scientific article; zbMATH DE number 2239327
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5714894
zbMath1080.65066MaRDI QIDQ5714894
D. P. Sakas, Theodore E. Simos
Publication date: 16 December 2005
Title: zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
numerical examplesboundary value problemradial Schrödinger equationtrigonometric fittingmultiderivative finite difference methods
Numerical solution of boundary value problems involving ordinary differential equations (65L10) Linear boundary value problems for ordinary differential equations (34B05) Finite difference and finite volume methods for ordinary differential equations (65L12)
Related Items (14)
A new two-step hybrid method for the numerical solution of the Schrödinger equation ⋮ A new two-step P-stable hybrid Obrechkoff method for the numerical integration of second-order IVPs ⋮ A hybrid method with phase-lag and derivatives equal to zero for the numerical integration of the Schrödinger equation ⋮ Two-step high order hybrid explicit method for the numerical solution of the Schrödinger equation ⋮ Trigonometrically fitted high-order predictor-corrector method with phase-lag of order infinity for the numerical solution of radial Schrödinger equation ⋮ A family of ten-step methods with vanished phase-lag and its first derivative for the numerical solution of the Schrödinger equation ⋮ Symmetric multistep Obrechkoff methods with zero phase-lag for periodic initial value problems of second order differential equations ⋮ P-stable high-order super-implicit and Obrechkoff methods for periodic initial value problems ⋮ A new eight-order symmetric two-step multiderivative method for the numerical solution of second-order IVPs with oscillating solutions ⋮ P-stable exponentially-fitted Obrechkoff methods of arbitrary order for second-order differential equations ⋮ High phase-lag order trigonometrically fitted two-step Obrechkoff methods for the numerical solution of periodic initial value problems ⋮ Closed Newton-Cotes trigonometrically-fitted formulae of high order for the numerical integration of the Schrödinger equation ⋮ Exponentially-fitted Obrechkoff methods for second-order differential equations ⋮ High order closed Newton-Cotes trigonometrically-fitted formulae for the numerical solution of the Schrödinger equation
This page was built for publication: