Report
Is Gauss quadrature better than Clenshaw-Curtis?
- Abstract:
- We consider the question of whether Gauss quadrature, which is very famous, is more powerful than the much simpler Clenshaw-Curtis quadrature, which is less well-known. Seven-line MATLAB codes are presented that implement both methods, and experiments show that the supposed factor-of-2 advantage of Gauss quadrature is rarely realized. Theorems are given to explain this effect. First, following Elliott and O'Hara and Smith in the 1960s, the phenomenon is explained as a consequence of aliasing of coefficients in Chebyshev expansions. Then another explanation is offered based on the interpretation of a quadrature formula as a rational approximation of $\log((z+1)/(z-1))$ in the complex plane. Gauss quadrature corresponds to Pad\'e approximation at $z=\infty$. Clenshaw-Curtis quadrature corresponds to an approximation whose order of accuracy at $z=\infty$ is only half as high, but which is nevertheless equally accurate near $[-1,1]$.
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Authors
- Publisher:
- Unspecified
- Publication date:
- 2006-05-01
- UUID:
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uuid:4d851558-1a72-4b74-b7b7-8a02cb22b542
- Local pid:
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oai:eprints.maths.ox.ac.uk:1116
- Deposit date:
-
2011-05-20
Terms of use
- Copyright date:
- 2006
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