An analysis of operator splitting techniques in the stiff case (Q1570337): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 21:34, 10 December 2024

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An analysis of operator splitting techniques in the stiff case
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    An analysis of operator splitting techniques in the stiff case (English)
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    10 January 2001
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    Operator splitting methods are widely used in many applications, such as air pollution modeling, combustion, and reactive flows. The author regards the case where the evolution equations to be simulated are stiff. He considers systems with two operators: a stiff one and a non-stiff one. For example, a linear evolution system under a singular perturbation has the form \[ {{d z}\over{d t}} = \Biggl({A\over \varepsilon} + B \Biggr) z,\quad z(0) = z_0, \] where \(\varepsilon\) is a small positive parameter. The author shows some splitting schemes for solving of the evolution systems (``first-order'', ``second-order'' schemes). The ``first-order'' scheme has the form \[ \begin{aligned} {{d z^*}\over{d t}} = B^* z^*,\quad z^*(0) = z_0, &\quad \text{on }[0,\Delta t],\\ {{d z^{**}}\over{d t}} = B^* z^{**},\quad z^{**}(0) = z^*(\Delta t), &\quad \text{on }[0,\Delta t],\end{aligned} \] where the final value is given by \(z^{**}(\Delta t)\). The main results deals with the choice of the sequential order for the operators: the stiff operator must always be last in the splitting scheme.
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    operator splitting
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    Air Pollution Modeling
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    combustion
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    reactive flows
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    stiff systems
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    semidiscretization
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    linear evolution system
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    singular perturbation
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