Related papers: A New Highly Parallel Non-Hermitian Eigensolver
The calculation of a segment of eigenvalues and their corresponding eigenvectors of a Hermitian matrix or matrix pencil has many applications. A new density-matrix-based algorithm has been proposed recently and a software package FEAST has…
A detailed new upgrade of the FEAST eigensolver targeting non-Hermitian eigenvalue problems is presented and thoroughly discussed. It aims at broadening the class of eigenproblems that can be addressed within the framework of the FEAST…
The FEAST algorithm, due to Polizzi, is a typical contour-integral based eigensolver for computing the eigenvalues, along with their eigenvectors, inside a given region in the complex plane. It was formulated under the circumstance that the…
The FEAST eigensolver package is a free high-performance numerical library for solving the Hermitian and non-Hermitian eigenvalue problems, and obtaining all the eigenvalues and (right/left) eigenvectors within a given search interval or…
The FEAST library package represents an unified framework for solving various family of eigenvalue problems and achieving accuracy, robustness, high-performance and scalability on parallel architectures. Its originality lies with a new…
The FEAST algorithm is a subspace iteration method that uses a spectral projector as a rational filter in order to efficiently solve interior eigenvalue problems in parallel. Although the solutions from the FEAST algorithm converge rapidly…
The linear FEAST algorithm is a method for solving linear eigenvalue problems. It uses complex contour integration to calculate the eigenvectors whose eigenvalues that are located inside some user-defined region in the complex plane. This…
The contour-integral based eigensolvers are the recent efforts for computing the eigenvalues inside a given region in the complex plane. The best-known members are the Sakurai-Sugiura (SS) method, its stable version CIRR, and the FEAST…
We analyze the FEAST method for computing selected eigenvalues and eigenvectors of large sparse matrix pencils. After establishing the close connection between FEAST and the well-known Rayleigh-Ritz method, we identify several critical…
We present a variant of the FEAST matrix eigensolver for solving restricted real and symmetric eigenvalue problems. The method is derived from a combination of a variant of the FEAST method, which employs two contour integrals per…
A new numerical algorithm for solving the symmetric eigenvalue problem is presented. The technique deviates fundamentally from the traditional Krylov subspace iteration based techniques (Arnoldi and Lanczos algorithms) or other…
In a recent article [1], the FEAST algorithm has been presented as a general purpose eigenvalue solver which is ideally suited for addressing the numerical challenges in electronic structure calculations. Here, FEAST is presented beyond the…
This paper describes a set of rational filtering algorithms to compute a few eigenvalues (and associated eigenvectors) of non-Hermitian matrix pencils. Our interest lies in computing eigenvalues located inside a given disk, and the proposed…
We present Randomized-Accelerated FEAST (RA-FEAST), a hybrid algorithm that combines contour-integration-based eigensolvers with randomized numerical linear algebra techniques for efficiently computing partial eigendecompositions of…
The self-consistent procedure in electronic structure calculations is revisited using a highly efficient and robust algorithm for solving the non-linear eigenvector problem i.e. H({{\psi}}){\psi} = E{\psi}. This new scheme is derived from a…
Earlier this decade, the so-called FEAST algorithm was released for computing the eigenvalues of a matrix in a given interval. Previously, rational filter functions have been examined as a parameter of FEAST. In this thesis, we expand on…
The FEAST eigenvalue algorithm is a subspace iteration algorithm that uses contour integration in the complex plane to obtain the eigenvectors of a matrix for the eigenvalues that are located in any user-defined search interval. By…
The FEAST method for solving large sparse eigenproblems is equivalent to subspace iteration with an approximate spectral projector and implicit orthogonalization. This relation allows to characterize the convergence of this method in terms…
Solving dense Hermitian eigenproblems arranged in a sequence with direct solvers fails to take advantage of those spectral properties which are pertinent to the entire sequence, and not just to the single problem. When such features take…
The adoption of hybrid GPU-CPU nodes in traditional supercomputing platforms opens acceleration opportunities for electronic structure calculations in materials science and chemistry applications, where medium sized Hermitian generalized…