The Extended Resolution Digital Differential Analyzer: A New Computing Structure for Solving Differential Equations
- 1 January 1970
- journal article
- Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in IEEE Transactions on Computers
- Vol. C-19 (1) , 1-9
- https://doi.org/10.1109/tc.1970.5008893
Abstract
In conventional digital differential analyzers (DDA), the word length used for the transmission of information between integrators is restricted to at most a single magnitude bit and a sign bit. This restriction seriously limits integrator frequency response and has to a large extent been responsible for the failure of DDAs to achieve widespread acceptance as general purpose differential analyzers. In this paper it is shown that DDA speed and accuracy can be greatly improved by using increment word lengths which are approximately one-half the length of integrand registers providing that integration formulas more accurate than Euler integration are used. The programming of such machines for the solution of both linear and nonlinear differential equations is discussed and a quantitative evaluation of performance improvement is presented. At the same time, an effort is made to isolate the principal difficulties in hardware implementation which result from extending the integrator increment resolution.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Circle test evaluation of a method of compensating hybrid computing error by predicted integralSIMULATION, 1967
- Dynamic-error analysis of digital and combined analog-digital computer systemsSIMULATION, 1966
- Error analysis of hybrid computer systemsSIMULATION, 1966
- The Scaling of Digital Differential AnalyzersIEEE Transactions on Electronic Computers, 1965
- Design of a one-megacycle iteration rate DDAPublished by Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) ,1962
- Generalized Integration on the Analog ComputerIEEE Transactions on Electronic Computers, 1959