The indices of these components are selected based on certain optimality conditions. We prove the weak convergence of the resulting sequence of feasible solutions that implies that the corresponding sequence of vectors converges in norm to a unique solution to the Sylvester problem. Four typical examples on a plane are given.
Key words: Sylvester problem, quadratic programming, MDM algorithm.
Funding agency Grant number
Russian Science Foundation 23-41-00060
The work on Section 5 was carried out in the Institute for Problems in Mechanical Engineering of the Russian Academy of Sciences and was supported by the Russian Science Foundation, project no. 23-41-00060.
Received: 06.02.2024
English version:
Computational Mathematics and Mathematical Physics, 2024, Volume 64, Issue 7, Pages 1396–1412
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S0965542524700684
Bibliographic databases:
Document Type: Article
UDC: 519.8
Language: Russian
Citation: V. N. Malozemov, N. A. Solovyeva, G. Sh. Tamasyan, “The MDM algorithm and the Sylvester problem”, Zh. Vychisl. Mat. Mat. Fiz., 64:7 (2024), 1128–1144; Comput. Math. Math. Phys., 64:7 (2024), 1396–1412
Citation in format AMSBIB
\Bibitem{MalSolTam24}
\by V.~N.~Malozemov, N.~A.~Solovyeva, G.~Sh.~Tamasyan
\paper The MDM algorithm and the Sylvester problem
\jour Zh. Vychisl. Mat. Mat. Fiz.
\yr 2024
\vol 64
\issue 7
\pages 1128--1144
\mathnet{http://mi.mathnet.ru/zvmmf11783}
\crossref{https://doi.org/10.31857/S0044466924070038}
\elib{https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=75206867}
\transl
\jour Comput. Math. Math. Phys.
\yr 2024
\vol 64
\issue 7
\pages 1396--1412
\crossref{https://doi.org/10.1134/S0965542524700684}
Linking options:
  • https://www.mathnet.ru/eng/zvmmf11783
  • https://www.mathnet.ru/eng/zvmmf/v64/i7/p1128
  • Citing articles in Google Scholar: Russian citations, English citations
    Related articles in Google Scholar: Russian articles, English articles
    Журнал вычислительной математики и математической физики Computational Mathematics and Mathematical Physics
     
      Contact us:
     Terms of Use  Registration to the website  Logotypes © Steklov Mathematical Institute RAS, 2025