CURVPS(3) calculate values for a smoothing spline for a periodic function.

SYNOPSIS

CALL CURVPS (N, X, Y, P, D, ISW, S, EPS, YS, YSP, SIGMA, TEMP, IER)

This subroutine calculates certain values that are used by CURVP2 in order to compute an interpolatory smoothing spline under tension through a sequence of functional values for a periodic function. The actual computation of the interpolated values must be done using CURVP2.

Three parameters are used to control the degree of smoothness -- D, S, and EPS.

The parameter D is a value indicating the degree of confidence in the accuracy of the input function values -- it should be an approximation of the standard deviation of error. Effectively the value of D controls how close the smoothed curve comes to the input data points. If D is small then the interpolated curve will pass close to the input data. The larger the value of D, the more freedom the smooth curve has in how close it comes to the input data values.

S is a more subtle global smoothing parameter. S must be non-negative. For small values of S, the curve approximates the tension spline and for larger values of S, the curve is smoother. A reasonable value for S is REAL(N).

EPS controls the precision to which S is interpreted; EPS must be between 0. and 1. inclusive. A reasonable value for EPS is SQRT(2./REAL(N)).

DESCRIPTION

N
(integer, input) The number of input data values. (N > 1)
X
(integer, input) An array containing the abscissae for the input function.
Y
(integer, input) An array containing the functional values for the input function -- Y(K) is the functional value at X(K) for K=1,N.
P
(real, input) The period of the function.
D
(integer, input) A user-specified value containing the observed weights. D may be either an array or a scalar, depending on the value of ISW (as described below).
ISW
(integer, input) A switch for interpreting the value of D. If ISW=0, then D is an array of length N (D contains an individual error estimate for each input data value); if ISW=1, then D is a scalar that serves as an error estimate for every single data item.
S
(integer, input) Contains the value for smoothing. S must be non-negative. Larger values for S yield greater smoothing. A reasonable value is REAL(N).
EPS
(integer, input) Contains a tolerance value for the relative precision to which S should be interpreted. EPS must be between 0. and 1. inclusive. A reasonable value is SQRT(2./REAL(N)).
YS
(integer, input) An array of length N.
YSP
(integer, input) An array of length N.
SIGMA
(integer, input) Tension factor. Values near zero result in a cubic spline; large values (e.g. 50) result in nearly a polygonal line. A typical value is 1.
TEMP
(integer, input) Scratch space.
IER
(integer, input) An error return value. If IER is returned as 0, then no errors were detected.

= 1 if N is less than 2.
= 2 if S is negative.
= 3 if EPS is negative or greater than 1.
= 4 if X values are not strictly increasing.
= 5 if D is negative.
= 6 if P is less than or equal to X(N)-X(1).

ACCESS

To use CURVPS, load the NCAR Graphics library ngmath.

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) 2000
University Corporation for Atmospheric Research

The use of this Software is governed by a License Agreement.