CS计算机代考程序代写 algorithm 3/23/2020

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An Example
Check the necessary conditions at x  (1, 0)T *
of the constrained minimization problem: 24
subject to
minx1 1.5 x2 0.5 x
1x x 0, 12
1x x 0, 12
1x x 0, 12
1x x 0. 12

Answer
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The necessary conditions hold when
 0.75, 0.25, 0, 0 . *
T

Sufficient Conditions
Afeasiblepointx isastrictlocalminimizer,if *
(i) it satisfies the necessary conditions; (ii) the strict complementarity holds, i.e.,
eitheraTx b 0, or 0, butnotboth. i*i *i
(iii) ZT2 f (x )Z is positive definite. *
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Comment
The following example shows that the condition (ii) is important :
min f (x)  x3  x2 12
subjectto: 1x 0. 1
x  (0, 0) is not optimal, although it verifies all the conditions except (ii).
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Comment (cont’d)
A1 0 1 0

A  1, 0 : active constraint at x  (0, 0).
ˆ
fx0, 0  fxATfor0.
T
ˆˆˆ
0 00
T
Z0,1 ZT2fxZ0,10 2120.
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251
 

Degenerate Constraints
An active constraint is degenerate, if its associated Lagrange multiplier is zero.
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Sufficient Conditions in the presence of degenerate constraints
Afeasiblepointx isastrictlocalminimizer,if *
(i) it satisfies the necessary conditions; (ii) T Ax b0;
**
(iii) Z T 2 f (x )Z is positive definite, where Z is
*
ˆ
a basis matrix for the null space of A , the submatrix
ˆ
of A w.r.t. the nondegenerate active constraints at x .
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*

Example revisited
min f (x)  x3  x2 12
subjectto: 1x 0. 1
x  (0, 0) is not optimal. 1 0 ˆ  
A1 0,A1,0:activeconstraintatx(0,0), 
ˆˆ associatedwith0.Thus,A ,Z I.
 ZT2fxZ0 00.
  0 2 
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An Illustrative Example Solve the optimization problem:
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min f(x)x3 x3 2×2 x x 12112
subjectto x 2x 2 12
x0 1
x2 0.

1 2 2 A1 0, b0 

0 1 0 
 Then, let    , ,  123
Solution
 First, we identify the matrices from the constraints Ax  b :
T
be the vector of Lagrange multipliers associated with three constraints.
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Solution (cont’d)
 The necessary conditions for a local minimum are: (1) x2x2,x0,x0,
1212 (2) f(x)AT

3×2 4x 1 1 1 0
 1 1  ,
1 2 3
3×2 1 2 0 1   2
(3)2x2x0,x0,x 0, 1122132
 0,  0,  0. 123
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Solution (cont’d)
In addition, for the sufficiency, we must consider all possible combinations in the complementary slackness conditions; that is, either a constraint is active,
or its Lagrange multiplier is zero.
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x 0, 1
Solution (cont’d)
Case 1: All three constraints are active:
x 2x 2, 12
x2 0.
There is no feasible point in this case.
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12 x 0.
Solution (cont’d)
Case 2: The first two constraints are active and 3  0: x 2x 2,
1
Then, the only feasible point is x 
From the necessary condition (2), we have
1 1 1  1, 1
2 2 1 0 2  0. 2
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
0, 1 .
T

Solution (cont’d)
T
Case 2: So, this point x  0, 1 is a stationary point,
although the 2nd constraint is degenerate.
ˆ
The last sufficient condition is true:

T Inthiscase,A  1 2 , andthenZ  2 1 .
ZT2fxZ 220, *
Thus, x  0, 1 
is NOT a strict local minimizer.
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 
T

Solution (cont’d)
Case 3: The 1st and 3rd constraints are active and2 0.
x 2x 2 2 12x
x2 0 0
The necessary condition (2) becomes
31 0  3,  5 13 1 3
1 2 1 
Thus this point is NOT minimizer.
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and 0. 1
x 0 0 1 x
Solution (cont’d)
Case 4: The 2nd and 3rd constraints are active
x2 0 0
The necessary condition (2) becomes
1 1 0
 1,1
23 2 3 101

Thus this point is NOT optimal.
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Solution (cont’d)
Case 5: The 1st constraint is active and 2  3  0. Then, x  2  2x and, with the necessary condition (2),
12
12×2 16×2 31 x0, Case2
 1 
3×2 1 2  2

or x  1.6297 ,   0.4485  0, NOT optimal.
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0.1852 1 
1

