Produktbild: Building and Solving Mathematical Programming Models in Engineering and Science

Building and Solving Mathematical Programming Models in Engineering and Science and Scienc

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

01.11.2001

Verlag

Wiley

Seitenzahl

568

Maße (L/B/H)

24/16,1/3,5 cm

Gewicht

1012 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-471-15043-5

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

01.11.2001

Verlag

Wiley

Seitenzahl

568

Maße (L/B/H)

24/16,1/3,5 cm

Gewicht

1012 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-471-15043-5

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Building and Solving Mathematical Programming Models in Engineering and Science
  • Preface xiii

    I Models 1

    1 Linear Programming 3

    1.1 Introduction 3

    1.2 The Transportation Problem 4

    1.3 The Production Scheduling Problem 6

    1.4 The Diet Problem 9

    1.5 The Network Flow Problem 11

    1.6 The Portfolio Problem 13

    1.7 Scaffolding System 15

    1.8 Electric Power Economic Dispatch 18

    2 Mixed-Integer Linear Programming 25

    2.1 Introduction 25

    2.2 The 0-1 Knapsack Problem 25

    2.3 Identifying Relevant Symptoms 27

    2.4 The Academy Problem 29

    2.5 School Timetable Problem 32

    2.6 Models of Discrete Location 35

    2.7 Unit Commitment of Thermal Power Units 38

    3 Nonlinear Programming 47

    3.1 Introduction 47

    3.2 Some Geometrically Motivated Examples 47

    3.3 Some Mechanically Motivated Examples 51

    3.4 Some Electrically Motivated Examples 55

    3.5 The Matrix Balancing Problem 62

    3.6 The Traffic Assignment Problem 64

    II Methods 71

    4 An Introduction to Linear Programming 73

    4.1 Introduction 73

    4.2 Problem Statement and Basic Definitions 73

    4.3 Linear Programming Problem in Standard Form 78

    4.4 Basic Solutions 81

    4.5 Sensitivities 83

    4.6 Duality 84

    5 Understanding the Set of All Feasible Solutions 97

    5.1 Introduction and Motivation 97

    5.2 Convex Sets 101

    5.3 Linear Spaces 105

    5.4 Polyhedral Convex Cones 107

    5.5 Polytopes 109

    5.6 Polyhedra 110

    5.7 Bounded and Unbounded LPP 113

     6 Solving the Linear Programming Problem 117

    6.1 Introduction 117

    6.2 The Simplex Method 118

    6.3 The Exterior Point Method 140

    7 Mixed-Integer Linear Programming 161

    7.1 Introduction 161

    7.2 The Branch-Bound Method 162

    7.3 The Gomory Cuts Method 172

    8 Optimality and Duality in Nonlinear Programming 183

    8.1 Introduction 183

    8.2 Necessary Optimality Conditions 188

    8.2.1 Differentiability 188

    8.3 Optimality Conditions: Sufficiency and Convexity 207

    8.4 Duality Theory 216

    8.5 Practical Illustration of Duality and Separability 221

    8.6 Constraint Qualifications 226

    9 Computational Methods for Nonlinear Programming 235

    9.1 Unconstrained Optimization Algorithms 236

    9.2 Constrained Optimization Algorithms 254

    9.2.1 Dual Methods 254

    III Software 283

    10 The GAMS Package 285

    10.1 Introduction 285

    10.2 Illustrative Example 286

    10.3 Language Features 290

    11 Some Examples Using GAMS 311

    11.1 Introduction 311

    11.2 Linear Programming Examples 311

    11.3 Mixed-Integer LPP Examples 330

    11.4 Nonlinear Programming Examples 344

    IV Applications 369

    12 Applications 371

    12.1 Applications to Artificial Intelligence 371

    12.2 Applications to CAD 378

    12.3 Applications to Probability 387

    12.4 Regression Models 395

    12.5 Applications to Optimization Problems 401

    12.6 Transportation Systems 417

    12.7 Short-Term Hydrothermal Coordination 442

    13 Some Useful Modeling Tricks 451

    13.1 Introduction 451

    13.2 Some General Tricks 451

    13.3 Some GAMS Tricks 466

    A Compatibility and Set of All Feasible Solutions 477

    A.l The Dual Cone 478

    A.2 Cone Associated with a Polyhedron 480

    A.3 The ¿ Procedure 483

    A.4 Compatibility of Linear Systems 488

    A.5 Solving Linear Systems 491

    A.6 Applications to Several Examples 494

    B Notation 517

    Bibliography 533

    Index 541