47,127 research outputs found
ADI splitting schemes for a fourth-order nonlinear partial differential equation from image processing
We present directional operator splitting schemes for the numerical solution of a fourth-order, nonlinear partial differential evolution equation which arises in image processing. This equation constitutes the H−1-gradient flow of the total variation and represents a prototype of higher-order equations of similar type which are popular in imaging for denoising, deblurring and inpainting problems. The efficient numerical solution of this equation is very challenging due to the stiffness of most numerical schemes. We show that the combination of directional splitting schemes with implicit time-stepping provides a stable and computationally cheap numerical realisation of the equation
Method of lines transpose: High order L-stable O(N) schemes for parabolic equations using successive convolution
We present a new solver for nonlinear parabolic problems that is L-stable and
achieves high order accuracy in space and time. The solver is built by first
constructing a single-dimensional heat equation solver that uses fast O(N)
convolution. This fundamental solver has arbitrary order of accuracy in space,
and is based on the use of the Green's function to invert a modified Helmholtz
equation. Higher orders of accuracy in time are then constructed through a
novel technique known as successive convolution (or resolvent expansions).
These resolvent expansions facilitate our proofs of stability and convergence,
and permit us to construct schemes that have provable stiff decay. The
multi-dimensional solver is built by repeated application of dimensionally
split independent fundamental solvers. Finally, we solve nonlinear parabolic
problems by using the integrating factor method, where we apply the basic
scheme to invert linear terms (that look like a heat equation), and make use of
Hermite-Birkhoff interpolants to integrate the remaining nonlinear terms. Our
solver is applied to several linear and nonlinear equations including heat,
Allen-Cahn, and the Fitzhugh-Nagumo system of equations in one and two
dimensions
Oscillation-free method for semilinear diffusion equations under noisy initial conditions
Noise in initial conditions from measurement errors can create unwanted
oscillations which propagate in numerical solutions. We present a technique of
prohibiting such oscillation errors when solving initial-boundary-value
problems of semilinear diffusion equations. Symmetric Strang splitting is
applied to the equation for solving the linear diffusion and nonlinear
remainder separately. An oscillation-free scheme is developed for overcoming
any oscillatory behavior when numerically solving the linear diffusion portion.
To demonstrate the ills of stable oscillations, we compare our method using a
weighted implicit Euler scheme to the Crank-Nicolson method. The
oscillation-free feature and stability of our method are analyzed through a
local linearization. The accuracy of our oscillation-free method is proved and
its usefulness is further verified through solving a Fisher-type equation where
oscillation-free solutions are successfully produced in spite of random errors
in the initial conditions.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figure
Boundary knot method: A meshless, exponential convergence, integration-free, and boundary-only RBF technique
Based on the radial basis function (RBF), non-singular general solution and
dual reciprocity principle (DRM), this paper presents an inheretnly meshless,
exponential convergence, integration-free, boundary-only collocation techniques
for numerical solution of general partial differential equation systems. The
basic ideas behind this methodology are very mathematically simple and
generally effective. The RBFs are used in this study to approximate the
inhomogeneous terms of system equations in terms of the DRM, while non-singular
general solution leads to a boundary-only RBF formulation. The present method
is named as the boundary knot method (BKM) to differentiate it from the other
numerical techniques. In particular, due to the use of non-singular general
solutions rather than singular fundamental solutions, the BKM is different from
the method of fundamental solution in that the former does no need to introduce
the artificial boundary and results in the symmetric system equations under
certain conditions. It is also found that the BKM can solve nonlinear partial
differential equations one-step without iteration if only boundary knots are
used. The efficiency and utility of this new technique are validated through
some typical numerical examples. Some promising developments of the BKM are
also discussed.Comment: 36 pages, 2 figures, Welcome to contact me on this paper: Email:
[email protected] or [email protected]
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