NAG CL Interface
s17dhc (airy_bi_complex)
1
Purpose
s17dhc returns the value of the Airy function or its derivative for complex , with an option for exponential scaling.
2
Specification
void |
s17dhc (Nag_FunType deriv,
Complex z,
Nag_ScaleResType scal,
Complex *bi,
NagError *fail) |
|
The function may be called by the names: s17dhc, nag_specfun_airy_bi_complex or nag_complex_airy_bi.
3
Description
s17dhc returns a value for the Airy function or its derivative , where is complex, . Optionally, the value is scaled by the factor .
The function is derived from the function CBIRY in
Amos (1986). It is based on the relations
, and
, where
is the modified Bessel function and
.
For very large , argument reduction will cause total loss of accuracy, and so no computation is performed. For slightly smaller , the computation is performed but results are accurate to less than half of machine precision. If is too large, and the unscaled function is required, there is a risk of overflow and so no computation is performed. In all the above cases, a warning is given by the function.
4
References
Amos D E (1986) Algorithm 644: A portable package for Bessel functions of a complex argument and non-negative order ACM Trans. Math. Software 12 265–273
5
Arguments
-
1:
– Nag_FunType
Input
-
On entry: specifies whether the function or its derivative is required.
- is returned.
- is returned.
Constraint:
or .
-
2:
– Complex
Input
-
On entry: the argument of the function.
-
3:
– Nag_ScaleResType
Input
-
On entry: the scaling option.
- The result is returned unscaled.
- The result is returned scaled by the factor .
Constraint:
or .
-
4:
– Complex *
Output
-
On exit: the required function or derivative value.
-
5:
– NagError *
Input/Output
-
The NAG error argument (see
Section 7 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface).
6
Error Indicators and Warnings
- NE_ALLOC_FAIL
-
Dynamic memory allocation failed.
See
Section 3.1.2 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface for further information.
- NE_BAD_PARAM
-
On entry, argument 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.
See
Section 7.5 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface for further information.
- NE_NO_LICENCE
-
Your licence key may have expired or may not have been installed correctly.
See
Section 8 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface for further information.
- NE_OVERFLOW_LIKELY
-
No computation because is too large when .
- NE_TERMINATION_FAILURE
-
No computation – algorithm termination condition not met.
- NE_TOTAL_PRECISION_LOSS
-
No computation because .
- NW_SOME_PRECISION_LOSS
-
Results lack precision because .
7
Accuracy
All constants in s17dhc are given to approximately digits of precision. Calling the number of digits of precision in the floating-point arithmetic being used , then clearly the maximum number of correct digits in the results obtained is limited by . Because of errors in argument reduction when computing elementary functions inside s17dhc, the actual number of correct digits is limited, in general, by , where represents the number of digits lost due to the argument reduction. Thus the larger the value of , the less the precision in the result.
Empirical tests with modest values of , checking relations between Airy functions , , and , have shown errors limited to the least significant – digits of precision.
8
Parallelism and Performance
s17dhc is not threaded in any implementation.
Note that if the function is required to operate on a real argument only, then it may be much cheaper to call
s17ahc or
s17akc.
10
Example
This example prints a caption and then proceeds to read sets of data from the input data stream. The first datum is a value for the argument
deriv, the second is a complex value for the argument,
z, and the third is a character value
used as a flag
to set the argument
scal. The program calls the function and prints the results. The process is repeated until the end of the input data stream is encountered.
10.1
Program Text
10.2
Program Data
10.3
Program Results