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A Comparative Study of American Option Valuation and ComputationRodolfo, Karl January 2007 (has links)
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / For many practitioners and market participants, the valuation of financial derivatives is considered of very high importance as its uses range from a risk management tool, to a speculative investment strategy or capital enhancement. A developing market requires efficient but accurate methods for valuing financial derivatives such as American options. A closed form analytical solution for American options has been very difficult to obtain due to the different boundary conditions imposed on the valuation problem. Following the method of solving the American option as a free boundary problem in the spirit of the "no-arbitrage" pricing framework of Black-Scholes, the option price and hedging parameters can be represented as an integral equation consisting of the European option value and an early exercise value dependent upon the optimal free boundary. Such methods exist in the literature and along with risk-neutral pricing methods have been implemented in practice. Yet existing methods are accurate but inefficient, or accuracy has been compensated for computational speed. A new numerical approach to the valuation of American options by cubic splines is proposed which is proven to be accurate and efficient when compared to existing option pricing methods. Further comparison is made to the behaviour of the American option's early exercise boundary with other pricing models.
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Configurable flows / Fluxos configuráveisSilveira, Renato January 2015 (has links)
Nós refinamos o planejador introduzindo uma nova forma para o núcleo da equação que permite facilmente lidar com terrenos não-homogêneos. Isto é obtido através de mudanças locais na concavidade/convexidade do potencial, criando regiões com altas ou baixas preferências de navegação. Nós integramos esta nova equação ao planejador hierárquico, surgindo uma ampla variedade de aplicações. Nossa proposta contribui para diversas áreas incluindo a navegação de agentes, pathfinding em jogos, simulação de multidões, e a navegação de robôs. Nossas publicações reforçam a relevância e robustez do método proposto. / In this work, we propose a new solution to agent navigation based upon boundary value problems (BVP), called Configurable Flows, to control steering behaviors of characters in dynamic environments. We use a potential field formalism that allows synthetic actors to move negotiating space, avoiding collisions, and attaining goals while producing very individual paths. The individuality of each character can be set by changing its inner field parameters leading to a broad range of possible behaviors without jeopardizing its performance. BVP Path Planners generate potential fields through a differential equation whose gradient descent represents navigation routes from any point of the environment to a goal position. Resulting paths are smooth and free from local minima. In spite of these advantages, these kind of planners consumes a lot of time to produce a solution. Our approach combines a BVP Path Planner with the Full Multigrid Method, which solves elliptic partial differential equations using a hierarchical strategy. The proposed planner enables real-time performance in large environments. Results show that our proposal spends less than 1% of the time needed to compute a solution using the original BVP planners in several environments. We refine our Path Planner by introducing a new form of the core equation that permits to easily cope with terrain inhomogeneities. This is accomplished by locally changing the concavity/ convexity of the potential, and then creating regions with higher or lower navigation preferences. As the potential field requires several steps to converge, this approach can be expensive computationally. To overcome this problem, we integrate this novel core equation to the hierarchical planner, emerging a wide variety of applications. We believe our proposal can contribute to several areas of research including agent navigation, pathfinding for games, crowd simulation and robotics. Our publications reinforce the relevance of the proposed method.
