NANAFeb 22, 2018

Time-parallel iterative solvers for parabolic evolution equations

arXiv:1802.0812634 citationsh-index: 16
AI Analysis

This work provides efficient parallel-in-time solvers for large-scale parabolic problems, enabling faster simulations in computational science and engineering.

The authors developed time-parallel iterative solvers for parabolic evolution equations, achieving convergence rates independent of the number of time-steps, final time, or spatial mesh sizes, with parallel complexity growing only logarithmically with time-steps.

We present original time-parallel algorithms for the solution of the implicit Euler discretization of general linear parabolic evolution equations with time-dependent self-adjoint spatial operators. Motivated by the inf-sup theory of parabolic problems, we show that the standard nonsymmetric time-global system can be equivalently reformulated as an original symmetric saddle-point system that remains inf-sup stable with respect to the same natural parabolic norms. We then propose and analyse an efficient and readily implementable parallel-in-time preconditioner to be used with an inexact Uzawa method. The proposed preconditioner is non-intrusive and easy to implement in practice, and also features the key theoretical advantages of robust spectral bounds, leading to convergence rates that are independent of the number of time-steps, final time, or spatial mesh sizes, and also a theoretical parallel complexity that grows only logarithmically with respect to the number of time-steps. Numerical experiments with large-scale parallel computations show the effectiveness of the method, along with its good weak and strong scaling properties.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes