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matrix of higher order differences

Peter, I have indeed worked with Gregory-Newton and divided differences in my very first numerical analysis course a couple of decades ago! However, I am perplexed by the particular form of this matrix where the differences are stored along the diagonals.  I know that this is not the *same* as the Wronskian, but was just wondering whether it is an established matrix that is some kind of an *ian* like Hermitian, Jacobian, Hessian, Wronskian, Laplacian, ...

Best,
Ravi.

-------------------------------------------------------
Ravi Varadhan, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor,
Division of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology School of Medicine Johns Hopkins University

Ph. (410) 502-2619
email: rvaradhan at jhmi.edu


-----Original Message-----
From: peter dalgaard [mailto:pdalgd at gmail.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, April 27, 2011 4:59 PM
To: Ravi Varadhan
Cc: R Help
Subject: Re: [R] matrix of higher order differences
On Apr 27, 2011, at 21:34 , Ravi Varadhan wrote:

            
Not quite, I think. This is one function at different values of x, the Wronskian is about n different functions.

Tables of higher-order differences were used fundamentally for interpolation and error detection in tables of function values (remember those?), but rarely computed to the full extent - usually only until the effects of truncation set in and the differences start alternating in sign.