Multistep differential transform method for numerical solution of classical neutron point kinetic equation (Q487205)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Multistep differential transform method for numerical solution of classical neutron point kinetic equation
scientific article

    Statements

    Multistep differential transform method for numerical solution of classical neutron point kinetic equation (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    19 January 2015
    0 references
    The authors apply the multistep differential transform method applied to the neutron point kinetic equations \[ \frac{dn(t)}{dt} = \left(\frac{\rho(t)-\beta}{l}\right) n(t) + \sum_{i=1}^m \lambda_i c_i + S(t), \] and \[ \frac{dc_i(t)}{dt} = \frac{\beta_i}{l} n(t) - \lambda_i c_i(t),\quad i=1,\dots, m. \] This is written in matrix form as \[ \frac{d \vec{x}(t)}{dt} = A x(t) + B(t) \vec{x}(t) + S(t), \qquad \vec{x}(0)= \vec{x}_0. \] For a function \(f(t)\) the differential transform method (DTM) gives the function \(F\) defined by \[ F(k) = \frac{1}{k!} \left[ \frac{d^k f(t)}{dt^k}\right]_{t=t_0}. \] If \(f(t) = \frac{d \vec{x}(t)}{dt}\), then \(F(k) = (k+1) X(k+1)\). This allows to transform the neutron point kinetic equation, which gives an explicit equation for \(X(k+1)\). In order to obtain an approximate solution of the kinetic equations, the DTM uses the values \(X(k)\) for \(k=0,\dots,p\), where \(X(0)=\vec{x}(0)=\vec{x}_0\) and \(X(k)\) for \(k\geq 1\) is determined from the transformed differential equation, namely with \(p=m+1\) \[ \vec{x}(t) = \sum_{k=0}^p t^k X(k). \] In the classical DTM, \(\vec{x}(t)\) is defined on \([0,T]\). The multistep DTM employs a partition \(0=t_0<t_1<\dots<t_n=T\) of the interval \([0,T]\), and sets \(\vec{x}_0(t) = \vec{x}(t)\) for \(0\leq t \leq t_1\) as obtained above. Then \(\vec{x}_i(t)\) is obtained as above, but with initial data \(\vec{x}_i(t_i) = \vec{x}_{i-1}(t_i)\) for \(i=1,\dots, n-1\). The approximate solution is then \(\vec{x}(t) = \vec{x}_i(t)\) for \(t\in [t_{i},t_{i+1}]\).
    0 references
    0 references
    neutron point kinetic equation
    0 references
    differential transform method
    0 references
    Taylor series
    0 references
    multistep
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references