AbstractThe finite Fourier representation of a function f(x) exhibits oscillations where the function or its derivatives are nonsmooth. This is known as the Gibbs phenomenon. A robust and accurate reconstruction method that resolves the Gibbs oscillations was proposed in a previous paper (J. Comput. Appl. Math. 161 (2003) 41) based on the inversion of the transformation matrix which represents the projection of a set of basis functions onto the Fourier space. If the function is a polynomial, this inverse polynomial reconstruction method (IPRM) is exact. In this paper, we develop the IPRM by requiring that the proper error be orthogonal to the Fourier or polynomial space. The IPRM is generalized to any set of basis functions. The primitive b...
much wisdom, guidance, and encouragement over the years. Abstract. The classical Gibbs ' phenom...
AbstractWhen a function is smooth but not smoothly periodic with a particular period, and nonetheles...
AbstractIn this paper we study approximation methods for analytic functions that have been “spliced”...
AbstractThe finite Fourier representation of a function f(x) exhibits oscillations where the functio...
AbstractIt is well known that the expansion of an analytic nonperiodic function on a finite interval...
AbstractWhen Fourier expansions, or more generally spectral methods, are used for the representation...
The Gibbs phenomenon refers to the lack of uniform convergence which occurs in many orthogonal basis...
The Gibbs phenomenon refers to the lack of uniform convergence which occurs in many orthogonal basis...
We generalize the Inverse Polynomial Reconstruction Method (IPRM) for mitigation of the Gibbs phenom...
In several applications, data are collected in the frequency (Fourier) domain non-uniformly, either ...
It is well known that given an arbitrary continuous and periodic function f(x), it is possible to re...
The Inverse Polynomial Reconstruction Method (IPRM) has been re-cently introduced by J.-H. Jung and ...
The Gibbs phenomenon refers to the lack of uniform convergence which occurs in many orthogonal basis...
We prove that any stable method for resolving the Gibbs phenomenon—that is, recover-ing high-order a...
AbstractWe introduce a simple and efficient method to reconstruct an element of a Hilbert space in t...
much wisdom, guidance, and encouragement over the years. Abstract. The classical Gibbs ' phenom...
AbstractWhen a function is smooth but not smoothly periodic with a particular period, and nonetheles...
AbstractIn this paper we study approximation methods for analytic functions that have been “spliced”...
AbstractThe finite Fourier representation of a function f(x) exhibits oscillations where the functio...
AbstractIt is well known that the expansion of an analytic nonperiodic function on a finite interval...
AbstractWhen Fourier expansions, or more generally spectral methods, are used for the representation...
The Gibbs phenomenon refers to the lack of uniform convergence which occurs in many orthogonal basis...
The Gibbs phenomenon refers to the lack of uniform convergence which occurs in many orthogonal basis...
We generalize the Inverse Polynomial Reconstruction Method (IPRM) for mitigation of the Gibbs phenom...
In several applications, data are collected in the frequency (Fourier) domain non-uniformly, either ...
It is well known that given an arbitrary continuous and periodic function f(x), it is possible to re...
The Inverse Polynomial Reconstruction Method (IPRM) has been re-cently introduced by J.-H. Jung and ...
The Gibbs phenomenon refers to the lack of uniform convergence which occurs in many orthogonal basis...
We prove that any stable method for resolving the Gibbs phenomenon—that is, recover-ing high-order a...
AbstractWe introduce a simple and efficient method to reconstruct an element of a Hilbert space in t...
much wisdom, guidance, and encouragement over the years. Abstract. The classical Gibbs ' phenom...
AbstractWhen a function is smooth but not smoothly periodic with a particular period, and nonetheles...
AbstractIn this paper we study approximation methods for analytic functions that have been “spliced”...