132 research outputs found
bounds for numerical solutions of noncoercive convection-diffusion equations
International audienceIn this work, we apply an iterative energy method à la de Giorgi in order to establish bounds for numerical solutions of noncoercive convection-diffusion equations with mixed Dirichlet-Neumann boundary conditions
Continuous dependence estimates for nonlinear fractional convection-diffusion equations
We develop a general framework for finding error estimates for
convection-diffusion equations with nonlocal, nonlinear, and possibly
degenerate diffusion terms. The equations are nonlocal because they involve
fractional diffusion operators that are generators of pure jump Levy processes
(e.g. the fractional Laplacian). As an application, we derive continuous
dependence estimates on the nonlinearities and on the Levy measure of the
diffusion term. Estimates of the rates of convergence for general nonlinear
nonlocal vanishing viscosity approximations of scalar conservation laws then
follow as a corollary. Our results both cover, and extend to new equations, a
large part of the known error estimates in the literature.Comment: In this version we have corrected Example 3.4 explaining the link
with the results in [51,59
On a stochastic partial differential equation with non-local diffusion
In this paper, we prove existence, uniqueness and regularity for a class of
stochastic partial differential equations with a fractional Laplacian driven by
a space-time white noise in dimension one. The equation we consider may also
include a reaction term
Optimal error estimates for non-conforming approximations of linear parabolic problems with minimal regularity
We consider a general linear parabolic problem with extended time boundary
conditions (including initial value problems and periodic ones), and
approximate it by the implicit Euler scheme in time and the Gradient
Discretisation method in space; the latter is in fact a class of methods that
includes conforming and nonconforming finite elements, discontinuous Galerkin
methods and several others. The main result is an error estimate which holds
without supplementary regularity hypothesis on the solution. This result states
that the approximation error has the same order as the sum of the interpolation
error and the conformity error. The proof of this result relies on an inf-sup
inequality in Hilbert spaces which can be used both in the continuous and the
discrete frameworks. The error estimate result is illustrated by numerical
examples with low regularity of the solution
Two classes of nonlocal Evolution Equations related by a shared Traveling Wave Problem
We consider reaction-diffusion equations and Korteweg-de Vries-Burgers (KdVB)
equations, i.e. scalar conservation laws with diffusive-dispersive
regularization. We review the existence of traveling wave solutions for these
two classes of evolution equations. For classical equations the traveling wave
problem (TWP) for a local KdVB equation can be identified with the TWP for a
reaction-diffusion equation. In this article we study this relationship for
these two classes of evolution equations with nonlocal diffusion/dispersion.
This connection is especially useful, if the TW equation is not studied
directly, but the existence of a TWS is proven using one of the evolution
equations instead. Finally, we present three models from fluid dynamics and
discuss the TWP via its link to associated reaction-diffusion equations
Piecewise linear transformation in diffusive flux discretization
To ensure the discrete maximum principle or solution positivity in finite
volume schemes, diffusive flux is sometimes discretized as a conical
combination of finite differences. Such a combination may be impossible to
construct along material discontinuities using only cell concentration values.
This is often resolved by introducing auxiliary node, edge, or face
concentration values that are explicitly interpolated from the surrounding cell
concentrations. We propose to discretize the diffusive flux after applying a
local piecewise linear coordinate transformation that effectively removes the
discontinuities. The resulting scheme does not need any auxiliary
concentrations and is therefore remarkably simpler, while being second-order
accurate under the assumption that the structure of the domain is locally
layered.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figures, preprint submitted to Journal of Computational
Physic
The discontinuous Galerkin method for fractional degenerate convection-diffusion equations
We propose and study discontinuous Galerkin methods for strongly degenerate
convection-diffusion equations perturbed by a fractional diffusion (L\'evy)
operator. We prove various stability estimates along with convergence results
toward properly defined (entropy) solutions of linear and nonlinear equations.
Finally, the qualitative behavior of solutions of such equations are
illustrated through numerical experiments
A Gradient Scheme for the Discretization of Richards Equation
International audienceWe propose a finite volume method on general meshes for the discretiza-tion of Richards equation, an elliptic-parabolic equation modeling groundwater flow. The diffusion term, which can be anisotropic and heterogeneous, is discretized in a gradient scheme framework, which can be applied to a wide range of unstruc-tured possibly non-matching polyhedral meshes in arbitrary space dimension. More precisely, we implement the SUSHI scheme which is also locally conservative. As is needed for Richards equation, the time discretization is fully implicit. We obtain a convergence result based upon energy-type estimates and the application of the Fréchet-Kolmogorov compactness theorem. We implement the scheme and present the results of a number of numerical tests
Computing the first eigenpair of the p-Laplacian via inverse iteration of sublinear supersolutions
We introduce an iterative method for computing the first eigenpair
for the -Laplacian operator with homogeneous Dirichlet
data as the limit of as , where
is the positive solution of the sublinear Lane-Emden equation
with same boundary data. The method is
shown to work for any smooth, bounded domain. Solutions to the Lane-Emden
problem are obtained through inverse iteration of a super-solution which is
derived from the solution to the torsional creep problem. Convergence of
to is in the -norm and the rate of convergence of
to is at least . Numerical evidence is
presented.Comment: Section 5 was rewritten. Jed Brown was added as autho
A Comparison of Consistent Discretizations for Elliptic Problems on Polyhedral Grids
In this work, we review a set of consistent discretizations for second-order elliptic equations, and compare and contrast them with respect to accuracy, monotonicity, and factors affecting their computational cost (degrees of freedom, sparsity, and condition numbers). Our comparisons include the linear and nonlinear TPFA method, multipoint flux-approximation (MPFA-O), mimetic methods, and virtual element methods. We focus on incompressible flow and study the effects of deformed cell geometries and anisotropic permeability.acceptedVersio
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