Abstract

We consider the tensor equation whose coefficient tensor is a nonsingular M-tensor and whose right-side vector is nonnegative. Such a tensor equation may have a large number of nonnegative solutions. It is already known that the tensor equation has a maximal nonnegative solution and a minimal nonnegative solution (called extremal solutions collectively). However, the existing proofs do not show how the extremal solutions can be computed. The existing numerical methods can find one of the nonnegative solutions, without knowing whether the computed solution is an extremal solution. In this paper, we present new proofs for the existence of extremal solutions. Our proofs are much shorter than existing ones and more importantly they give numerical methods that can compute the extremal solutions. Linear convergence of these numerical methods is also proved under mild assumptions. Some of our discussions also allow the coefficient tensor to be a Z-tensor or allow the right-side vector to have some negative elements.

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