NANASep 21, 2017

Discrete Energy Laws for the First-Order System Least-Squares Finite-Element Approach

arXiv:1709.00385h-index: 34
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

Provides theoretical and numerical validation of energy conservation properties for FOSLS methods, relevant to computational scientists using finite elements for time-dependent problems.

This paper analyzes discrete energy laws for FOSLS discretizations of time-dependent PDEs, proving that energy law conformance converges with order O(h^{2p}), higher than the expected O(h^p) approximation convergence.

This paper analyzes the discrete energy laws associated with first-order system least-squares (FOSLS) discretizations of time-dependent partial differential equations. Using the heat equation and the time-dependent Stokes' equation as examples, we discuss how accurately a FOSLS finite-element formulation adheres to the underlying energy law associated with the physical system. Using regularity arguments involving the initial condition of the system, we are able to give bounds on the convergence of the discrete energy law to its expected value (zero in the examples presented here). Numerical experiments are performed, showing that the discrete energy laws hold with order $\mathcal O\left(h^{2p}\right)$, where $h$ is the mesh spacing and $p$ is the order of the finite-element space. Thus, the energy law conformance is held with a higher order than the expected, $\mathcal{O}\left(h^p\right)$, convergence of the finite-element approximation. Finally, we introduce an abstract framework for analyzing the energy laws of general FOSLS discretizations.

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