Non-standard methods for singularly perturbed problems possessing oscillatory/layer solutions (Q883935): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 20:03, 25 June 2024

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Non-standard methods for singularly perturbed problems possessing oscillatory/layer solutions
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    Non-standard methods for singularly perturbed problems possessing oscillatory/layer solutions (English)
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    12 June 2007
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    The authors consider the singularly perturbed two-point boundary value problem \[ Ly \equiv \varepsilon y''+a(x)y'+b(x)y=f(x)\text{ on }(0,1),\quad y(0)=\alpha_0,\;y(1)=\alpha_1, \] where \(\alpha_0, \alpha_1\) are given constants, \(\varepsilon\) is a small positive parameter, and \(f(x), a(x)\) and \(b(x)\) are sufficiently smooth functions satisfying \(a(x)\geq a>0\), and \(b(x) \geq b >0\). They discuss the rapid change of the solution in one or more ``layer region(s)'', a problem which arises when the highest derivative term is multiplied by a small parameter. The specific form of the rapid change of the solution depends on whether or not \(a(x) \equiv 0\) and leads to either the dispersive problem or the dissipative problem. The analysis in the paper is motivated by the cases \(a(x) \equiv 0\) and \(b(x) \equiv 0\). The authors use nonstandard finite difference methods (NSFDMs). The dispersive or dissipative nature of the solution is captured by systematically constructing suitable denominator functions for the discrete second order derivative. After deriving some exact schemes, they develop a new scheme. They demonstrate that the NSFDMs developed are qualitatively stable with respect to the maximum principle, the continuous dependence on given data and the principle of conservation of energy. Theoretical results are presented and proved. Convergence analysis is carried out. A section with test examples and numerical results is included, the examples being chosen for which the exact solution is known. Numerical rates of convergence are calculated.
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    singular perturbations
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    boundary value problems
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    nonstandard finite difference methods
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    maximum principle
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    convergence
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    numerical results
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