numer anal
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

46
(FIVE YEARS 21)

H-INDEX

6
(FIVE YEARS 2)

Author(s):  
Neela Nataraj ◽  
Carsten Carstensen

The popular (piecewise) quadratic schemes for the biharmonic equation based on triangles are the nonconforming Morley finite element, the discontinuous Galerkin, the C0    interior penalty, and the WOPSIP schemes. Those methods are modified in their right-hand side and then are quasi-optimal in their respective discrete norms. The smoother JI M  is defined for a piecewise smooth input function by a (generalized) Morley interpolation I M  followed by a companion operator J. An abstract framework for the error analysis in the energy, weaker and piecewise Sobolev norms for the schemes is outlined and applied to the biharmonic equation. Three errors are also equivalent in some particular discrete norm from [Carstensen, Gallistl, Nataraj: Comparison results of nonstandard P 2  finite element methods for the biharmonic problem, ESAIM Math. Model. Numer. Anal. (2015)] without data oscillations. This paper extends and unifies the work [Veeser, Zanotti: Quasioptimal nonconforming methods for symmetric elliptic problems, SIAM J. Numer. Anal. 56 (2018)] to the discontinuous Galerkin scheme and adds error estimates in weaker and piecewise Sobolev norms.


Author(s):  
Vesa Kaarnioja ◽  
Yoshihito Kazashi ◽  
Frances Y. Kuo ◽  
Fabio Nobile ◽  
Ian H. Sloan

AbstractThis paper deals with the kernel-based approximation of a multivariate periodic function by interpolation at the points of an integration lattice—a setting that, as pointed out by Zeng et al. (Monte Carlo and Quasi-Monte Carlo Methods 2004, Springer, New York, 2006) and Zeng et al. (Constr. Approx. 30: 529–555, 2009), allows fast evaluation by fast Fourier transform, so avoiding the need for a linear solver. The main contribution of the paper is the application to the approximation problem for uncertainty quantification of elliptic partial differential equations, with the diffusion coefficient given by a random field that is periodic in the stochastic variables, in the model proposed recently by Kaarnioja et al. (SIAM J Numer Anal 58(2): 1068–1091, 2020). The paper gives a full error analysis, and full details of the construction of lattices needed to ensure a good (but inevitably not optimal) rate of convergence and an error bound independent of dimension. Numerical experiments support the theory.


Author(s):  
Václav Kučera ◽  
Mária Lukáčová-Medvid’ová ◽  
Sebastian Noelle ◽  
Jochen Schütz

AbstractIn this paper we derive and analyse a class of linearly implicit schemes which includes the one of Feistauer and Kučera (J Comput Phys 224:208–221, 2007) as well as the class of RS-IMEX schemes (Schütz and Noelle in J Sci Comp 64:522–540, 2015; Kaiser et al. in J Sci Comput 70:1390–1407, 2017; Bispen et al. in Commun Comput Phys 16:307–347, 2014; Zakerzadeh in ESAIM Math Model Numer Anal 53:893–924, 2019). The implicit part is based on a Jacobian matrix which is evaluated at a reference state. This state can be either the solution at the old time level as in Feistauer and Kučera (2007), or a numerical approximation of the incompressible limit equations as in Zeifang et al. (Commun Comput Phys 27:292–320, 2020), or possibly another state. Subsequently, it is shown that this class of methods is asymptotically preserving under the assumption of a discrete Hilbert expansion. For a one-dimensional setting with some limitations on the reference state, the existence of a discrete Hilbert expansion is shown.


Author(s):  
Changkun Wei ◽  
Jiaqing Yang ◽  
Bo Zhang

In this paper, we propose and study the uniaxial perfectly matched layer (PML) method for three-dimensional time-domain electromagnetic scattering problems, which has a great advantage over the spherical one in dealing with problems involving anisotropic scatterers. The truncated uniaxial PML problem is proved to be well-posed and stable, based on the Laplace transform technique and the energy method. Moreover, the $L^2$-norm and $L^{\infty}$-norm error estimates in time are given between the solutions of the original scattering problem and the truncated PML problem, leading to the exponential convergence of the time-domain uniaxial PML method in terms of the thickness and absorbing parameters of the PML layer. The proof depends on the error analysis between the EtM operators for the original scattering problem and the truncated PML problem, which is different from our previous work (SIAM J. Numer. Anal. 58(3) (2020), 1918-1940).


