779 research outputs found
On discretely entropy conservative and entropy stable discontinuous Galerkin methods
High order methods based on diagonal-norm summation by parts operators can be
shown to satisfy a discrete conservation or dissipation of entropy for
nonlinear systems of hyperbolic PDEs. These methods can also be interpreted as
nodal discontinuous Galerkin methods with diagonal mass matrices. In this work,
we describe how use flux differencing, quadrature-based projections, and
SBP-like operators to construct discretely entropy conservative schemes for DG
methods under more arbitrary choices of volume and surface quadrature rules.
The resulting methods are semi-discretely entropy conservative or entropy
stable with respect to the volume quadrature rule used. Numerical experiments
confirm the stability and high order accuracy of the proposed methods for the
compressible Euler equations in one and two dimensions
A short note on a Bernstein-Bezier basis for the pyramid
We introduce a Bernstein-Bezier basis for the pyramid, whose restriction to
the face reduces to the Bernstein-Bezier basis on the triangle or
quadrilateral. The basis satisfies the standard positivity and partition of
unity properties common to Bernstein polynomials, and spans the same space as
non-polynomial pyramid bases in the literature.Comment: Submitte
Multi-patch discontinuous Galerkin isogeometric analysis for wave propagation: explicit time-stepping and efficient mass matrix inversion
We present a class of spline finite element methods for time-domain wave
propagation which are particularly amenable to explicit time-stepping. The
proposed methods utilize a discontinuous Galerkin discretization to enforce
continuity of the solution field across geometric patches in a multi-patch
setting, which yields a mass matrix with convenient block diagonal structure.
Over each patch, we show how to accurately and efficiently invert mass matrices
in the presence of curved geometries by using a weight-adjusted approximation
of the mass matrix inverse. This approximation restores a tensor product
structure while retaining provable high order accuracy and semi-discrete energy
stability. We also estimate the maximum stable timestep for spline-based finite
elements and show that the use of spline spaces result in less stringent CFL
restrictions than equivalent piecewise continuous or discontinuous finite
element spaces. Finally, we explore the use of optimal knot vectors based on L2
n-widths. We show how the use of optimal knot vectors can improve both
approximation properties and the maximum stable timestep, and present a simple
heuristic method for approximating optimal knot positions. Numerical
experiments confirm the accuracy and stability of the proposed methods
Jet Observables Without Jet Algorithms
We introduce a new class of event shapes to characterize the jet-like
structure of an event. Like traditional event shapes, our observables are
infrared/collinear safe and involve a sum over all hadrons in an event, but
like a jet clustering algorithm, they incorporate a jet radius parameter and a
transverse momentum cut. Three of the ubiquitous jet-based observables---jet
multiplicity, summed scalar transverse momentum, and missing transverse
momentum---have event shape counterparts that are closely correlated with their
jet-based cousins. Due to their "local" computational structure, these jet-like
event shapes could potentially be used for trigger-level event selection at the
LHC. Intriguingly, the jet multiplicity event shape typically takes on
non-integer values, highlighting the inherent ambiguity in defining jets. By
inverting jet multiplicity, we show how to characterize the transverse momentum
of the n-th hardest jet without actually finding the constituents of that jet.
Since many physics applications do require knowledge about the jet
constituents, we also build a hybrid event shape that incorporates (local) jet
clustering information. As a straightforward application of our general
technique, we derive an event-shape version of jet trimming, allowing
event-wide jet grooming without explicit jet identification. Finally, we
briefly mention possible applications of our method for jet substructure
studies.Comment: v2 - 31 pages, 18 figures; update to JHEP version, section 3.2
expanded, reference to FastJet contrib updated, results unchange
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