An Explicit Runge–Kutta–Nyström Method is Canonical If and Only If Its Adjoint is Explicit
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4009447
DOI10.1137/0729032zbMath0756.65107OpenAlexW2090690453MaRDI QIDQ4009447
Robert D. Skeel, Daniel I. Okunbor
Publication date: 27 September 1992
Published in: SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1137/0729032
Hamiltonian systemsRunge-Kutta-Nyström methodsRunge-Kutta methodssymplectic methodsadjoint methodscanonical methods
Multistep, Runge-Kutta and extrapolation methods for ordinary differential equations (65L06) Dynamical aspects of finite-dimensional Hamiltonian and Lagrangian systems (37J99)
Related Items (18)
Symplectic integration of Hamiltonian wave equations ⋮ Order conditions of two kinds of canonical difference schemes ⋮ Canonical Runge-Kutta-Nyström methods of orders five and six ⋮ Variable steps for reversible integration methods ⋮ Perturbed collocation and symplectic RKN methods ⋮ Lack of dissipativity is not symplecticness ⋮ New way to construct high order Hamiltonian variational integrators ⋮ The Chebyshev methods of Panovsky and Richardson as Runge-Kutta-Nyström methods ⋮ Gauss-Runge-Kutta-Nyström methods ⋮ A feasible and effective technique in constructing ERKN methods for multi-frequency multidimensional oscillators in scientific computation ⋮ The construction of arbitrary order ERKN methods based on group theory for solving oscillatory Hamiltonian systems with applications ⋮ Recent progress in the theory and application of symplectic integrators ⋮ Symplectic Runge-Kutta and related methods: Recent results ⋮ Order conditions for canonical Runge-Kutta-Nyström methods ⋮ Order properties of symplectic Runge-Kutta-Nyström methods ⋮ A symplectic Runge-Kutta-Nyström method with minimal phase-lag ⋮ Explicit Canonical Methods for Hamiltonian Systems ⋮ The tri-coloured free-tree theory for symplectic multi-frequency ERKN methods
This page was built for publication: An Explicit Runge–Kutta–Nyström Method is Canonical If and Only If Its Adjoint is Explicit