Simulations of nonlinear parabolic PDEs with forcing function without linearization
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2054752
DOI10.1515/ms-2021-0035OpenAlexW3180324090WikidataQ114052783 ScholiaQ114052783MaRDI QIDQ2054752
Publication date: 3 December 2021
Published in: Mathematica Slovaca (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1515/ms-2021-0035
Numerical computation using splines (65D07) Nonlinear parabolic equations (35K55) Numerical methods for partial differential equations, initial value and time-dependent initial-boundary value problems (65Mxx)
Related Items (1)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Numerical solution of Burgers' equation by cubic Hermite collocation method
- Numerical solution of Burgers' equation with modified cubic B-spline differential quadrature method
- A generalised Cole-Hopf transformation for nonlinear parabolic and hyperbolic equations
- A practical guide to splines
- Efficient numerical techniques for Burgers' equation
- A numerical solution of the Burgers' equation using cubic B-splines
- Numerical solutions of the Burgers' equation by the least-squares quadratic B-spline finite element method
- Numerical study of reaction diffusion Fisher's equation by fourth order cubic B-spline collocation method
- Cubic quasi-interpolation spline collocation method for solving convection-diffusion equations
- A class of numerical algorithms based on cubic trigonometric B-spline functions for numerical simulation of nonlinear parabolic problems
- Numerical solutions of linear and nonlinear diffusion equations by a differential quadrature method (DQM)
- Convergence of BDFs applied to nonlinear stiff initial value problems
- A-BDF: A Generalization of the Backward Differentiation Formulae
- Application of tan(φ(ξ)/2)-expansion method to burgers and foam drainage equations
- Numerical study of Fisher's reaction-diffusion equation by the Sinc collocation method
This page was built for publication: Simulations of nonlinear parabolic PDEs with forcing function without linearization