``Shooting method for the solution of singularly perturbed two-point boundary-value problems having less severe boundary layer.
DOI10.1016/S0096-3003(01)00263-6zbMath1035.65081MaRDI QIDQ1855910
Publication date: 28 January 2003
Published in: Applied Mathematics and Computation (Search for Journal in Brave)
singular perturbationnumerical examplesboundary value problemboundary layershooting methodError estimatesexponentially fitted difference scheme
Numerical solution of boundary value problems involving ordinary differential equations (65L10) Error bounds for numerical methods for ordinary differential equations (65L70) Linear boundary value problems for ordinary differential equations (34B05) Singular perturbations for ordinary differential equations (34E15) Finite difference and finite volume methods for ordinary differential equations (65L12)
Related Items (18)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Asymptotic and numerical analysis of singular perturbation problems: A survey
- A boundary value technique for singular perturbation problems
- Difference approximations for singular perturbations of systems of ordinary differential equations
- A computational method for solving singularly perturbed turning point problems exhibiting twin boundary layers
- A numerical algorithm for singular perturbation problems exhibiting weak boundary layers.
- A numerical-asymptotic solution for singular perturbation problems
- Sufficient Conditions for Uniform Convergence of a Class of Difference Schemes for a Singularly Perturbed Problem
- Analysis of Some Difference Approximations for a Singular Perturbation Problem Without Turning Points
- ‘Shooting method' for singular perturbation problems arising in chemical reactor theory
- Layer-Adapted Grids for Singular Perturbation Problems
- ‘Shooting method’ for singularly perturbed one-dimensional reaction-diffusion neumann problems
- On a Differential Equation of Boundary Layer Type
This page was built for publication: ``Shooting method for the solution of singularly perturbed two-point boundary-value problems having less severe boundary layer.