28 research outputs found

    Parallelization in time through tensor-product space-time solvers

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    In this note, we extend the fast tensor-product algorithm for the simulation of time-dependent partial differential equations. We use the natural tensorization of the space-time domain to propose, after discretization, a set of independent problems, each one with the complexity of a single steady problem. This allows for an efficient parallel implementation that is already interesting on small architectures, but that can also be combined with standard domain-decomposition-based algorithms providing a further direction of parallelism on large computer platforms. Preliminary numerical simulations are presented for a one-dimensional unsteady heat equation

    Analysis of Iterative Methods for the Steady and Unsteady Stokes Problem: Application to Spectral Element Discretizations

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    A new and detailed analysis of the basic Uzawa algorithm for decoupling of the pressure and the velocity in the steady and unsteady Stokes operator is presented. The paper focuses on the following new aspects: explicit construction of the Uzawa pressure-operator spectrum for a semiperiodic model problem; general relationship of the convergence rate of the Uzawa procedure to classical inf-sup discretization analysis; and application of the method to high-order variational discretization

    Approximation of Parametric Derivatives by the Empirical Interpolation Method

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    We introduce a general a priori convergence result for the approximation of parametric derivatives of parametrized functions. We consider the best approximations to parametric derivatives in a sequence of approximation spaces generated by a general approximation scheme, and we show that these approximations are convergent provided that the best approximation to the function itself is convergent. We also provide estimates for the convergence rates. We present numerical results with spaces generated by a particular approximation scheme—the Empirical Interpolation Method—to confirm the validity of the general theory
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