nag_numdiff_1d_real_eval (d04bac) (PDF version)
d04 Chapter Contents
d04 Chapter Introduction
NAG Library Manual

NAG Library Function Document

nag_numdiff_1d_real_eval (d04bac)

 Contents

    1  Purpose
    7  Accuracy

1  Purpose

nag_numdiff_1d_real_eval (d04bac) calculates a set of derivatives (up to order 14) of a function at a point with respect to a single variable. A corresponding set of error estimates is also returned. Derivatives are calculated using an extension of the Neville algorithm. This function differs from nag_numdiff_1d_real (d04aac), in that the abscissae and corresponding function values must be calculated before this function is called. The abscissae may be generated using nag_numdiff_1d_real_absci (d04bbc).

2  Specification

#include <nag.h>
#include <nagd04.h>
void  nag_numdiff_1d_real_eval (const double xval[], const double fval[], double der[], double erest[], NagError *fail)

3  Description

nag_numdiff_1d_real_eval (d04bac) provides a set of approximations:
der[j-1] ,   j=1,2,,14  
to the derivatives:
fj x0 ,   j=1,2,,14  
of a real valued function fx at a real abscissa x0, together with a set of error estimates:
erest[j-1] ,   j=1,2,,14  
which hopefully satisfy:
der[j-1] - f j x0 < erest[j-1] ,   j= 1,2,,14 .  
The results der[j-1] and erest[j-1] are based on 21 function values:
fx0 , f x0 ± 2i-1 h ,   i=1,2,,10 .  
The abscissae x and the corresponding function values fx should be passed into nag_numdiff_1d_real_eval (d04bac) as the vectors xval and fval respectively. The step size h is derived from the abscissae in xval. See Section 9 for a discussion of how the derived value of h may affect the results of nag_numdiff_1d_real_eval (d04bac). The order in which the abscissae and function values are stored in xval and fval is irrelevant, provided that the function value at any given index corresponds to the value of the abscissa at the same index. Abscissae may be automatically generated using nag_numdiff_1d_real_absci (d04bbc) if desired. For each derivative nag_numdiff_1d_real_eval (d04bac) employs an extension of the Neville Algorithm (see Lyness and Moler (1969)) to obtain a selection of approximations.
For example, for odd derivatives, this function calculates a set of numbers:
T k,p,s ,   p=s,s+1,,6 ,   k=0,1,,9-p  
each of which is an approximation to f 2s+1 x0 / 2s+1 ! . A specific approximation Tk,p,s is of polynomial degree 2p+2 and is based on polynomial interpolation using function values fx0±2i-1h, for k=k,,k+p. In the absence of round-off error, the better approximations would be associated with the larger values of p and of k. However, round-off error in function values has an increasingly contaminating effect for successively larger values of p. This function proceeds to make a judicious choice between all the approximations in the following way.
For a specified value of s, let:
Rp = Up - Lp ,   p=s,s+1,,6  
where Up = maxk Tk,p,s  and Lp = mink Tk,p,s , for k=0,1,,9-p, and let p- be such that Rp- = minp Rp , for p=s,,6.
This function returns:
der[2s] = 1 8-p- × k=0 9-p- T k, p-, s - Up- - Lp- 2s+1 !  
and
erest[2s] = Rp- × 2s+1 ! × K 2s+1  
where Kj is a safety factor which has been assigned the values:
Kj=1, j9
Kj=1.5, j=10,11
Kj=2 j12,
on the basis of performance statistics.
The even order derivatives are calculated in a precisely analogous manner.

4  References

Lyness J N and Moler C B (1969) Generalised Romberg methods for integrals of derivatives Numer. Math. 14 1–14

5  Arguments

1:     xval[21] const doubleInput
On entry: the abscissae at which the function has been evaluated, as described in Section 3. These can be generated by calling nag_numdiff_1d_real_absci (d04bbc). The order of the abscissae is irrelevant.
Constraint: the values in xval must span the set x0, x0 ± 2j-1 h , for j=1,2,,10.
2:     fval[21] const doubleInput
On entry: fval[j-1] must contain the function value at xval[j-1], for j=1,2,,21.
3:     der[14] doubleOutput
On exit: the 14 derivative estimates.
4:     erest[14] doubleOutput
On exit: the 14 error estimates for the derivatives.
5:     fail NagError *Input/Output
The NAG error argument (see Section 3.6 in the Essential Introduction).

6  Error Indicators and Warnings

NE_ALLOC_FAIL
Dynamic memory allocation failed.
See Section 3.2.1.2 in the Essential Introduction for further information.
NE_BAD_PARAM
On entry, argument value had an illegal value.
NE_INTERNAL_ERROR
An internal error has occurred in this function. Check the function call and any array sizes. If the call is correct then please contact NAG for assistance.
An unexpected error has been triggered by this function. Please contact NAG.
See Section 3.6.6 in the Essential Introduction for further information.
NE_NO_LICENCE
Your licence key may have expired or may not have been installed correctly.
See Section 3.6.5 in the Essential Introduction for further information.
NE_SPACING_INCORRECT
On entry, the values of xval are not correctly spaced.
Derived h=value.
NE_TOO_SMALL
The derived h is below tolerance.
Derived h>value is required. Derived h=value.

7  Accuracy

The accuracy of the results is problem dependent. An estimate of the accuracy of each result der[j-1] is returned in erest[j-1] (see Sections 3, 5 and 9).
A basic feature of any floating-point function for numerical differentiation based on real function values on the real axis is that successively higher order derivative approximations are successively less accurate. It is expected that in most cases der[13] will be unusable. As an aid to this process, the sign of erest[j-1] is set negative when the estimated absolute error is greater than the approximate derivative itself, i.e., when the approximate derivative may be so inaccurate that it may even have the wrong sign. It is also set negative in some other cases when information available to nag_numdiff_1d_real_eval (d04bac) indicates that the corresponding value of der[j-1] is questionable.
The actual values in erest depend on the accuracy of the function values, the properties of the machine arithmetic, the analytic properties of the function being differentiated and the step length h (see Section 9). The only hard and fast rule is that for a given objective function and h, the values of erest[j-1] increase with increasing j. The limit of 14 is dictated by experience. Only very rarely can one obtain meaningful approximations for higher order derivatives on conventional machines.

8  Parallelism and Performance

Not applicable.

9  Further Comments

The results depend very critically on the choice of the step length h. The overall accuracy is diminished as h becomes small (because of the effect of round-off error) and as h becomes large (because the discretization error also becomes large). If this function is used four or five times with different values of h one can find a reasonably good value. A process in which the value of h is successively halved (or doubled) is usually quite effective. Experience has shown that in cases in which the Taylor series for the objective function about x0 has a finite radius of convergence R, the choices of h>R/19 are not likely to lead to good results. In this case some function values lie outside the circle of convergence.
As mentioned, the order of the abscissae in xval does not matter, provided the corresponding values of fval are ordered identically. If the abscissae are generated by nag_numdiff_1d_real_absci (d04bbc), then they will be in ascending order. In particular, the target abscissa x0 will be stored in xval[10].

10  Example

This example evaluates the derivatives of the polygamma function, calculated using nag_real_polygamma (s14aec), and compares the first 3 derivatives calculated to those found using nag_real_polygamma (s14aec).

10.1  Program Text

Program Text (d04bace.c)

10.2  Program Data

None.

10.3  Program Results

Program Results (d04bace.r)


nag_numdiff_1d_real_eval (d04bac) (PDF version)
d04 Chapter Contents
d04 Chapter Introduction
NAG Library Manual

© The Numerical Algorithms Group Ltd, Oxford, UK. 2015