1  1
Solution (cont’d)
Case 6: The 2nd constraint is active and     0. 13
Then, x  0 and, with the necessary condition (2), 1
  2 2 10, NOT optimal. 3×2 1 0
2
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Case 7: The 3rd constraint is active and     0. 12
Then, x2  0 and, with the necessary condition (2), xx 0 1.5486
3241 
 1 1 331,x feasible.
1
10


ˆ sufficiency condition is
T Inthiscase,A 0 1 , Z  1 0 .Thus,thelast

 
ZT2 f xZ 1 0 5.2916 0 1 5.29160  0 00
  
Therefore, x  1.5486 is a strict local minimizer. 0 

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Solution (end)
Case 8: No constraints are active.
Then the necessary condition (2), together with i  0, yields

3×2 4x 1 0
 1 1   0  no feasible solution. 3×21 
2

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An Exercise (HW)
Solve the optimization problem:
min f (x)  x2  x2  x x 1212
subjectto 2x x 2 12
xx4 12
x 0. 1

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Case 3: Nonlinear Constraints
Problem with equality constraints: min f (x)
subjectto gi(x)0,1im.
Problem with inequality constraints: min f (x)
subjectto gi(x)0,1im.

Standing Assumptions
 f, g areofclassC2.
 x is a regular point, i.e.,
*
For the case of equality constraints:
g (x ) are linearly independent; i*
while, for the case of inequality constraints, the
above is true only for the active constraints at x . *
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270

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271
the equality constraints:
g(x)x2 x2 x2 30 1123
g (x)2x 4x x2 10 2123
Examples
 Is the feasible point x  (1, 1, 1)T regular for *
 Is the feasible point x  (1, 1)T regular for *
the inequality constraint: 1 1 3
g(x) x2 x21 0 12122


Lagrangian Function
m
L(x,)  f(x)g(x)
 f(x)Tg(x) T
ii i1
  1,,m  : vector of Lagrange multipliers
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Necessary Conditions: Equality Constraints
Let x be a local minimizer of f subject to g(x)  0. 
Let Z (x ) be a null-space matrix for the matrix 
g(x )mn. *
If x is a regular point of the constraints, 
thenavectorofLagrangemultipliers s.t.
  L(x , )  0, or equivalently, Z(x )T f (x )  0;
x**
 Z(x )T 2 L(x , )Z(x )  0. (reduced Hessian)
 xx   
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Sufficiency Conditions: Equality Constraints
Letx beafeasiblepointsuchthatg(x)0. *
Let Z(x )n(nm) be a basis matrix for 
the null-space of g(x )mn. *
Assumethatavector s.t. L(x,)0, and
x
 Z(x )T 2 L(x , )Z(x )  0. (reduced Hessian)
 xx   
Then, x is a strict local minimizer of f
*
subject to g(x)  0.
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An Example
Consider the minimization problem with an equality constraint:
min f (x)  x2  x2 12
subjecttox2 2×2 4. 12

Stepwise Procedure
Step 1: Define the Lagrangian function L(x,)x2 x2 (x2 2×2 4)
1212
Step 2: Check the 1st-order necessary condition, (along with the feasibility requirement):
2x 2x 0 11
2×2 4x2 0
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Stepwise Procedure
Step 2 (cont’d): There are four possible solutions:
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1 x 0,  2 , 2;
T
x0, 2 ,2;

1 x2, 0 , 1; and

T
x2, 0 , 1.
T
T

Stepwise Procedure
Step 3: Determine which points are minimizers, by examining the Hessian matrix:
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2 L(x,)2 0 2 0 xx 0 2 0 4
 2(1) 0 
 0 2(12) 

Stepwise Procedure
Step 3 (cont’d): For example, consider the (stationary)
T
x 0, 2 with2.

Z1,0 becauseg(x)0,42 .
point
 ZT2 L(x,)Z30

T
xx
 x  (0, 2)T is a strict local minimizer.
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1
T