Author(s):  
Andreas Dedner ◽  
Tristan Pryer

AbstractWe extend the finite element method introduced by Lakkis and Pryer (SIAM J. Sci. Comput. 33(2): 786–801, 2011) to approximate the solution of second-order elliptic problems in nonvariational form to incorporate the discontinuous Galerkin (DG) framework. This is done by viewing the “finite element Hessian” as an auxiliary variable in the formulation. Representing the finite element Hessian in a discontinuous setting yields a linear system of the same size and having the same sparsity pattern of the compact DG methods for variational elliptic problems. Furthermore, the system matrix is very easy to assemble; thus, this approach greatly reduces the computational complexity of the discretisation compared to the continuous approach. We conduct a stability and consistency analysis making use of the unified framework set out in Arnold et al. (SIAM J. Numer. Anal. 39(5): 1749–1779, 2001/2002). We also give an a posteriori analysis of the method in the case where the problem has a strong solution. The analysis applies to any consistent representation of the finite element Hessian, and thus is applicable to the previous works making use of continuous Galerkin approximations. Numerical evidence is presented showing that the method works well also in a more general setting.


2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hu Chen ◽  
Martin Stynes

Abstract Time-fractional initial-boundary problems of parabolic type are considered. Previously, global error bounds for computed numerical solutions to such problems have been provided by Liao et al. (SIAM J. Numer. Anal. 2018, 2019) and Stynes et al. (SIAM J. Numer. Anal. 2017). In the present work we show how the concept of complete monotonicity can be combined with these older analyses to derive local error bounds (i.e., error bounds that are sharper than global bounds when one is not close to the initial time t = 0 {t=0} ). Furthermore, we show that the error analyses of the above papers are essentially the same – their key stability parameters, which seem superficially different from each other, become identical after a simple rescaling. Our new approach is used to bound the global and local errors in the numerical solution of a multi-term time-fractional diffusion equation, using the L1 scheme for the temporal discretisation of each fractional derivative. These error bounds are α-robust. Numerical results show they are sharp.


2021 ◽  
Vol 147 (3) ◽  
pp. 553-578
Author(s):  
Dominic Breit ◽  
Alan Dodgson

AbstractWe study stochastic Navier–Stokes equations in two dimensions with respect to periodic boundary conditions. The equations are perturbed by a nonlinear multiplicative stochastic forcing with linear growth (in the velocity) driven by a cylindrical Wiener process. We establish convergence rates for a finite-element based space-time approximation with respect to convergence in probability (where the error is measured in the $$L^\infty _tL^2_x\cap L^2_tW^{1,2}_x$$ L t ∞ L x 2 ∩ L t 2 W x 1 , 2 -norm). Our main result provides linear convergence in space and convergence of order (almost) 1/2 in time. This improves earlier results from Carelli and Prohl (SIAM J Numer Anal 50(5):2467–2496, 2012) where the convergence rate in time is only (almost) 1/4. Our approach is based on a careful analysis of the pressure function using a stochastic pressure decomposition.


2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ani Miraçi ◽  
Jan Papež ◽  
Martin Vohralík

Abstract In this work, we study a local adaptive smoothing algorithm for a-posteriori-steered p-robust multigrid methods. The solver tackles a linear system which is generated by the discretization of a second-order elliptic diffusion problem using conforming finite elements of polynomial order p ≥ 1 {p\geq 1} . After one V-cycle (“full-smoothing” substep) of the solver of [A. Miraçi, J. Papež, and M. Vohralík, A-posteriori-steered p-robust multigrid with optimal step-sizes and adaptive number of smoothing steps, SIAM J. Sci. Comput. 2021, 10.1137/20M1349503], we dispose of a reliable, efficient, and localized estimation of the algebraic error. We use this existing result to develop our new adaptive algorithm: thanks to the information of the estimator and based on a bulk-chasing criterion, cf. [W. Dörfler, A convergent adaptive algorithm for Poisson’s equation, SIAM J. Numer. Anal. 33 1996, 3, 1106–1124], we mark patches of elements with increased estimated error on all levels. Then, we proceed by a modified and cheaper V-cycle (“adaptive-smoothing” substep), which only applies smoothing in the marked regions. The proposed adaptive multigrid solver picks autonomously and adaptively the optimal step-size per level as in our previous work but also the type of smoothing per level (weighted restricted additive or additive Schwarz) and concentrates smoothing to marked regions with high error. We prove that, under a numerical condition that we verify in the algorithm, each substep (full and adaptive) contracts the error p-robustly, which is confirmed by numerical experiments. Moreover, the proposed algorithm behaves numerically robustly with respect to the number of levels as well as to the diffusion coefficient jump for a uniformly-refined hierarchy of meshes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Roland Becker ◽  
Michael Innerberger ◽  
Dirk Praetorius

AbstractWe consider a linear elliptic PDE and a quadratic goal functional. The goal-oriented adaptive FEM algorithm (GOAFEM) solves the primal as well as a dual problem, where the goal functional is always linearized around the discrete primal solution at hand. We show that the marking strategy proposed in [M. Feischl, D. Praetorius and K. G. van der Zee, An abstract analysis of optimal goal-oriented adaptivity, SIAM J. Numer. Anal.54 (2016), 3, 1423–1448] for a linear goal functional is also optimal for quadratic goal functionals, i.e., GOAFEM leads to linear convergence with optimal convergence rates.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document