NANACOMP-PHFLU-DYNJun 29, 2018

Hybridized discontinuous Galerkin methods for wave propagation

arXiv:1807.0008626 citationsh-index: 61
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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For computational scientists working on wave propagation, this is an incremental review of existing methods.

This paper reviews hybridized discontinuous Galerkin methods for wave propagation in fluids, solids, and electromagnetism, highlighting their efficiency and unique features. No concrete numerical results are provided.

We present the recent development of hybridizable and embedded discontinuous Galerkin (DG) methods for wave propagation problems in fluids, solids, and electromagnetism. In each of these areas, we describe the methods, discuss their main features, display numerical results to illustrate their performance, and conclude with bibliography notes. The main ingredients in devising these DG methods are (i) a local Galerkin projection of the underlying partial differential equations at the element level onto spaces of polynomials of degree k to parametrize the numerical solution in terms of the numerical trace; (ii) a judicious choice of the numerical flux to provide stability and consistency; and (iii) a global jump condition that enforces the continuity of the numerical flux to obtain a global system in terms of the numerical trace. These DG methods are termed hybridized DG methods, because they are amenable to hybridization (static condensation) and hence to more efficient implementations. They share many common advantages of DG methods and possess some unique features that make them well-suited to wave propagation problems.

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