ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Generalized trust-region subproblem (GT) is a nonconvex quadratic optimization with a single quadratic constraint. It reduces to the classical trust-region subproblem (T) if the constraint set is a Euclidean ball. (GT) is polynomially solvable based on its inherent hidden convexity. In this paper, we study local minimizers of (GT). Unlike (T) with at most one local nonglobal minimizer, we can prove that two-dimensional (GT) has at most two local nonglobal minimizers, which are shown by example to be attainable. The main contribution of this paper is to prove that, at any local nonglobal minimizer of (GT), not only the strict complementarity condition holds, but also the standard second-order sufficient optimality condition remains necessary. As a corollary, finding all local nonglobal minimizers of (GT) or proving the nonexistence can be done in polynomial time. Finally, for (GT) in complex domain, we prove that there is no local nonglobal minimizer, which demonstrates that real-valued optimization problem may be more difficult to solve than its complex version.
We study nonconvex homogeneous quadratically constrained quadratic optimization with one or two constraints, denoted by (QQ1) and (QQ2), respectively. (QQ2) contains (QQ1), trust region subproblem (TRS) and ellipsoid regularized total least squares p
The local nonglobal minimizer of trust-region subproblem, if it exists, is shown to have the second smallest objective function value among all KKT points. This new property is extended to $p$-regularized subproblem. As a corollary, we show for the f
Aiming at convex optimization under structural constraints, this work introduces and analyzes a variant of the Frank Wolfe (FW) algorithm termed ExtraFW. The distinct feature of ExtraFW is the pair of gradients leveraged per iteration, thanks to whic
We prove the $C^{1}$ regularity for a class of abnormal length-minimizers in rank $2$ sub-Riemannian structures. As a consequence of our result, all length-minimizers for rank $2$ sub-Riemannian structures of step up to $4$ are of class $C^{1}$.
This paper proposes a new variant of Frank-Wolfe (FW), called $k$FW. Standard FW suffers from slow convergence: iterates often zig-zag as update directions oscillate around extreme points of the constraint set. The new variant, $k$FW, overcomes this