1,209 research outputs found
On the optimal shape parameter for Gaussian radial basis function finite difference approximation of the Poisson equation
We investigate the influence of the shape parameter in the meshless Gaussian RBF finite difference method with irregular centres on the quality of the approximation of the Dirichlet problem for the Poisson equation with smooth solution. Numerical experiments show that the optimal shape parameter strongly depends on the problem, but insignificantly on the density of the centres. Therefore, we suggest a multilevel algorithm that effectively finds near-optimal shape parameter, which helps to significantly reduce the error. Comparison to the finite element method and to the generalised finite differences obtained in the flat limits of the Gaussian RBF is provided
A numerical study of steady viscous flow past a circular cylinder
Numerical solutions have been obtained for steady viscous flow past a circular cylinder at Reynolds numbers up to 300. A new technique is proposed for the boundary condition at large distances and an iteration scheme has been developed, based on Newton's method, which circumvents the numerical difficulties previously encountered around and beyond a Reynolds number of 100. Some new trends are observed in the solution shortly before a Reynolds number of 300. As vorticity starts to recirculate back from the end of the wake region, this region becomes wider and shorter. Other flow quantities like position of separation point, drag, pressure and vorticity distributions on the body surface appear to be quite unaffected by this reversal of trends
Steady viscous flow past a circular cylinder
Viscous flow past a circular cylinder becomes unstable around Reynolds number Re = 40. With a numerical technique based on Newton's method and made possible by the use of a supercomputer, steady (but unstable) solutions have been calculated up to Re = 400. It is found that the wake continues to grow in length approximately linearly with Re. However, in conflict with available asymptotic predictions, the width starts to increase very rapidly around Re = 300. All numerical calculations have been performed on the CDC CYBER 205 at the CDC Service Center in Arden Hills, Minnesota
A Numerical Method for Conformal Mappings
A numerical technique is presented for calculating the Taylor coefficients of the analytic function which maps the unit circle onto a region bounded by any smooth simply connected curve. The method involves a quadratically convergent outer iteration and a super-linearly convergent inner iteration. If N complex points are distributed equidistantly around the periphery of the unit circle, their images on the edge of the mapped region, together with approximations for the N/2 first Taylor coefficients, are obtained in O(Nlog N) operations. A calculation of time-dependent waves on deep water is discussed as an example of the potential applications of the method
A Numerical Methodology for the PainlevƩ Equations
The six PainlevĆ© transcendents PI ā PVI have both applications and analytic properties that make them stand out from most other classes of special functions. Although they have been the subject of extensive theoretical investigations for about a century, they still have a reputation for being numerically challenging. In particular, their extensive pole fields in the complex plane have often been perceived as ānumerical mine fieldsā. In the present work, we note that the PainlevĆ© property in fact provides the opportunity for very fast and accurate numerical solutions throughout such fields. When combining a Taylor/PadĆ©-based ODE initial value solver for the pole fields with a boundary value solver for smooth regions, numerical solutions become available across the full complex plane. We focus here on the numerical methodology, and illustrate it for the PI equation. In later studies, we will concentrate on mathematical aspects of both the PI and the higher PainlevĆ© transcendents
State diagram and the phase transition of -bosons in a square bi-partite optical lattice
It is shown that, in a reasonable approximation, the quantum state of
-bosons in a bi-partite square two-dimensional optical lattice is governed
by the nonlinear boson model describing tunneling of \textit{boson pairs}
between two orthogonal degenerate quasi momenta on the edge of the first
Brillouin zone. The interplay between the lattice anisotropy and the atomic
interactions leads to the second-order phase transition between the
number-squeezed and coherent phase states of the -bosons. In the isotropic
case of the recent experiment, Nature Physicis 7, 147 (2011), the -bosons
are in the coherent phase state, where the relative global phase between the
two quasi momenta is defined only up to mod(): . The
quantum phase diagram of the nonlinear boson model is given.Comment: 15 pages; 5 figures, some in colo
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