1. Introduction
Over the last few decades, we have observed rapid development of the theory of iterative methods for simultaneously finding all roots of a polynomial (see, e.g., [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18,
19,
20,
21,
22,
23,
24,
25,
26,
27,
28,
29,
30,
31,
32,
33,
34] and the references given therein). The present paper deals with a thorough local and semilocal convergence analysis of a well-known iterative method, which was introduced in [
34].
In the paper, stands for a valued field with absolute value and stands for the ring of polynomials over . We endow the vector space with the norm defined by ().
Let be a polynomial of degree . A vector is said to be a root vector of polynomial f if: for all , where .
In 1984, Wang and Zheng [
34] introduced the following simultaneous method:
where
is defined by
with:
where:
Apparently, the domain
of Wang–Zheng’s iteration function
T is:
In the paper, we denote by
the set of the vectors in
with pairwise distinct coordinates, i.e.,
In 1987, Wang and Wu [
32] gave the following local convergence theorem for Wang–Zheng’s method:
Theorem 1 ([32]).Suppose is a polynomial of degree with simple zeros. Let be an initial approximation with pairwise distinct coordinates satisfying:where and . Then, Wang–Zheng’s iteration (1) is convergent to a root vector of f with convergence order four and with error estimate: In order to formulate the semilocal convergence results, we need the function
(Weierstrass correction) defined by:
where
is the leading coefficient of polynomial
f with degree
n.
In 2007, Petković, Petković, and Rančić [
13] gave a semilocal convergence result for Wang–Zheng’s method (
1), improving the previous result due to Petković and Herceg [
12].
Theorem 2 ([13]).Suppose is a polynomial of degree with simple zeros. Let be an initial approximation with pairwise distinct coordinates satisfying:where , then Wang–Zheng’s iteration (1) is convergent to a root vector of f with convergence order four. The purpose of our study is to give a comprehensive convergence analysis for Wang–Zheng’s method (
1). We present two local convergence theorems (Theorem 5 and Theorem 6) and a semilocal convergence theorem (Theorem 9). Our first local convergence theorem improves the result of Wang and Wu (Theorem 1), and our semilocal convergence result improves the result of Petković, Petković, and Rančić (Theorem 2).
2. Preliminaries
Recently, Proinov [
16,
17,
18,
35,
36] developed a general convergence theory for iterative methods of the type (
1), where
is an iteration function in metric, cone metric, or vector space. On the basis of this theory lays the notion
function of initial conditions of
T since the convergence of any iterative method of the type (
1) is studied with respect to some function of initial conditions (see [
35,
36]). Some applications of this theory can be found in [
1,
2,
5,
7,
8,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18,
19,
20,
21,
22,
23,
24,
25,
26,
27,
28,
29,
35,
36,
37,
38].
Let
be equipped with coordinate-wise ordering ⪯ defined by:
Furthermore,
is equipped with a vector norm
defined by:
For a given
p (
), we always define a number
q by:
Furthermore, for given
n and
p, we use the denotations:
We observe that
and
. Henceforth, for two vectors
and
, we shall use the denotation
for a vector in
defined by:
provided that
y has only nonzero coordinates. Furthermore, we define
, and we denote by
the sum of the first
k terms of geometric sequence
, i.e.,
Definition 1 ([36]).A function is called quasi-homogeneous of degree if it satisfies for and . We define the function
by:
The following theorem of Proinov [
18] deals with local convergence of the Picard iterative sequence (
1) regarding the function
defined as follows:
Theorem 3 ([18]).Let be an iteration function, be a vector with pairwise distinct coordinates, and be defined by (12). Suppose there exists a quasi-homogeneous function of degree such that for each vector with , the following conditions hold: Let be an initial approximation such that: Then, the Picard iteration (1) is well defined and converges to ξ with order and with error estimates:where and is defined by (10). The next theorem of Proinov [
18] deals with local convergence of the Picard iteration (
1) with respect to the function of initial conditions
defined by:
Theorem 4 ([18]).Let be an iteration function, , and is defined by (15). Suppose there is a nonzero quasi-homogeneous function of degree such that for any with , the conditions:are fulfilled. Let also be an initial approximation such that:where . Then, the Picard iteration (1) is well defined and converges to ξ with error estimates:where , , , , , and is defined by (10). To prove our auxiliary results, we use the following technical lemmas.
Lemma 1 ([17]).Let , vector ξ be with distinct coordinates, and . Then, for ,where b is defined by (9) and is defined by (12). Lemma 2 ([17]).Let , vector x be with distinct coordinates, and . Then, for ,where is defined by (15). Lemma 3 ([22]).Let be a polynomial of degree , which splits in . Suppose is a root vector of f and is a vector with a coordinate , which is not a zero of f and . Then:where and are defined by: 3. Local Convergence Analysis of the First Type
In 2016, Proinov [
16] categorized into three types the most commonly-used initial conditions in the convergence analysis of simultaneous methods. The objective of this section is to provide a local convergence theorem of the first type for Wang–Zheng’s method.
Let be a polynomial of degree , and let be a root vector of f.
In the present section, we investigate the convergence of Wang–Zheng’s iteration (
1) with respect to the function of initial conditions
defined by (
12).
For the sake of simplicity, we introduce the following denotations:
Lemma 4. Suppose is a polynomial of degree , which splits in and is a root vector of f. If is a vector with for some i, then:where , , , and are defined by (19), (20), (21), and (22), respectively. Proof. From (
2) and Lemma 3, taking into account that
and that
is a root vector of
f, we obtain:
where
is defined by (
19),
Now, taking into account that
,
and
, we get (
23). □
Define the real functions
as follows:
where the functions
and
g are defined by:
and
a,
b are defined by (
9). We observe that the function
g is continuous and decreasing on
, and
and
. It follows from this that there exists a unique zero
of
g in
. It is easy to show that the function
is increasing on
. This yields that
is a quasi-homogeneous function of degree
on
. In the following lemma, we prove that the function
satisfies the assumption (
13) of Theorem 3 for the iteration function
defined by (
2).
Lemma 5. Suppose is a polynomial of degree , which splits in , is a root vector of f, and . Let a vector be such that:where E is defined by (12) and the positive number μ is the unique zero in of the function g defined in: (25). Then: - (i)
, where is defined by (3); - (ii)
, where ϕ is defined by (24).
Proof. (i) First, we note that Lemma 1 and Condition (
26) show that
. Let
for some
i. It follows from Lemma 3 that
is equivalent to
. From (
19), the triangle inequality, Lemma 1, and (
26), we obtain:
which yields
. Taking into account the definition of
in (
3), it remains to prove that
. From Lemma 3, we get:
where
,
,
, and
are defined by (
19) (
20), (
21), and (
22). It follows from (
28) that
is equivalent to
. By (
20), the triangle inequality, Lemma 1, and Hölder’s inequality, we obtain:
From (
21) and the triangle inequality, it follows that:
From (
30) and Lemma 1, we obtain the following estimate:
From (
22) and the triangle inequality, it follows that:
From (
32), Lemma 1, and Hölder’s inequality, we get the bound:
It follows from Condition (
26) and the monotonicity of
g that
. Now, using the triangle inequality and the inequalities (
27), (
29), (
31), and (
33), we get:
This means that . Therefore, .
(ii) We have to prove that:
If
, then
, and so, (
35) becomes an equality. Suppose
. By Lemma 4 and the triangle inequality, we get:
Combining (
36) and the estimates (
29), (
31), (
33), and (
34), we get (
35). □
Now, we are ready to state the first main theorem of this paper. First, we define a real function
as follows:
where
a,
b are defined by (
9).
Theorem 5. Let be a polynomial of degree with n simple zeros in , be a root vector of f, and . Suppose is an initial approximation satisfying the following conditions:where E and Φ are the functions defined by (12) and (37), respectively. Then, Wang–Zheng’s iteration (1) is well defined and convergent to ξ with fourth order and with error estimates:where , and the functions ϕ, γ, g are defined by (24) and (25). Proof. We will apply Proinov’s Theorem 3 to the function
defined by (
2). First, we prove that the initial Condition (
39) implies condition:
where
is the unique zero of the function
g in
. It is easy to see that
is decreasing on
and
. This implies
. Hence, if
and
, then
. On the other hand, if
, then
if and only if
. Consequently, (
38) implies (
41). Now, Theorem 3 and Lemma 5 lead to the conclusion that the iterative sequence (
1) is well defined and convergent to
with error bounds (
39). It remains to prove the estimate (
40).
It follows from the first estimate in (
39) that
for
. We also note the following simple facts:
for
; the function
is increasing on
;
for
. Now, applying Lemma 5 (ii) with
and taking into account these facts, we obtain:
which proves (
40). □
In the case , we obtain the following consequence of Theorem 5:
Corollary 1. Let be a polynomial of degree possessing n simple zeros in , and let be a root vector of f. Suppose is an initial approximation satisfying the following condition: Then, the iterative sequence (1) is well defined and convergent to ξ with error bounds (39) and (40) with . Proof. We prove that
satisfies the conditions (
38) of Theorem 5 with the function
defined by (
37) with
. Since
is decreasing on
, it is sufficient to prove that
. The last inequality is equivalent to
, which holds for all
. This completes the proof. □
The following corollary is an improvement of Wang–Wu’s result (Theorem 1).
