NAG FL Interface
F05 (Orthog)
Orthogonalization

1 Scope of the Chapter

This chapter is concerned with the orthogonalization of vectors in a finite dimensional space.

2 Background to the Problems

Let a1,a2,,an be a set of n linearly independent vectors in m-dimensional space; mn.
We wish to construct a set of n vectors q1,q2,,qn such that:

2.1 Gram–Schmidt Orthogonalization

The classical Gram–Schmidt orthogonalization process is described in many textbooks; see for example Chapter 5 of Golub and Van Loan (1996).
It constructs the orthonormal set progressively. Suppose it has computed orthonormal vectors q1,q2,,qk which orthogonalise the first k vectors a1,a2,,ak. It then uses ak+1 to compute qk+1 as follows:
zk+1 = ak+1-i=1k qiT ak+1qi qk+1 = zk+1 /zk+12.  
In finite precision computation, this process can result in a set of vectors qi which are far from being orthogonal. This is caused by zk+1 being small compared with ak+1. If this situation is detected, it can be remedied by reorthogonalising the computed qk+1 against q1,q2,,qk, that is, repeating the process with the computed qk+1 instead of ak+1. See Danial et al. (1976).

2.2 Householder Orthogonalization

An alternative approach to orthogonalising a set of vectors is based on the QR factorization (see the F08 Chapter Introduction), which is usually performed by Householder's method. See Chapter 5 of Golub and Van Loan (1996).
Let A be the m by n matrix whose columns are the n vectors to be orthogonalised. The QR factorization gives
A=QR  
where R is an n by n upper triangular matrix and Q is an m by n matrix, whose columns are the required orthonormal set.
Moreover, for any k such that 1kn, the first k columns of Q are an orthonormal basis for the first k columns of A.
Householder's method requires twice as much work as the Gram–Schmidt method, provided that no re-orthogonalization is required in the latter. However, it has satisfactory numerical properties and yields vectors which are close to orthogonality even when the original vectors ai are close to being linearly dependent.

3 Recommendations on Choice and Use of Available Routines

The single routine in this chapter, f05aaf, uses the Gram–Schmidt method, with re-orthogonalization to ensure that the computed vectors are close to being exactly orthogonal. This method is only available for real vectors.
To apply Householder's method, you must use routines in Chapter F08:
for real vectors: f08aef, followed by f08aff
for complex vectors: f08asf, followed by f08atf
The example programs for f08aef or f08asf illustrate the necessary calls to these routines.

4 Withdrawn or Deprecated Routines

None.

5 References

Danial J W, Gragg W B, Kaufman L and Stewart G W (1976) Reorthogonalization and stable algorithms for updating the Gram–Schmidt QR factorization Math. Comput. 30 772–795
Golub G H and Van Loan C F (1996) Matrix Computations (3rd Edition) Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore