Numerical recipes : the art of scientific computing / William H. Press [and others].

Author
Press, William H. [Browse]
Format
Book
Language
English
Εdition
3rd ed.
Published/​Created
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2007.
Description
xxi, 1235 pages ; 26 cm

Availability

Copies in the Library

Location Call Number Status Location Service Notes
Engineering Library - Reserve QA297 .N866 2007 Browse related items Request
    Harold P. Furth Plasma Physics Library - Stacks QA297 .N866 2007 Browse related items Request
      Lewis Library - Stacks QA297 .N866 2007 Browse related items Request
        Lewis Library - Stacks QA297 .N866 2007 Browse related items Request
          Lewis Library - Term Loan Reserves QA297 .N866 2007 Browse related items Request

            Details

            Subject(s)
            Summary note
            Co-authored by four leading scientists from academia and industry, Numerical Recipes Third Edition starts with basic mathematics and computer science and proceeds to complete, working routines. Widely recognized as the most comprehensive, accessible and practical basis for scientific computing, this new edition incorporates more than 400 Numerical Recipes routines, many of them new or upgraded. The executable C++ code, now printed in color for easy reading, adopts an object-oriented style particularly suited to scientific applications. The whole book is presented in the informal, easy-to-read style that made earlier editions so popular. New key features: 2 new chapters, 25 new sections, 25% longer than Second Edition; Thorough upgrades throughout the text; Over 100 completely new routines and upgrades of many more; New Classification and Inference chapter, including Gaussian mixture models, HMMs, hierarchical clustering, Support Vector Machines; New Computational Geometry chapter covers KD trees, quad- and octrees, Delaunay triangulation, and algorithms for lines, polygons, triangles, and spheres; New sections include interior point methods for linear programming, Monte Carlo Markov Chains, spectral and pseudospectral methods for PDEs, and many new statistical distributions; An expanded treatment of ODEs with completely new routines; Comprehensive coverage of: linear algebra, interpolation, special functions, random numbers, nonlinear sets of equations, optimization, eigensystems, Fourier methods and wavelets, statistical tests, ODEs and PDEs, integral equations, and inverse theory, and more. - Publisher.
            Notes
            Previous edition: 2002.
            Bibliographic references
            Includes bibliographical references and index.
            Contents
            • Preliminaries
            • Solution of Linear Algebraic Equations
            • Interpolation and Extrapolation
            • Integration of Functions
            • Evaluation of Functions
            • Special Functions
            • Random Numbers
            • Sorting and Selection
            • Root Finding and Nonlinear Sets of Equations
            • Miknimization or Maximization of Functions
            • Eigensystems
            • Fast Fourier Transform
            • Fourier and Spectral Applications
            • Statistical Description of Data
            • Modeling of Data
            • Classification and Inference
            • Integration of Ordinary Differential Equations
            • Two-Point Boundary Value Problems
            • Integral Equations and Inverse Theory
            • Portal Differential Equations
            • Computational Geometry
            • Less-Numerical Algorithms.
            Other format(s)
            Also available online.
            ISBN
            • 0521880688 ((hbk.))
            • 9780521880688 ((hbk.))
            • 9780521884075 ((hbk. with source code CD-ROM))
            • 0521884071 ((hbk. with source code CD-ROM))
            • 9780521706858
            • 0521706858
            LCCN
            2007062003
            OCLC
            843198105
            International Article Number
            • 9780521884075
            Statement on language in description
            Princeton University Library aims to describe library materials in a manner that is respectful to the individuals and communities who create, use, and are represented in the collections we manage. Read more...
            Other views
            Staff view