NANASep 11, 2018

Multi-domain Spectral Collocation Method for Variable-Order Nonlinear Fractional Differential Equations

arXiv:1809.0394534 citations
AI Analysis

This method addresses the limitations of existing spectral methods for nonlinear and variable-order fractional PDEs, providing a more flexible numerical tool for researchers in fractional calculus.

The authors developed a multi-domain spectral collocation method for variable-order nonlinear fractional differential equations, demonstrating its effectiveness on the fractional Helmholtz and Burgers equations with h-p refinement and comparisons to single-domain methods.

Spectral and spectral element methods using Galerkin type formulations are efficient for solving linear fractional PDEs (FPDEs) of constant order but are not efficient in solving nonlinear FPDEs and cannot handle FPDEs with variable-order. In this paper, we present a multi-domain spectral collocation method that addresses these limitations. We consider FPDEs in the Riemann-Liouville sense, and employ Jacobi Lagrangian interpolants to represent the solution in each element. We provide variable-order differentiation formulas, which can be computed efficiently for the multi-domain discretization taking into account the nonlocal interactions. We enforce the interface continuity conditions by matching the solution values at the element boundaries via the Lagrangian interpolants, and in addition we minimize the jump in (integer) fluxes using a penalty method. We analyze numerically the effect of the penalty parameter on the condition number of the global differentiation matrix and on the stability and convergence of the penalty collocation scheme. We demonstrate the effectiveness of the new method for the fractional Helmholtz equation of constant and variable-order using $h-p$ refinement for different values of the penalty parameter. We also solve the fractional Burgers equation with constant and variable-order and compare with solutions obtained with a single domain spectral collocation method.

Foundations

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

Your Notes