Corollary 2. Suppose is a polynomial of degree possessing n simple zeros in and is a root vector of f. Let a vector be with pairwise distinct coordinates and let it satisfy:where . Then, the iterative sequence (1) is well defined and convergent to ξ with error bounds: Proof. Consequently, Corollary 1 guarantees the convergence of the iterative sequence (
1) to the root vector
with the error bound (
40) for
. From (
43), we get:
From this and (
40), we obtain the estimate (
44), which ends the proof. □
4. Local Convergence Analysis of the Second Type
Let
be a polynomial of degree
, and let
be a root vector of
f. The objective of this section is to provide a local convergence theorem of the second type. More precisely, we study the convergence of Wang–Zheng’s method (
1) with respect to the function of initial conditions
defined by (
15).
The main role in this section is played by a real function
defined by:
where
a is defined by (
9). Let us denote by
the unique zero of the function:
in the interval
. It easy to see that the function
is decreasing on
and the function
is quasi-homogeneous of degree
on
. In the next lemma, we prove that the function
satisfies the assumptions (
16) of Theorem 4 for
defined by (
2).
Lemma 6. Suppose is a polynomial of degree with n simple zeros in , is a root vector of f, and . Let a vector be with pairwise distinct coordinates and let it satisfy:where the functions E is defined by (15) and ν is the unique zero in of the function Λ defined by (46). Then: - (i)
, where is defined by (3); - (ii)
, where β is defined by (45).
Proof. The proof is similar to the proof of Lemma 5. We again define the quantities
,
,
, and
by (
19), (
20), (
21), and (
22). Using Lemma 2, we obtain the following estimates:
From these estimates, we get:
The rest of the proof is the same as in Lemma 5. □
Now, we are ready to state the second main result of this paper. In the formulation of the theorem we use the following real functions:
where
is defined by (
45) and
b is defined in (
9).
Theorem 6. Let a polynomial be of degree with n simple zeros in , and be a root vector of f. Suppose is an initial approximation with distinct coordinates satisfying:where E, Λ, and Ψ are defined by (15), (46) and (48), respectively. Then, the Wang–Zheng’s iterative sequence (1) is well defined and convergent to ξ with error estimates:where , , and ψ, ϕ are defined by (49). Besides, if , then the order of convergence is at least four. Proof. Let
be defined by (
2), and let the real function
be defined by (
45). It follows from the first two inequalities of (
50) that
, where
is the unique zero of the function
in
. Hence, the initial conditions (
50) can be written in the form:
It follows from Lemma 6 that the initial condition (
16) holds with
. Applying Theorem 4 to the iteration function
T, we conclude that the iterative sequence (
1) is well defined and convergent to
with order four and with error bounds (
51). □
Applying Theorem 6 with , we get the next result.
Corollary 3. Let a polynomial be of degree with n simple zeros in and be a root vector of f. Suppose is an initial approximation with distinct coordinates satisfying: Then, the iteration (1) is well defined and convergent to ξ with order four and with error estimates (51), where the functions ψ and ϕ are defined by (49) with . Proof. According to Theorem 6, it is sufficient to prove the following two inequalities
and
, where the real functions
and
are defined by (
46) and (
48) with
. We prove only the second inequality since the first one is trivial. It is easy to show that the second inequality can be written in the form
, where
and
. Taking into account that
is a decreasing sequence and
is an increasing sequence, we get
. This completes the proof. □
5. Semilocal Convergence Analysis
Let
f be a polynomial
of degree
. In the present section, we provide two semilocal convergence theorems for Wang–Zheng’s method (
1), which improve the result of Petković, Petković, and Rančić (Theorem 2). Here, we study the convergence of (
1) with respect to the function of initial conditions
given by:
where the function
is defined by (
7).
Henceforth, we use a metric
on
, which was introduced in [
23]. First, we define an equivalence relation
on
as follows:
if there exists a permutation
of the indexes
such that
. Then, the distance
between two vectors
is defined by:
To prove the results in this section, we need Theorem 6 and Corollary 3, as well as the following two theorems of Proinov [
16].
