scholarly journals Guaranteed and robust {$L^2$}-norm a posteriori error estimates for {1D} linear advection problems

Author(s):  
Alexndre Ern ◽  
Martin Vohralík ◽  
Mohammad Zakerzadeh

We propose a reconstruction-based a posteriori error estimate for linear advection problems in one space dimension. In our framework, a stable variational ultra-weak formulation is adopted, and the equivalence of the $L^2$-norm of the error with the dual graph norm of the residual is established. This dual norm is showed to be localizable over vertex-based patch subdomains of the computational domain under the condition of the orthogonality of the residual to the piecewise affine hat functions. We show that this condition is valid for some well-known numerical methods including continuous/discontinuous Petrov--Galerkin and discontinuous Galerkin methods. Consequently, a well-posed local problem on each patch is identified, which leads to a global conforming reconstruction of the discrete solution. We prove that this reconstruction provides a guaranteed upper bound on the $L^2$ error. Moreover, up to a constant, it also gives local lower bounds on the $L^2$ error, where the generic constant is proven to be independent of mesh-refinement, polynomial degree of the approximation, and the advective velocity. This leads to robustness of our estimates with respect to the advection as well as the polynomial degree. All the above properties are verified in a series of numerical experiments, additionally leading to asymptotic exactness. Motivated by these results, we finally propose a heuristic extension of our methodology to any space dimension, achieved by solving local least-squares problems on vertex-based patches. Though not anymore guaranteed, the resulting error indicator is numerically robust with respect to both advection velocity and polynomial degree, for a collection of two-dimensional test cases including discontinuous solutions aligned and not aligned with the computational mesh.

2000 ◽  
Vol 10 (01) ◽  
pp. 31-46
Author(s):  
MATS G. LARSON

We prove an a posteriori error estimate for approximations of periodic orbits in Hamiltonian systems using Galerkin methods which conserve the Hamiltonian. The error is estimated in terms of the local time step, the residual obtained by inserting the approximate solution into the differential equation, and a stability factor describing relevant stability properties of the adjoint linearized problem. The quantitative growth of the stability factor as a function of time is of particular interest. We show that the stability factor grows linearly with time for a certain class of problems when the conservative scheme is used, in contrast to the quadratic growth of the stability factor, expected for non-conservative schemes in general.


2021 ◽  
Vol 91 (333) ◽  
pp. 37-74
Author(s):  
T. Chaumont-Frelet ◽  
A. Ern ◽  
M. Vohralík

We study extensions of piecewise polynomial data prescribed in a patch of tetrahedra sharing an edge. We show stability in the sense that the minimizers over piecewise polynomial spaces with prescribed tangential component jumps across faces and prescribed piecewise curl in elements are subordinate in the broken energy norm to the minimizers over the broken H ( curl ) \boldsymbol H(\boldsymbol {\operatorname {curl}}) space with the same prescriptions. Our proofs are constructive and yield constants independent of the polynomial degree. We then detail the application of this result to the a posteriori error analysis of the curl–curl problem discretized with Nédélec finite elements of arbitrary order. The resulting estimators are reliable, locally efficient, polynomial-degree-robust, and inexpensive. They are constructed by a broken patchwise equilibration which, in particular, does not produce a globally H ( curl ) \boldsymbol H(\boldsymbol {\operatorname {curl}}) -conforming flux. The equilibration is only related to edge patches and can be realized without solutions of patch problems by a sweep through tetrahedra around every mesh edge. The error estimates become guaranteed when the regularity pick-up constant is explicitly known. Numerical experiments illustrate the theoretical findings.


2018 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 322-357 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Mora ◽  
Gonzalo Rivera

AbstractWe present a priori and a posteriori error analyses of a virtual element method (VEM) to approximate the vibration frequencies and modes of an elastic solid. We analyse a variational formulation relying only on the solid displacement and propose an $H^{1}(\Omega )$-conforming discretization by means of the VEM. Under standard assumptions on the computational domain, we show that the resulting scheme provides a correct approximation of the spectrum and prove an optimal–order error estimate for the eigenfunctions and a double order for the eigenvalues. Since the VEM has the advantage of using general polygonal meshes, which allows efficient implementation of mesh refinement strategies, we also introduce a residual-type a posteriori error estimator and prove its reliability and efficiency. We use the corresponding error estimator to drive an adaptive scheme. Finally, we report the results of a couple of numerical tests that allow us to assess the performance of this approach.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-225
Author(s):  
Fleurianne Bertrand ◽  
Daniele Boffi ◽  
Rolf Stenberg

AbstractThis paper derives a posteriori error estimates for the mixed numerical approximation of the Laplace eigenvalue problem. We discuss a reconstruction in the standard {H_{0}^{1}}-conforming space for the primal variable of the mixed Laplace eigenvalue problem and compare it with analogous approaches present in the literature for the corresponding source problem. In the case of Raviart–Thomas finite elements of arbitrary polynomial degree, the resulting error estimator constitutes a guaranteed upper bound for the error and is shown to be local efficient. Our reconstruction is performed locally on a set of vertex patches.


2018 ◽  
Vol 52 (5) ◽  
pp. 2037-2064 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Ciarlet ◽  
Martin Vohralík

We present a posteriori error analysis of diffusion problems where the diffusion tensor is not necessarily symmetric and positive definite and can in particular change its sign. We first identify the correct intrinsic error norm for such problems, covering both conforming and nonconforming approximations. It combines a dual (residual) norm together with the distance to the correct functional space. Importantly, we show the equivalence of both these quantities defined globally over the entire computational domain with the Hilbertian sums of their localizations over patches of elements. In this framework, we then design a posteriori estimators which deliver simultaneously guaranteed error upper bound, global and local error lower bounds, and robustness with respect to the (sign-changing) diffusion tensor. Robustness with respect to the approximation polynomial degree is achieved as well. The estimators are given in a unified setting covering at once conforming, nonconforming, mixed, and discontinuous Galerkin finite element discretizations in two or three space dimensions. Numerical results illustrate the theoretical developments.


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