The convergence rate of the minimal residual method for the Stokes problem
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1899126
DOI10.1007/s002110050138zbMath0837.65026OpenAlexW2082001547MaRDI QIDQ1899126
Andrew J. Wathen, Bernd Fischer, David J. Silvester
Publication date: 21 May 1996
Published in: Numerische Mathematik (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002110050138
convergencenumerical experimentsminimal residual methodsymmetric indefinite matrixStokes equationiteration matrix
Navier-Stokes equations (35Q30) Iterative numerical methods for linear systems (65F10) Finite difference methods for boundary value problems involving PDEs (65N06)
Related Items
Generalized block triangular preconditioner for symmetric saddle point problems, Efficient Preconditioners for Interior Point Methods via a New Schur Complement-Based Strategy, Conjugate gradient and minimal residual method for solving symmetric indefinite systems, Extension of fractional step techniques for incompressible flows: the preconditioned Orthomin(1) for the pressure Schur complement, Unnamed Item, A wirebasket preconditioner for the mortar boundary element method, A Data Scalable Augmented Lagrangian KKT Preconditioner for Large-Scale Inverse Problems, Unnamed Item, Refined saddle-point preconditioners for discretized Stokes problems, Convergence analysis of inexact Lu-type preconditioners for indefinite problems arising in incompressible continuum analysis, Efficient preconditioning of the linearized Navier-Stokes equations for incompressible flow, On the eigenvalues of a class of saddle point matrices, An expanded mixed finite element approach via a dual-dual formulation and the minimum residual method, Natural Preconditioning and Iterative Methods for Saddle Point Systems, Block triangular preconditioners for symmetric saddle-point problems, Superlinear Convergence of Krylov Subspace Methods for Self-Adjoint Problems in Hilbert Space, A low-order Galerkin finite element method for the Navier-Stokes equations of steady incompressible flow: a stabilization issue and iterative methods.