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Dive into the research topics where Hein Hundal is active.

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Featured researches published by Hein Hundal.


International Transactions in Operational Research | 2009

Characterizing arbitrarily slow convergence in the method of alternating projections

Heinz H. Bauschke; Frank Deutsch; Hein Hundal

Bauschke, Borwein, and Lewis have stated a trichotomy theorem that characterizes when the convergence of the method of alternating projections can be arbitrarily slow. However, there are two errors in their proof of this theorem. In this note, we show that although one of the errors is critical, the theorem itself is correct. We give a different proof that uses the multiplicative form of the spectral theorem, and the theorem holds in any real or complex Hilbert space, not just in a real Hilbert space.


Fixed-point algorithms for inverse problems in science and engineering, 2011, ISBN 978-1-4419-9568-1, págs. 213-242 | 2011

Arbitrarily slow convergence of sequences of linear operators: A survey

Frank Deutsch; Hein Hundal

This is a survey (without proofs except for verifying a few new facts) of the slowest possible rate of convergence of a sequence of linear operators that converges pointwise to a linear operator. A sequence of linear operators (L n ) is said to converge to a linear operator Larbitrarily slowly (resp., almost arbitrarily slowly) provided that (L n ) converges to L pointwise, and for each sequence of real numbers (ϕ(n)) converging to 0, there exists a point x = x ϕ such that \(\|{L}_{n}(x) - L(x)\| \geq \phi (n)\) for all n (resp., for infinitely many n). Two main “lethargy” theorems are prominent in this study, and they have numerous applications. The first lethargy theorem (Theorem 11.16) characterizes almost arbitrarily slow convergence. Applications of this lethargy theorem include the fact that a large class of polynomial operators (e.g., Bernstein, Hermite–Fejer, Landau, Fejer, and Jackson operators) all converge almost arbitrarily slowly to the identity operator. Also all the classical quadrature rules (e.g., the composite Trapezoidal Rule, composite Simpson’s Rule, and Gaussian quadrature) converge almost arbitrarily slowly to the integration functional. The second lethargy theorem (Theorem 11.21) gives useful sufficient conditions that guarantee arbitrarily slow convergence. In the particular case when the sequence of linear operators is generated by the powers of a single linear operator, there is a “dichotomy” theorem (Theorem 11.27) which states that either there is linear (fast) convergence or arbitrarily slow convergence; no other type of convergence is possible. Some applications of the dichotomy theorem include generalizations and sharpening of (1) the von Neumann-Halperin cyclic projections theorem, (2) the rate of convergence for intermittently (i.e., “almost” randomly) ordered projections, and (3) a theorem of Xu and Zikatanov.


Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications | 1997

The Rate of Convergence for the Method of Alternating Projections, II☆

Frank Deutsch; Hein Hundal


Transactions of the American Mathematical Society | 2003

Accelerating the convergence of the method of alternating projections

Heinz H. Bauschke; Frank Deutsch; Hein Hundal; Sung-Ho Park


Journal of Approximation Theory | 2006

The rate of convergence for the cyclic projections algorithm I: angles between convex sets

Frank Deutsch; Hein Hundal


Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society | 2005

A new proximal point iteration that converges weakly but not in norm

Heinz H. Bauschke; James V. Burke; Frank Deutsch; Hein Hundal; J. D. Vanderwerff


Journal of Approximation Theory | 2008

The rate of convergence for the cyclic projections algorithm III: Regularity of convex sets

Frank Deutsch; Hein Hundal


Journal of Approximation Theory | 2006

The rate of convergence for the cyclic projections algorithm II: norms of nonlinear operators

Frank Deutsch; Hein Hundal


Journal of Approximation Theory | 2010

Slow convergence of sequences of linear operators II: Arbitrarily slow convergence

Frank Deutsch; Hein Hundal


arXiv: Functional Analysis | 2017

Some Applications of the Hahn-Banach Separation Theorem

Frank Deutsch; Hein Hundal; Ludmil Zikatanov

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Frank Deutsch

Pennsylvania State University

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Heinz H. Bauschke

University of British Columbia

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James V. Burke

University of Washington

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Ludmil Zikatanov

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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