Fractional programming

In mathematical optimization, fractional programming is a generalization of linear-fractional programming. The objective function in a fractional program is a ratio of two functions that are in general nonlinear. The ratio to be optimized often describes some kind of efficiency of a system.

Definition

Let be real-valued functions defined on a set . Let . The nonlinear program

where on , is called a fractional program.

Concave fractional programs

A fractional program in which f is nonnegative and concave, g is positive and convex, and S is a convex set is called a concave fractional program. If g is affine, f does not have to be restricted in sign. The linear fractional program is a special case of a concave fractional program where all functions are affine.

Properties

The function is semistrictly quasiconcave on S. If f and g are differentiable, then q is pseudoconcave. In a linear fractional program, the objective function is pseudolinear.

Transformation to a concave program

By the transformation , any concave fractional program can be transformed to the equivalent parameter-free concave program [1]

If g is affine, the first constraint is changed to and the assumption that f is nonnegative may be dropped.

Duality

The Lagrangian dual of the equivalent concave program is

Notes

  1. Schaible, Siegfried (1974). "Parameter-free Convex Equivalent and Dual Programs". Zeitschrift für Operations Research. 18 (5): 187–196. doi:10.1007/BF02026600. MR 0351464.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
gollark: Nope.
gollark: 1 hop for IPv6, it says "no reply" a bunch of times for IPv4.
gollark: Don't know. Is this something I can check over SSH to a device over there?
gollark: Yes, but not behind CGNAT fortunately.
gollark: I don't have control over it much, it runs on an ISP-supplied router and I haven't changed that.

References

  • Avriel, Mordecai; Diewert, Walter E.; Schaible, Siegfried; Zang, Israel (1988). Generalized Concavity. Plenum Press.
  • Schaible, Siegfried (1983). "Fractional programming". Zeitschrift für Operations Research. 27: 39–54. doi:10.1007/bf01916898.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.