Analysis of variable-step/non-autonomous artificial compression methods

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Publication:2633299

DOI10.1007/S00021-019-0429-2zbMATH Open1411.76117arXiv1809.04650OpenAlexW3101489649WikidataQ128044920 ScholiaQ128044920MaRDI QIDQ2633299FDOQ2633299


Authors: Robin Ming Chen, M. McLaughlin, William Layton Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 8 May 2019

Published in: Journal of Mathematical Fluid Mechanics (Search for Journal in Brave)

Abstract: A standard artificial compression (AC) method for incompressible flow is frac{u_{n+1}^{varepsilon }-u_{n}^{varepsilon }}{k}+u_{n+1}^{varepsilon }cdot

abla u_{n+1}^{varepsilon }+{frac{1}{2}}u_{n+1}^{varepsilon } abla cdot u_{n+1}^{varepsilon }+ abla p_{n+1}^{varepsilon }- u Delta u_{n+1}^{varepsilon }=f ext{ ,} \ varepsilon frac{p_{n+1}^{varepsilon }-p_{n}^{varepsilon }}{k} +

abla cdot u_{n+1}^{varepsilon }=0 for, typically, varepsilon=k (timestep). It is fast, efficient and stable with accuracy O(varepsilon+k). For adaptive (and thus variable) timestep kn (and thus varepsilon=varepsilonn) its long time stability is unknown. For variable k,varepsilon this report shows how to adapt a standard AC method to recover a provably stable method. For the associated continuum AC model, we prove convergence of the varepsilon=varepsilon(t) artificial compression model to a weak solution of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations as varepsilon=varepsilon(t)ightarrow0. The analysis is based on space-time Strichartz estimates for a non-autonomous acoustic equation. Variable varepsilon,k numerical tests in 2d and 3d are given for the new AC method.


Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1809.04650




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