adaptive finite element methods
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2021 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 69-79
Author(s):  
Tom Gustafsson

This work describes a concise algorithm for the generation of triangular meshes with the help of standard adaptive finite element methods. We demonstrate that a generic adaptive finite element solver can be repurposed into a triangular mesh generator if a robust mesh smoothing algorithm is applied between the mesh refinement steps. We present an implementation of the mesh generator and demonstrate the resulting meshes via examples.


2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pascal Heid ◽  
Dirk Praetorius ◽  
Thomas P. Wihler

Abstract We revisit a unified methodology for the iterative solution of nonlinear equations in Hilbert spaces. Our key observation is that the general approach from [P. Heid and T. P. Wihler, Adaptive iterative linearization Galerkin methods for nonlinear problems, Math. Comp. 89 2020, 326, 2707–2734; P. Heid and T. P. Wihler, On the convergence of adaptive iterative linearized Galerkin methods, Calcolo 57 2020, Paper No. 24] satisfies an energy contraction property in the context of (abstract) strongly monotone problems. This property, in turn, is the crucial ingredient in the recent convergence analysis in [G. Gantner, A. Haberl, D. Praetorius and S. Schimanko, Rate optimality of adaptive finite element methods with respect to the overall computational costs, preprint 2020]. In particular, we deduce that adaptive iterative linearized finite element methods (AILFEMs) lead to full linear convergence with optimal algebraic rates with respect to the degrees of freedom as well as the total computational time.


2020 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lars Diening ◽  
Christian Kreuzer

AbstractIt is an open question if the threshold condition \theta<\theta_{\star} for the Dörfler marking parameter is necessary to obtain optimal algebraic rates of adaptive finite element methods. We present a (non-PDE) example fitting into the common abstract convergence framework (axioms of adaptivity) which allows for convergence with exponential rates. However, for Dörfler marking \theta>\theta_{\star}, the algebraic convergence rate can be made arbitrarily small.


Author(s):  
Stefan A. Funken ◽  
Anja Schmidt

Abstract Adaptive meshing is a fundamental component of adaptive finite element methods. This includes refining and coarsening meshes locally. In this work, we are concerned with the red-green-blue refinement strategy in two dimensions and its counterpart-coarsening. In general, coarsening algorithms are mostly based on an explicitly given refinement history. In this work, we present a coarsening algorithm on adaptive red-green-blue meshes in two dimensions without explicitly knowing the refinement history. To this end, we examine the local structure of these meshes, find an easy-to-verify criterion to adaptively coarsen red-green-blue meshes, and prove that this criterion generates meshes with the desired properties. We present a MATLAB implementation built on the red-green-blue refinement routine of the -package (Funken and Schmidt 2018, 2019).


2017 ◽  
Vol 212 (1) ◽  
pp. 76-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhengyong Ren ◽  
Lewen Qiu ◽  
Jingtian Tang ◽  
Xiaoping Wu ◽  
Xiao Xiao ◽  
...  

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