14 research outputs found
Performance study of the multiwavelet discontinuous Galerkin approach for solving the GreenâNaghdi equations
This paper presents a multiresolution discontinuous Galerkin scheme for the adaptive solution of Boussinesqâtype equations. The model combines multiwaveletâbased grid adaptation with a discontinuous Galerkin (DG) solver based on the system of fully nonlinear and weakly dispersive GreenâNaghdi (GN) equations. The key feature of the adaptation procedure is to conduct a multiresolution analysis using multiwavelets on a hierarchy of nested grids to improve the efficiency of the reference DG scheme on a uniform grid by computing on a locally refined adapted grid. This way the local resolution level will be determined by manipulating multiwavelet coefficients controlled by a single userâdefined threshold value. The proposed adaptive multiwavelet discontinuous Galerkin solver for GN equations (MWDGâGN) is assessed using several benchmark problems related to wave propagation and transformation in nearshore areas. The numerical results demonstrate that the proposed scheme retains the accuracy of the reference scheme, while significantly reducing the computational cost
A discontinuous Galerkin approach for conservative modelling of fully nonlinear and weakly dispersive wave transformations
This work extends a robust second-order Runge-Kutta Discontinuous Galerkin (RKDG2) method to solve the fully nonlinear and weakly dispersive flows, within a scope to simultaneously address accuracy, conservativeness, cost-efficiency and practical needs. The mathematical model governing such flows is based on a variant form of the Green-Naghdi (GN) equations decomposed as a hyperbolic shallow water system with an elliptic source term. Practical features of relevance (i.e. conservative modelling over irregular terrain with wetting and drying and local slope limiting) have been restored from an RKDG2 solver to the Nonlinear Shallow Water (NSW) equations, alongside new considerations to integrate elliptic source terms (i.e. via a fourth-order local discretization of the topography) and to enable local capturing of breaking waves (i.e. via adding a detector for switching off the dispersive terms). Numerical results are presented, demonstrating the overall capability of the proposed approach in achieving realistic prediction of nearshore wave processes involving both nonlinearity and dispersion effects within a single model