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Configurable flows / Fluxos configuráveisSilveira, Renato January 2015 (has links)
Nós refinamos o planejador introduzindo uma nova forma para o núcleo da equação que permite facilmente lidar com terrenos não-homogêneos. Isto é obtido através de mudanças locais na concavidade/convexidade do potencial, criando regiões com altas ou baixas preferências de navegação. Nós integramos esta nova equação ao planejador hierárquico, surgindo uma ampla variedade de aplicações. Nossa proposta contribui para diversas áreas incluindo a navegação de agentes, pathfinding em jogos, simulação de multidões, e a navegação de robôs. Nossas publicações reforçam a relevância e robustez do método proposto. / In this work, we propose a new solution to agent navigation based upon boundary value problems (BVP), called Configurable Flows, to control steering behaviors of characters in dynamic environments. We use a potential field formalism that allows synthetic actors to move negotiating space, avoiding collisions, and attaining goals while producing very individual paths. The individuality of each character can be set by changing its inner field parameters leading to a broad range of possible behaviors without jeopardizing its performance. BVP Path Planners generate potential fields through a differential equation whose gradient descent represents navigation routes from any point of the environment to a goal position. Resulting paths are smooth and free from local minima. In spite of these advantages, these kind of planners consumes a lot of time to produce a solution. Our approach combines a BVP Path Planner with the Full Multigrid Method, which solves elliptic partial differential equations using a hierarchical strategy. The proposed planner enables real-time performance in large environments. Results show that our proposal spends less than 1% of the time needed to compute a solution using the original BVP planners in several environments. We refine our Path Planner by introducing a new form of the core equation that permits to easily cope with terrain inhomogeneities. This is accomplished by locally changing the concavity/ convexity of the potential, and then creating regions with higher or lower navigation preferences. As the potential field requires several steps to converge, this approach can be expensive computationally. To overcome this problem, we integrate this novel core equation to the hierarchical planner, emerging a wide variety of applications. We believe our proposal can contribute to several areas of research including agent navigation, pathfinding for games, crowd simulation and robotics. Our publications reinforce the relevance of the proposed method.
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Configurable flows / Fluxos configuráveisSilveira, Renato January 2015 (has links)
Nós refinamos o planejador introduzindo uma nova forma para o núcleo da equação que permite facilmente lidar com terrenos não-homogêneos. Isto é obtido através de mudanças locais na concavidade/convexidade do potencial, criando regiões com altas ou baixas preferências de navegação. Nós integramos esta nova equação ao planejador hierárquico, surgindo uma ampla variedade de aplicações. Nossa proposta contribui para diversas áreas incluindo a navegação de agentes, pathfinding em jogos, simulação de multidões, e a navegação de robôs. Nossas publicações reforçam a relevância e robustez do método proposto. / In this work, we propose a new solution to agent navigation based upon boundary value problems (BVP), called Configurable Flows, to control steering behaviors of characters in dynamic environments. We use a potential field formalism that allows synthetic actors to move negotiating space, avoiding collisions, and attaining goals while producing very individual paths. The individuality of each character can be set by changing its inner field parameters leading to a broad range of possible behaviors without jeopardizing its performance. BVP Path Planners generate potential fields through a differential equation whose gradient descent represents navigation routes from any point of the environment to a goal position. Resulting paths are smooth and free from local minima. In spite of these advantages, these kind of planners consumes a lot of time to produce a solution. Our approach combines a BVP Path Planner with the Full Multigrid Method, which solves elliptic partial differential equations using a hierarchical strategy. The proposed planner enables real-time performance in large environments. Results show that our proposal spends less than 1% of the time needed to compute a solution using the original BVP planners in several environments. We refine our Path Planner by introducing a new form of the core equation that permits to easily cope with terrain inhomogeneities. This is accomplished by locally changing the concavity/ convexity of the potential, and then creating regions with higher or lower navigation preferences. As the potential field requires several steps to converge, this approach can be expensive computationally. To overcome this problem, we integrate this novel core equation to the hierarchical planner, emerging a wide variety of applications. We believe our proposal can contribute to several areas of research including agent navigation, pathfinding for games, crowd simulation and robotics. Our publications reinforce the relevance of the proposed method.
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Multilevel preconditioning operators on locally modified gridsJung, Michael, Matsokin, Aleksandr M., Nepomnyaschikh, Sergey V., Tkachov, Yu. A. 11 September 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Systems of grid equations that approximate elliptic boundary value problems on locally modified grids are considered. The triangulation, which approximates the boundary with second order of accuracy, is generated from an initial uniform triangulation by shifting nodes near the boundary according to special rules. This "locally modified" grid possesses several significant features: this triangulation has a regular structure, the generation of the triangulation is rather fast, this construction allows to use multilevel preconditioning (BPX-like) methods. The proposed iterative methods for solving elliptic boundary value problems approximately are based on two approaches: The fictitious space method, i.e. the reduction of the original problem to a problem in an auxiliary (fictitious) space, and the multilevel decomposition method, i.e. the construction of preconditioners by decomposing functions on hierarchical grids. The convergence rate of the corresponding iterative process with the preconditioner obtained is independent of the mesh size. The construction of the grid and the preconditioning operator for the three dimensional problem can be done in the same way.