Finally,
Step 3 (cont’d): By similar reasoning,
 x  (0,  2)T is a strict local minimizer.
T
 x  (2, 0)T and x  2, 0 are both local maximizers.
(left as an exercise)
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Necessary Conditions: Inequality
constraints (Karush‐Kuhn‐Tucker)
Let x be a local minimizer of f subject to g(x)  0.
Let the columns of Z (x ) form a basis for the null space of 
the Jacobian of the active constraints at x . *
Ifx isaregularpointfortheconstraints,
then  a vector of Lagrange multipliers   0 s.t.
  L(x , )0, orequivalentlyZ(x )Tf(x )=0; x**
 Tg(x)0; *
 Z(x)T2 L(x,)Z(x)0.  xx   
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Sufficiency Conditions: Inequality
constraints
Letx beafeasiblepointsatisfyingg(x)0. Suppose  a vector   0 s.t.
 xL(x, )0;  Tg(x)0;
*
 Z(x)T2 L(x,)Z(x)0,
  xx    
where Z is a basis for the null space of the Jacobian
matrix of the active constraints with positive Lagrange multipliers at x.
Then, x is a strict local minimizer of ming(x)0 f (x).
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Consider the problem
An Example
min f (x)  x 1
2 subjectto x1 x21
Question : Are the following points optimal:
T A(0,0)T,B1,1 ,C0, 2 .

T


12
x2 x2 2. 12
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Answer
T
A  0, 0 : not a local minimizer (as the reduced Hessian  0)
nor a maximizer (because 1  0, not  0 for max!). B  (1, 1)T : a strict local minimizer
T
C 0, 2 : notoptimal

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Consider the primal nonlinear problem:
Duality
min f (x)
subjectto g(x)0,
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xX.

Games and Min‐Max Duality
Consider two players: Alice and Bob and their strategies: x and y for the payoff of Alice to Bob:
F(x, y) Question :
What is the best course of action for maximing their rewards, regardless of what their opponent does?
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Games and Min‐Max Duality
In the worst case, Alice’s payoff to Bob is: F*(x)maxF(x,y)
yY
So, the best strategy of Alice is to solve the min-max problem:
minF*(x)minmaxF(x,y). xX xX yY
“Primal Problem”
Vice versa, Bob’s optimal strategy is to solve a max-min problem: maxF(y)maxminF(x,y).
yY * yY xX “Dual Problem”
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Weak Duality :
 F(y)F*(x);
Duality Theorems
*
 maxminF(x,y)minmaxF(x,y).
yY xX xX yY
Strong Duality :
max min F(x, y)  min max F(x, y)
yY xX xX yY
if a pair of x , y  satisfies the “saddle-point condition”:
**
F x , y F x , y  F x, y , x, y. ****
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with
Lagrange Duality
Starting with Lagrangian
L(x,) f(x)Tg(x), we can define:
minmaxL(x, ) minmaxf(x)T g(x) xX 0 xX 0  
*
L(x)maxL(x, ): Primalfunction
0 Clearly,
*
L(x), ifg(x)0; and  f(x), ifg(x)0.

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Dual Problem
The dual problem can thus be written as the max‐min problem:
maxminL(x,)  maxminf(x)Tg(x)
0 xX 0 xX  with

L ()  min L(x, ) : Dual function
*
xX

Weak Duality Theorem
 For any feasible solution x of the primal problem, and any feasible x, of the dual problem,
f(x)Tg f(x). maxL() min f(x):g(x)0.
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0 * xX


Comment
Unlike LP problem, there may be a duality gap. Consider for example:
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min f (x)  x2 subjectto x1
xXx:0x2. 

Comment (cont’d)
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Clearly, x 1 yields optimal objective value 1. *
 
L  minL(x,)min x2  x1
* ,
xX
xX if 2,
4, 
if 2. maxL21, at 2.

**


Convex Duality Theorem
The optimal primal and dual function values are
equal, if f(x) is convex and the constraint function
g(x) is concave, both continuously differentiable, and if the solution x is a regular point of the constraints. *
Moreover, the associated vector of Lagrange multipliers * solves the dual problem.
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Interior‐Point Methods for Convex Programming
1. Interior-point methods for linear programming
2. Interior-point methods for convex (nonlinear) programming
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Karmarkar (1984)

Interior‐Point Methods for Convex Programming
1. Interior-point methods for linear programming
• Affine-scaling method
• Path-following method
• Projective method
• Potential-reduction method
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Interior‐Point Methods for Linear Programming
Primal LP Problem: min cT x
Axk b,xk 0 “interior point” xk
subjectto Axb, x0. Dual LP Problem:
AT y  s  c, s  0 kkk
max subjectto
bT y
AT ysc, s0.

