Carla Manni

2papers

2 Papers

NAMay 25, 2018
Isogeometric analysis for 2D and 3D curl-div problems: Spectral symbols and fast iterative solvers

Mariarosa Mazza, Carla Manni, Ahmed Ratnani et al.

Alfvén-like operators are of interest in magnetohydrodynamics, which is used in plasma physics to study the macroscopic behavior of plasma. Motivated by this important and complex application, we focus on a parameter-dependent curl-div problem that can be seen as a prototype of an Alfvén-like operator, and we discretize it using isogeometric analysis based on tensor-product B-splines. The involved coefficient matrices can be very ill-conditioned, so that standard numerical solution methods perform quite poorly here. In order to overcome the difficulties caused by such ill-conditioning, a two-step strategy is proposed. First, we conduct a detailed spectral study of the coefficient matrices, highlighting the critical dependence on the different physical and approximation parameters. Second, we exploit such spectral information to design fast iterative solvers for the corresponding linear systems. For the first goal we apply the theory of (multilevel block) Toeplitz and generalized locally Toeplitz sequences, while for the second we use a combination of multigrid techniques and preconditioned Krylov solvers. Several numerical tests are provided both for the study of the spectral problem and for the solution of the corresponding linear systems.

NAOct 10, 2014
Convergence of univariate non-stationary subdivision schemes via asymptotical similarity

Costanza Conti, Nira Dyn, Carla Manni et al.

A new equivalence notion between non-stationary subdivision schemes, termed asymptotical similarity, which is weaker than asymptotical equivalence, is introduced and studied. It is known that asymptotical equivalence between a non-stationary subdivision scheme and a convergent stationary scheme guarantees the convergence of the non-stationary scheme. We show that for non-stationary schemes reproducing constants, the condition of asymptotical equivalence can be relaxed to asymptotical similarity. This result applies to a wide class of non-stationary schemes of importance in theory and applications.