Geometric programming
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A geometric program (GP) is an optimization problem of the form
where are posynomials and are monomials. In the context of geometric programming (unlike standard mathematics), a monomial is a function from to defined as
where and . A posynomial is any sum of monomials. [1]
GPs have numerous applications, such as component sizing in IC design[2][3] and parameter estimation via logistic regression in statistics. The maximum likelihood estimator in logistic regression is a GP.
Convex form
Geometric programs are not in general convex optimization problems, but they can be transformed to convex problems by a change of variables and a transformation of the objective and constraint functions. In particular, after performing the change of variables and taking the log of the objective and constraint functions, the functions , i.e., the posynomials, are transformed into log-sum-exp functions, which are convex, and the functions , i.e., the monomials, become affine. Hence, this transformation transforms every GP into an equivalent convex program. [1]
Software
Several software packages exist to assist with formulating and solving geometric programs.
- MOSEK is a commercial solver capable of solving geometric programs as well as other non-linear optimization problems.
- CVXOPT is an open-source solver for convex optimization problems.
- GPkit is a Python package for cleanly defining and manipulating geometric programming models. There are a number of example GP models written with this package here.
- GGPLAB is a MATLAB toolbox for specifying and solving geometric programs (GPs) and generalized geometric programs (GGPs).
- CVXPY is a Python-embedded modeling language for specifying and solving convex optimization problems, including GPs, GGPs, and log-log convex programs. [4]
See also
References
- ^ a b S. Boyd, S. J. Kim, L. Vandenberghe, and A. Hassibi. A Tutorial on Geometric Programming. Retrieved 8 January 2019.
- ^ M. Hershenson, S. Boyd, and T. Lee. Optimal Design of a CMOS Op-amp via Geometric Programming. Retrieved 8 January 2019.
- ^ S. Boyd, S. J. Kim, D. Patil, and M. Horowitz. Digital Circuit Optimization via Geometric Programming. Retrieved 8 January 2019.
- ^ A. Agrawal, S. Diamond, and S. Boyd. Disciplined Geometric Programming. Retrieved 8 January 2019.
Further Reading
- Richard J. Duffin; Elmor L. Peterson; Clarence Zener (1967). Geometric Programming. John Wiley and Sons. p. 278. ISBN 0-471-22370-0.