Post Reply 
On Convergence Rates of Root-Seeking Methods
03-11-2018, 11:36 PM
Post: #36
RE: On Convergence Rates of Root-Seeking Methods
Rather than Newton's which requires the derivative, did you mean secant?

Dieter is correct, I'd recommend Brent's method for a bracket solver. It is guaranteed to get a solution and is quadratically convergent almost always. There was a modification in the 34S to also include the Ridder's method in addition to Brent's secant, inverse quadratic and bisection methods. Testing indicated that it was beneficial, although I don't remember the conditions under which it is used.

There is quite a bit of code before the searching can begin. If the initial estimates don't bracket the solution, a bisection step is done before switching to more advanced methods. There might be a forced secant step after the bisection, I'm not sure anymore. If the first two function evaluations are equal, it does a bisection step and if that produces a third equal value a right then left step exponentially increasing interval scan is done. When there is only one initial estimate, it stars with the interval scan.


Pauli
Find all posts by this user
Quote this message in a reply
Post Reply 


Messages In This Thread
RE: On Convergence Rates of Root-Seeking Methods - Paul Dale - 03-11-2018 11:36 PM



User(s) browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)