27,119 research outputs found
A Second Order Fully-discrete Linear Energy Stable Scheme for a Binary Compressible Viscous Fluid Model
We present a linear, second order fully discrete numerical scheme on a
staggered grid for a thermodynamically consistent hydrodynamic phase field
model of binary compressible fluid flow mixtures derived from the generalized
Onsager Principle. The hydrodynamic model not only possesses the variational
structure, but also warrants the mass, linear momentum conservation as well as
energy dissipation. We first reformulate the model in an equivalent form using
the energy quadratization method and then discretize the reformulated model to
obtain a semi-discrete partial differential equation system using the
Crank-Nicolson method in time. The numerical scheme so derived preserves the
mass conservation and energy dissipation law at the semi-discrete level. Then,
we discretize the semi-discrete PDE system on a staggered grid in space to
arrive at a fully discrete scheme using the 2nd order finite difference method,
which respects a discrete energy dissipation law. We prove the unique
solvability of the linear system resulting from the fully discrete scheme. Mesh
refinements and two numerical examples on phase separation due to the spinodal
decomposition in two polymeric fluids and interface evolution in the gas-liquid
mixture are presented to show the convergence property and the usefulness of
the new scheme in applications
Efficient Numerical Evaluation of Feynman Integral
Feynman loop integrals are a key ingredient for the calculation of higher
order radiation effects, and are responsible for reliable and accurate
theoretical prediction. We improve the efficiency of numerical integration in
sector decomposition by implementing a quasi-Monte Carlo method associated with
the CUDA/GPU technique. For demonstration we present the results of several
Feynman integrals up to two loops in both Euclidean and physical kinematic
regions in comparison with those obtained from FIESTA3. It is shown that both
planar and non-planar two-loop master integrals in the physical kinematic
region can be evaluated in less than half a minute with
accuracy, which makes the direct numerical approach viable for precise
investigation of higher order effects in multi-loop processes, e.g. the
next-to-leading order QCD effect in Higgs pair production via gluon fusion with
a finite top quark mass.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, published in Chinese Physics
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