Theorem 7 ([16]).Let be an algebraically-closed valued field and be a polynomial of degree . Suppose there exists a vector with pairwise distinct coordinates such that:for some , where a is defined by (9). Then, f possesses only simple zeros, and there is a root vector of f such that:where are defined by: Theorem 8 ([16]).Let be an algebraically-closed valued field and be a polynomial of degree . Suppose there exists a vector with pairwise distinct coordinates such that:for some and , where a is defined by (9). Then, polynomial f possesses only simple zeros, and there exists a root vector of f such that:where the function α is defined by (57). Now, we are ready to state the third main theorem of this paper.
Theorem 9. Let be an algebraically-closed valued field and be a polynomial of degree and . Suppose is an initial approximation with pairwise distinct coordinates satisfying:where a is defined in (9), and , Λ, Ψ, and h are defined by: (53), (46), (48), and (57), respectively. Then, f possesses only simple zeroes, and Wang–Zheng’s iteration (1) is well defined and convergent to a root vector ξ of f with order four and with error estimate:where the function α is defined by (57) and τ is defined in (55). Proof. Let
. It can be proven that
and
. It follows from
and the first inequality in (
60) that
. By Theorem 7,
f possesses only simple zeros, and there is a root vector
of
f such that:
where the function
E is defined by (
15). On the other hand, it follows from
that:
Combining (
62) and (
63), we get
. From (
63) and the second inequality in (
60), we deduce that
, where
is the unique zero of the function
in
. From (
62) and the second inequality in (
60), taking into account that
is decreasing on
, we obtain:
Analogously, from (
62) and the third inequality in (
60), taking into account that
is decreasing on
, we get:
Thus,
satisfies the initial conditions (
50). Then, it follows from Theorem 6 that the iterative sequence (
1) is well defined and convergent to
with order four. The estimate (
61) follows from Theorem 7. □
From Corollary 3 and Theorem 8, we obtain the next theorem, which improves and complements the result of Petković, Petković, and Rančić (Theorem 2).
Theorem 10. Let be an algebraically-closed valued field. Let be a polynomial of degree and be an initial approximation with pairwise distinct coordinates satisfying:where is defined by (53). Then, f has only simple zeros, and Wang–Zheng’s iteration (1) is well defined and convergent to a root vector ξ of f with order four and with error estimate (61) with . Proof. If we take
, then we can write (
64) in the form:
with
. Then, by Theorem 8,
f possesses only simple zeros, and there is a root vector
of
f such that:
where
E is defined by (
15). Then, it follows from Corollary 3 that the iterative sequence (
1) is convergent to
with order four. The estimate (
61) follows Theorem 7. □
6. Conclusions
In 1984, Wang and Zheng [
34] derived a family of iterative methods for simultaneously finding all zeros
of a polynomial
f of degree
. The present paper deals with the convergence of the method (
1), which is a well-known member of the Wang–Zheng family. We have presented three types of convergence theorems for Wang–Zheng’s method (
1).
In 1987, Wang and Wu [
32] established a local convergence result for Wang–Zheng’s method (Theorem 1), which gives a lower bound for the convergence radius and an a posteriori error estimate. They proved that the method (
1) is convergent under the initial condition of the type:
where the radius of convergence
depends on
n and the parameters
and
. Their error estimate has the form:
where
depends on
n,
, and
. In
Section 3, we have obtained a local convergence result (Theorem 5), which improves the result of Wang and Wu [
32]. The advantages of this result are:
where .
In
Section 4, we have established a local convergence result of the second type (Theorem 6) for Wang–Zheng’s method (
1). The second type of convergence results are closer to the semilocal convergence results. The first convergence result of the second type were obtained by Wang and Zhao [
33] for the Weierstrass method. Our local convergence result of the second type is the first result of this type for Wang–Zheng’s method (
1). The convergence results of the second type for other simultaneous methods can be found in [
17,
22,
23,
24,
28,
29].
In
Section 5, we have obtained two semilocal convergence theorems (Theorem 9 and Theorem 10) for Wang–Zheng’s method (
1). In these theorems, we prove the convergence of the method under the initial conditions of the form:
where
depends on
n and the functions
and
d are defined by (
7) and (
11), respectively. Initial conditions of the type (
66) were considered for the first time by Proinov [
14,
15]. Our semilocal convergence results improved the result of Petković, Petković and Rančić [
13] (Theorem 2). The advantages of this result are:
weaker convergence conditions of the method (
1);
a verifiable a posteriori error estimate, which can be used as a stop criterion when applying Wang–Zheng’s method;
we did not assume either the simplicity, or existence of the zeros of f.
Finally, we refer the reader to some recent papers [
2,
17,
20,
22,
23,
24,
25,
28,
29], which investigate initial conditions of the type (
66).