Core foundations, algorithms, and language design for symbolic computation in physics

This thesis presents three contributions to the field of symbolic computation, followed by their application to symbolic physics computations. The first contribution is to interfacing systems. The Notation package, which is developed in this thesis, allows the entry and the creation of advanced not...

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Main Author: Harris, Jason F.
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Physics 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6073
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-60732015-03-30T15:30:47ZCore foundations, algorithms, and language design for symbolic computation in physicsHarris, Jason F.This thesis presents three contributions to the field of symbolic computation, followed by their application to symbolic physics computations. The first contribution is to interfacing systems. The Notation package, which is developed in this thesis, allows the entry and the creation of advanced notations in the Mathematica symbolic computation system. In particular, a complete and functioning notation for both Dirac's BraKet notation as well as a full tensorial notation, are given herein. The second part of the thesis introduces a prototype based rule inheritance language paradigm that is applicable to certain advanced pattern matching rewrite rule language models. In particular, an implementation is presented for Mathematica. After detailing this language extension, it is adopted throughout the rest of the thesis. Finally, the third major contribution is a highly efficient algorithm to canonicalize tensorial expressions. By an innovative technique this algorithm avoids the dummy index relabeling problem. Further algorithmic optimizations are then presented. The complete algorithm handles linear symmetries such as the Bianchi identities. It also fully accommodates partial derivatives as well as mixed index classes. These advances in language and notations are extensively demonstrated on problems in quantum mechanics, angular momentum, general relativity, and quasi-spin. It is shown that the developments in this thesis lead to an extremely flexible, extensible, and powerful working environment for the expression and ensuing calculation of symbolic physics computations.University of Canterbury. Physics2011-12-14T22:53:58Z2011-12-14T22:53:58Z1999Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/6073enNZCUCopyright Jason F. Harrishttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
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language en
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description This thesis presents three contributions to the field of symbolic computation, followed by their application to symbolic physics computations. The first contribution is to interfacing systems. The Notation package, which is developed in this thesis, allows the entry and the creation of advanced notations in the Mathematica symbolic computation system. In particular, a complete and functioning notation for both Dirac's BraKet notation as well as a full tensorial notation, are given herein. The second part of the thesis introduces a prototype based rule inheritance language paradigm that is applicable to certain advanced pattern matching rewrite rule language models. In particular, an implementation is presented for Mathematica. After detailing this language extension, it is adopted throughout the rest of the thesis. Finally, the third major contribution is a highly efficient algorithm to canonicalize tensorial expressions. By an innovative technique this algorithm avoids the dummy index relabeling problem. Further algorithmic optimizations are then presented. The complete algorithm handles linear symmetries such as the Bianchi identities. It also fully accommodates partial derivatives as well as mixed index classes. These advances in language and notations are extensively demonstrated on problems in quantum mechanics, angular momentum, general relativity, and quasi-spin. It is shown that the developments in this thesis lead to an extremely flexible, extensible, and powerful working environment for the expression and ensuing calculation of symbolic physics computations.
author Harris, Jason F.
spellingShingle Harris, Jason F.
Core foundations, algorithms, and language design for symbolic computation in physics
author_facet Harris, Jason F.
author_sort Harris, Jason F.
title Core foundations, algorithms, and language design for symbolic computation in physics
title_short Core foundations, algorithms, and language design for symbolic computation in physics
title_full Core foundations, algorithms, and language design for symbolic computation in physics
title_fullStr Core foundations, algorithms, and language design for symbolic computation in physics
title_full_unstemmed Core foundations, algorithms, and language design for symbolic computation in physics
title_sort core foundations, algorithms, and language design for symbolic computation in physics
publisher University of Canterbury. Physics
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6073
work_keys_str_mv AT harrisjasonf corefoundationsalgorithmsandlanguagedesignforsymboliccomputationinphysics
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