Heuristic computing technique for numerical solutions of nonlinear fourth order Emden–Fowler equation

2020 ◽  
Vol 178 ◽  
pp. 534-548 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zulqurnain Sabir ◽  
Sahar Saoud ◽  
Muhammad Asif Zahoor Raja ◽  
Hafiz Abdul Wahab ◽  
Adnène Arbi
Author(s):  
V. F. Edneral ◽  
O. D. Timofeevskaya

Introduction:The method of resonant normal form is based on reducing a system of nonlinear ordinary differential equations to a simpler form, easier to explore. Moreover, for a number of autonomous nonlinear problems, it is possible to obtain explicit formulas which approximate numerical calculations of families of their periodic solutions. Replacing numerical calculations with their precalculated formulas leads to significant savings in computational time. Similar calculations were made earlier, but their accuracy was insufficient, and their complexity was very high.Purpose:Application of the resonant normal form method and a software package developed for these purposes to fourth-order systems in order to increase the calculation speed.Results:It has been shown that with the help of a single algorithm it is possible to study equations of high orders (4th and higher). Comparing the tabulation of the obtained formulas with the numerical solutions of the corresponding equations shows good quantitative agreement. Moreover, the speed of calculation by prepared approximating formulas is orders of magnitude greater than the numerical calculation speed. The obtained approximations can also be successfully applied to unstable solutions. For example, in the Henon — Heyles system, periodic solutions are surrounded by chaotic solutions and, when numerically integrated, the algorithms are often unstable on them.Practical relevance:The developed approach can be used in the simulation of physical and biological systems.


Author(s):  
B. V. Rathish Kumar ◽  
Gopal Priyadarshi

We describe a wavelet Galerkin method for numerical solutions of fourth-order linear and nonlinear partial differential equations (PDEs) in 2D and 3D based on the use of Daubechies compactly supported wavelets. Two-term connection coefficients have been used to compute higher-order derivatives accurately and economically. Localization and orthogonality properties of wavelets make the global matrix sparse. In particular, these properties reduce the computational cost significantly. Linear system of equations obtained from discretized equations have been solved using GMRES iterative solver. Quasi-linearization technique has been effectively used to handle nonlinear terms arising in nonlinear biharmonic equation. To reduce the computational cost of our method, we have proposed an efficient compression algorithm. Error and stability estimates have been derived. Accuracy of the proposed method is demonstrated through various examples.


2013 ◽  
Vol 11 (01) ◽  
pp. 1350052 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. A. KHURI ◽  
A. SAYFY

A finite element collocation approach, based on cubic B-splines, is manipulated for obtaining numerical solutions of a generalized form of the Emden–Fowler type equations. The rate of convergence is discussed theoretically and verified numerically to be of fourth-order by using the double-mesh principle. The efficiency of the scheme is tested on a number of examples which represent special cases of the problem under consideration. The results are compared with analytical and other numerical solutions that are available in the literature. The proposed method reveals that the outcomes are reliable and very accurate when contrasted with other existing methods.


2008 ◽  
Vol 05 (03) ◽  
pp. 613-642 ◽  
Author(s):  
ALY FATHY ◽  
CHENG WANG ◽  
JOSHUA WILSON ◽  
SONGNAN YANG

The Maxwell equations are solved by a long-stencil fourth order finite difference method over a Yee grid, in which different physical variables are located at staggered mesh points. A careful treatment of the numerical values near the boundary is introduced, which in turn leads to a "symmetric image" formula at the "ghost" grid points. Such a symmetric formula assures the stability of the boundary extrapolation. In turn, the fourth order discrete curl operator for the electric and magnetic vectors gives a complete set of eigenvalues in the purely imaginary axis. To advance the dynamic equations, the four-stage Runge–Kutta method is utilized, which results in a full fourth order accuracy in both time and space. A stability constraint for the time step is formulated at both the theoretical and numerical levels, using an argument of stability domain. An accuracy check is presented to verify the fourth order precision, using a comparison between exact solution and numerical solutions at a fixed final time. In addition, some numerical simulations of a loss-less rectangular cavity are also carried out and the frequency is measured precisely.


Author(s):  
Akbar Mohebbi

AbstractIn this work we investigate the numerical solution of Kaup-Kupershmit (KK) equation, KdV-KdV and generalized Hirota-Satsuma (HS) systems. The proposed numerical schemes in this paper are based on fourth-order time-stepping schemes in combination with discrete Fourier transform. We discretize the original partial differential equations (PDEs) with discrete Fourier transform in space and obtain a system of ordinary differential equations (ODEs) in Fourier space which will be solved with fourth order time-stepping methods. After transforming the equations to a system of ODEs, the linear operator in KK and HS equation is diagonal but in KDV-KDV equation is not diagonal. However for KDV-KDV system which is the focus of this paper, we show that the exponential of linear operator and related inverse matrix have definite structure which enable us to implement the methods such as diagonal case. Comparing numerical solutions with exact traveling wave solutions demonstrates that those methods are accurate and readily implemented.


Geophysics ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 61 (6) ◽  
pp. 1939-1948 ◽  
Author(s):  
Danilo R. Velis ◽  
Tadeusz J. Ulrych

The fourth‐order cumulant matching method has been developed recently for estimating a mixed‐phase wavelet from a convolutional process. Matching between the trace cumulant and the wavelet moment is done in a minimum mean‐squared error sense under the assumption of a non‐Gaussian, stationary, and statistically independent reflectivity series. This leads to a highly nonlinear optimization problem, usually solved by techniques that require a certain degree of linearization, and that invariably converge to the minimum closest to the initial model. Alternatively, we propose a hybrid strategy that makes use of a simulated annealing algorithm to provide reliability of the numerical solutions by reducing the risk of being trapped in local minima. Beyond the numerical aspect, the reliability of the derived wavelets depends strongly on the amount of data available. However, by using a multidimensional taper to smooth the trace cumulant, we show that the method can be used even in a trace‐by‐trace implementation, which is very important from the point of view of stationarity and consistency. We demonstrate the viability of the method under several reflectivity models. Finally, we illustrate the hybrid strategy using marine and field real data examples. The consistency of the results is very encouraging because the improved cumulant matching strategy we describe can be effectively used with a limited amount of data.


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