Computing Reviews

Higher-order adaptive finite difference methods for fully nonlinear elliptic equations
Froese Hamfeldt B., Salvador T. Journal of Scientific Computing75(3):1282-1306,2018.Type:Article
Date Reviewed: 08/31/18

The authors extend Hamfeldt’s work [1] to solve a class of fully nonlinear degenerate elliptic partial differential problems. Hamfeldt previously developed a meshfree finite difference scheme for the weak form of the problem. Here, the authors construct piecewise Cartesian meshes using a quadtree structure. Additional boundary points are included to get a consistent scheme. They show that this set of points guarantees a monotone convergent approximation. The quadtree structure efficiently allows for adaptivity of the mesh in either a priori or a posteriori ways. The inclusion of boundary points helps in solving such partial differential equations (PDEs) on complicated geometries.

Several examples demonstrate the scheme. The first example is the Monge-Ampère equation, which is “only elliptic in the space of convex functions.” They show that the solution is of second-order accuracy; the non-convex, non-smooth domain does not affect the order of convergence. They also demonstrate that the central processing unit (CPU) time does not increase as fast when using a large number of points. The last example shows the benefits of an adaptive scheme: error reduces faster and is smaller for the same number of mesh points.


1)

Froese, B. D. Meshfree finite difference approximations for functionsof the eigenvalues of the Hessian. Numerische Mathematik 138, 1(2018), 75–99.

Reviewer:  Beny Neta Review #: CR146227 (1811-0582)

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