Note that the duality gap is:
cT x  bT y  xT s
3/23/2020 @2020 New York University Tandon 297 School of Engineering
“interior point” yk

1.1 Affine‐Scaling Method
Primal LP Problem: min cT x
Axk b,xk 0 subject to Ax  b, x  0. “interior point” xk
Steepest-descent direction (for the cost):  c Orthogonal projection matrix (for maintaining Ax  b) :
1
P  I  AT AAT  A
Projected steepest-descent direction: x  Pc.
3/23/2020
@2020 New York University Tandon 298 School of Engineering

1.1 Affine‐Scaling Method
Primal LP Problem: min cT x
Axk b,xk 0 subject to Ax  b, x  0. “interior point” xk
First, transform the LP problem to an equivalent problem, with x moved to a “central” point.
Then, search an updated estimate along the projected
steepest-descent direction for the transformed problem.
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1.1 Affine‐Scaling Method
Step 1: Change of variables at xk  0 xX1x, withX diagxk,i
T xkeX xk11…1 ,
1  
a “central” point, equally distant to the boundary.
Step 2: The LP problem is transformed to, in x, min cTx (cTx)
subjectto Axb, x0.
Update with the projected steepest-descent direction:
xPcIXATAX2ATAX Xc,  1 
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1.1 Affine‐Scaling Method
xk 1  e  x ,  >0 “step size”, larger after scaling xk1 Xxk1.
Selection of : max, 01,
with max the largest step to the boundary: xk,i maxxi 0, or max minxk,i /xi.
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xi 0

1.2 Path‐following method
Goal: Use a barrier function to keep the iterates away from
the boundary.
LPProblem:mincTx,subjectto Axb, x0. Approximate optimiz. problems P :
min  x, cTx log x  n 
subjectto ATxb, x0.
Pick a sequence of barrier parameters  >0  0.
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j j1

1.2 Path‐following method Primallog.barrierfunction:x,cT xlogx 
j1 (x,)c 1/x,…,1/x T cX1e,

1n
2 22
(x,)diag1/xi X .
Letting  be the vector of Lagrangian multipliers for P , the 1st-order necessary optimality conditions are:
c   X 1e  AT   0, Ax  b.

It can be shown that the optimal solution x*  x   for P
 exists/unique, goes to x* (optimal for the LP), as   0.
3/23/2020 @2020 New York University Tandon 303 School of Engineering
n
j

1.2 Path‐following method
The optimality conditions imply: Axb, ATsc, XSe
where s  c  AT .
Search algorithm based on Newton’s method :
  1 
x DDAT ADAT  AD cX1e,
 1
  y   A D A T   b   A S  1 e  ,
1
sAT ADAT  bAS1e,

with S  diag si , D  S 1 X .
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2. Interior‐Point Method for Convex Programming
Use appropriate barrier functions for fast convergence of Newton’s method, that performs well if small changes in x leads to small changes in the 2nd order derivatives of F.
A convex barrier function F(x) is self concordant, if 3/2
F(x) 2Fx , xdomF. Examples: F(x)  log(x), x  0;
F(x)m log(aT xb), xx:aT xb 0,i}.
3/23/2020
@2020 New York University Tandon 305 School of Engineering
i1
ii ii

Newton ‘ s Decrement :
measures the norm of Newton’s direction in min F(x). Consider the Taylor series approximation to F(xh):
F  F(x)F(x)T h0.5hT2F(x)h app
F(x)F(x)T h0.5 h 2 x
It can shown that the Newton direction pN minimizes the
above function, and satisfies 2F(x)p The optimal value of F is:
N
 F(x).
2 F ( x )  0 . 5  F , x 
app
with=F,x pN x Newton’sDecrementofFatx.
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2. Interior‐Point Method for Convex Programming
A self-concordant F(x) is a self-concordant barrier function forS ,ifv0, xint(S), hn,
F(x)Thv1/2 h . x
Example:F(x)log(x),v=1,S x:x0. 
Lemma :
If 1,thenF(x)T yxv,xint(S),yS.
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2. Interior‐Point Method for Convex Programming
Notice that any nonlinear programming problem of the form
min f (x), subject to g(x)  0
can be transformed to the following standard form:
mincT x, subject to xS. For example, min xn1, subject to
g(x)  0, xn1  f (x)  0.
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2. Path‐following Method for Convex Programming
The path-following method can be applied to solve a convex programming problem as follows:
For>0,defineF (x)cTxF(x),withF(x) 
a self-concordant barrier function for S with v  1, with
nonsingular 2F(x), xint(S).
By path-following, we generate a sequence of x  x*   ii
that converges to x as    , the optimal solution to *i
the original convex programming problem.
For more details, see D. Bertsekas, 2nd ed., 2016
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