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Exact discretizations of two-point boundary value problemsWindisch, G. 30 October 1998 (has links) (PDF)
In the paper we construct exact three-point discretizations of linear and nonlinear two-point boundary value problems with boundary conditions of the first kind. The finite element approach uses basis functions defined by the coefficients of the differential equations. All the discretized boundary value problems are of inverse isotone type and so are its exact discretizations which involve tridiagonal M-matrices in the linear case and M-functions in the nonlinear case.
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Study Of Momentum Transfer In Fluid-Fluid Systems By The Boundary Integral MethodShreekumar, * 01 1900 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Vertical Acoustic Propagation in the Non-Homogeneous Layered Atmosphere for a Time-Harmonic, Compact SourceYoerger, Edward J, Jr 20 December 2019 (has links)
In this work we study vertical, acoustic propagation in a non-homogeneous media for a spatially-compact, time-harmonic source. An analytical, 2-layer model is developed representing the acoustic pressure disturbance propagating in the atmosphere. The validity of the model spans the distance from the Earth's surface to 30,000 meters. This includes the troposphere (adiabatic), ozone layer (isothermal), and part of the stratosphere (isothermal). The results of the model derivation in the adiabatic region yield pressure solutions as Bessel functions of the First (J) and Second (Y) Kind of order $-\frac{7}{2}$ with an argument of $2 \Omega \tau$ (where $\Omega$ represents a dimensionless frequency and $\tau$ is a dimensionless vertical height in z (vertical coordinate)). For an added second layer (isothermal region), the pressure solution is a decaying sinusoidal, exponential function above the first layer.
In particular, the vertical, acoustic propagation is examined for various configurations. These are divided into 2 basic classes. The first class consists of examining the pressure response function when the source is located on boundary interfaces, while the second class consists of situations where the source is arbitrarily located within a finite layer. In all instances, a time-harmonic, compact source is implicitly understood. However, each class requires a different method of solution. The first class conforms to a general boundary value problem, while the second requires the use of Green's functions method.
In investigating problems of the first class, 3 different scenarios are examined. In the first case, we apply our model to a semi-infinite medium with a time-harmonic source ($e^{-i \omega t}$) located on the ground. In the next 2 cases, a semi-infinite medium is overlain on the previous medium at a height of z=13,000 meters. Thus, there exist two boundaries: the ground and the layer interface between the 2 media. Sources placed at these interfaces represent the 2nd and 3rd scenarios, respectively. The solutions to all 3 cases are of the form $A \frac{J_{-\frac{7}{2}}(2 \Omega \tau)}{{\tau}^{-\frac{7}{2}}} + B \frac{Y_{-\frac{7}{2}}(2 \Omega \tau)}{{\tau}^{-\frac{7}{2}}}$, where \textit{A} and \textit{B} are constants determined by the boundary conditions.
For the 2nd class, we examine the application to a time-harmonic, compact source placed arbitrarily within the 1st layer. The method of Green's functions is used to obtain a particular solution for the model equations. This result is compared with a Fast Field Program (FFP) which was developed to test these solutions. The results show that the response given by the Green's function compares favorably with that of the FFP.
Keywords: Linear Acoustics, Inhomogeneous Medium, Layered Atmosphere, Boundary Value Problem, Green's Function Method
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Exact discretizations of two-point boundary value problemsWindisch, G. 30 October 1998 (has links)
In the paper we construct exact three-point discretizations of linear and nonlinear two-point boundary value problems with boundary conditions of the first kind. The finite element approach uses basis functions defined by the coefficients of the differential equations. All the discretized boundary value problems are of inverse isotone type and so are its exact discretizations which involve tridiagonal M-matrices in the linear case and M-functions in the nonlinear case.
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Analysis and Control of the Boussinesq and Korteweg-de Vries EquationsRivas, Ivonne January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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