Sensitivity of the 1D shallow water equations with source terms: Solution method for discontinuous flows
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3100842
DOI10.1002/fld.2398zbMath1316.76056MaRDI QIDQ3100842
Vincent Guinot, Pascal Finaud-Guyot, Carole Delenne, Bernard Cappelaere
Publication date: 21 November 2011
Published in: International Journal for Numerical Methods in Fluids (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/fld.2398
sensitivity; shallow water equations; source terms; finite volume; Riemann solver; initial and boundary conditions
76B15: Water waves, gravity waves; dispersion and scattering, nonlinear interaction
76M12: Finite volume methods applied to problems in fluid mechanics
65M08: Finite volume methods for initial value and initial-boundary value problems involving PDEs
Related Items
Upwind finite volume solution of sensitivity equations for hyperbolic systems of conservation laws with discontinuous solutions, MUSCL schemes for the shallow water sensitivity equations with passive scalar transport, Mesh-independent multidimensional coupling of surface and subsurface water flow models
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Direct sensitivity computation for the Saint-Venant equations with hydraulic jumps
- Upwind finite volume solution of sensitivity equations for hyperbolic systems of conservation laws with discontinuous solutions
- Improved treatment of source terms in upwind schemes for the shallow water equations in channels with irregular geometry
- Restoration of the contact surface in the HLL-Riemann solver
- Hyperbolic systems of conservation laws II
- An eigenvector-based linear reconstruction scheme for the shallow-water equations on two-dimensional unstructured meshes
- A general approximate-state Riemann solver for hyperbolic systems of conservation laws with source terms
- Direct sensitivity analysis for smooth unsteady compressible flows using complex differentiation
- On Upstream Differencing and Godunov-Type Schemes for Hyperbolic Conservation Laws
- Simplified Second-Order Godunov-Type Methods
- Sensitivity Analysis in Practice