278 research outputs found

    A stroboscopic averaging algorithm for highly oscillatory delay problems

    Full text link
    We propose and analyze a heterogenous multiscale method for the efficient integration of constant-delay differential equations subject to fast periodic forcing. The stroboscopic averaging method (SAM) suggested here may provide approximations with \(\mathcal{O}(H^2+1/\Omega^2)\) errors with a computational effort that grows like \(H^{-1}\) (the inverse of the stepsize), uniformly in the forcing frequency Omega

    Palindromic 3-stage splitting integrators, a roadmap

    Get PDF
    The implementation of multi-stage splitting integrators is essentially the same as the implementation of the familiar Strang/Verlet method. Therefore multi-stage formulas may be easily incorporated into software that now uses the Strang/Verlet integrator. We study in detail the two-parameter family of palindromic, three-stage splitting formulas and identify choices of parameters that may outperform the Strang/Verlet method. One of these choices leads to a method of effective order four suitable to integrate in time some partial differential equations. Other choices may be seen as perturbations of the Strang method that increase efficiency in molecular dynamics simulations and in Hybrid Monte Carlo sampling.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, 2 table

    Geometrically derived difference formulae for the numerical integration of trajectory problems

    Get PDF
    The term 'trajectory problem' is taken to include problems that can arise, for instance, in connection with contour plotting, or in the application of continuation methods, or during phase-plane analysis. Geometrical techniques are used to construct difference methods for these problems to produce in turn explicit and implicit circularly exact formulae. Based on these formulae, a predictor-corrector method is derived which, when compared with a closely related standard method, shows improved performance. It is found that this latter method produces spurious limit cycles, and this behavior is partly analyzed. Finally, a simple variable-step algorithm is constructed and tested
    corecore