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Tridiagonal matrix algorithm - TDMA (Thomas algorithm)

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Introduction

The tridiagonal matrix algorithm (TDMA), also known as the Thomas algorithm, is a simplified form of Gaussian elimination that can be used to solve tridiagonal systems of equations. A tridiagonal system may be written as


a_i x_{i - 1}  + b_i x_i  + c_i x_{i + 1}  = d_i,

where  a_1  = 0 and  c_n = 0 . In matrix form, this system is written as

 
\left[ 
\begin{matrix}
   {b_1} & {c_1} & {   } & {   } & { 0 } \\ 
   {a_2} & {b_2} & {c_2} & {   } & {   } \\ 
   {   } & {a_3} & {b_3} & \cdot & {   } \\ 
   {   } & {   } & \cdot & \cdot & {c_{n-1}}\\ 
   { 0 } & {   } & {   } & {a_n} & {b_n}\\ 
\end{matrix}
\right]
\left[ 
\begin{matrix}
   {x_1 }  \\ 
   {x_2 }  \\ 
   \cdot   \\
   \cdot   \\
   {x_n }  \\
\end{matrix}
\right]
=
\left[ 
\begin{matrix}
   {d_1 }  \\ 
   {d_2 }  \\ 
   \cdot   \\
   \cdot   \\
   {d_n }  \\
\end{matrix}
\right].

For such systems, the solution can be obtained in O(n) operations instead of O(n^3) required by Gaussian Elimination. A first sweep eliminates the a_i's, and then an (abbreviated) backward substitution produces the solution. Example of such matrices commonly arise from the discretization of 1D problems (e.g. the 1D Poisson problem).

Algorithm

The following algorithm performs the TDMA, overwriting the original arrays. In some situations this is not desirable, so some prefer to copy the original arrays beforehand.

Forward elimination phase

for k = 2 step until n do
m = {{a_k } \over {b_{k - 1} }}
  b_k  = b_k  - mc_{k - 1}
  d_k  = d_k  - md_{k - 1}
end loop (k)

Backward substitution phase

  x_n  = {{d_n } \over {b_n }}
for k = n-1 stepdown until 1 do
  x_k  = {{d_k  - c_k x_{k + 1} } \over {b_k }}
end loop (k)

Assessments

This algorithm is only applicable to matrices that are diagonally dominant, which is to say

\left | b_i \right \vert > \left | a_i \right \vert + \left | c_{i} \right \vert \quad \quad i \in {1,...,n}

Variants

In some situations, particularly those involving periodic boundary conditions, a slightly perturbed form of the tridiagonal system may need to be solved:


a_1 x_{n}  + b_1 x_1  + c_1 x_2  = d_1,

a_i x_{i - 1}  + b_i x_i  + c_i x_{i + 1}  = d_i,\, i = 2,\ldots,n-1

a_n x_{n-1}  + b_n x_n  + c_n x_1  = d_n.

In matrix form, this is

 
\left[ 
\begin{matrix}
   {b_1} & {c_1} & {   } & {   } & {a_1} \\ 
   {a_2} & {b_2} & {c_2} & {   } & {   } \\ 
   {   } & {a_3} & {b_3} & \cdot & {   } \\ 
   {   } & {   } & \cdot & \cdot & {c_{n-1}}\\ 
   {c_n} & {   } & {   } & {a_n} & {b_n}\\ 
\end{matrix}
\right]
\left[ 
\begin{matrix}
   {x_1 }  \\ 
   {x_2 }  \\ 
   \cdot   \\
   \cdot   \\
   {x_n }  \\
\end{matrix}
\right]
=
\left[ 
\begin{matrix}
   {d_1 }  \\ 
   {d_2 }  \\ 
   \cdot   \\
   \cdot   \\
   {d_n }  \\
\end{matrix}
\right].

In this case, we can make use of the Sherman-Morrison formula to avoid the additional operations of Gaussian elimination and still use the Thomas algorithm. We will now solve

(A + uv^T)x = d

where

 u^T = [b_1\ 0\ 0\ ...\ 0\ c_n],\ v^T = [1\ 0\ 0\ ...\ 0\ a_1/b_1].

A is a slightly different tridiagonal system than above, and the solution to the perturbed system is obtained by solving

Ay=d,\ Aq=u

and compute x as

x = y - (v^T y)/(1 + (v^T q)) q

In other situation, the system of equation may be block tridiagonal, with smaller submatrices arranged as the individual elements in the above matrix system. Simplified forms of Gaussian elimination have been developed for these situations.

References

  1. Conte, S.D., and deBoor, C. (1972), Elementary Numerical Analysis, McGraw-Hill, New York..

Still TODO: Add more references, more on the variants, make things nicer looking, and maybe more performance type info --Jasond 22:59, 7 April 2006 (MDT)

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