NANAJun 15, 2018

Efficient adaptive multilevel stochastic Galerkin approximation using implicit a posteriori error estimation

arXiv:1806.0598715 citationsh-index: 15
AI Analysis

For researchers solving PDEs with high-dimensional random inputs, this work provides a practical and efficient adaptive algorithm that eliminates the need for manual tuning of enrichment strategies.

The paper presents a new adaptive stochastic Galerkin finite element method for elliptic PDEs with parameter-dependent coefficients that uses implicit a posteriori error estimation to automatically enrich the approximation space. Numerical experiments show the method achieves optimal error decay rates comparable to the underlying finite element method for the parameter-free problem.

Partial differential equations (PDEs) with inputs that depend on infinitely many parameters pose serious theoretical and computational challenges. Sophisticated numerical algorithms that automatically determine which parameters need to be activated in the approximation space in order to estimate a quantity of interest to a prescribed error tolerance are needed. For elliptic PDEs with parameter-dependent coefficients, stochastic Galerkin finite element methods (SGFEMs) have been well studied. Under certain assumptions, it can be shown that there exists a sequence of SGFEM approximation spaces for which the energy norm of the error decays to zero at a rate that is independent of the number of input parameters. However, it is not clear how to adaptively construct these spaces in a practical and computationally efficient way. We present a new adaptive SGFEM algorithm that tackles elliptic PDEs with parameter-dependent coefficients quickly and efficiently. We consider approximation spaces with a multilevel structure---where each solution mode is associated with a finite element space on a potentially different mesh---and use an implicit a posteriori error estimation strategy to steer the adaptive enrichment of the space. At each step, the components of the error estimator are used to assess the potential benefits of a variety of enrichment strategies, including whether or not to activate more parameters. No marking or tuning parameters are required. Numerical experiments for a selection of test problems demonstrate that the new method performs optimally in that it generates a sequence of approximations for which the estimated energy error decays to zero at the same rate as the error for the underlying finite element method applied to the associated parameter-free problem.

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