A Comparison of Preconditioning Methods for Saddle Point Problems with an Application to Porous Media Flow Problems
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2813289
DOI10.1007/978-3-319-40361-8_5zbMath1382.76199OpenAlexW2519400747MaRDI QIDQ2813289
Martin Hasal, Owe Axelsson, Radim Blaheta
Publication date: 23 June 2016
Published in: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-40361-8_5
Lua error in Module:PublicationMSCList at line 37: attempt to index local 'msc_result' (a nil value).
Related Items (1)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Finite-element based sparse approximate inverses for block-factorized preconditioners
- Preconditioners for saddle point linear systems with highly singular \((1,1)\) blocks
- Corrigendum to: ``Preconditioners for regularized saddle point problems with an application for heterogeneous Darcy flow problems
- A numerical solution of the Navier-Stokes equations using the finite element technique
- On element-by-element Schur complement approximations
- Finite Elements and Fast Iterative Solvers
- Preconditioning of matrices partitioned in 2 × 2 block form: eigenvalue estimates and Schwarz DD for mixed FEM
- Algebraic multilevel preconditioning of finite element matrices using local Schur complements
- Numerical solution of saddle point problems
- Preconditioning of Boundary Value Problems Using Elementwise Schur Complements
- Predicting the Behavior of Finite Precision Lanczos and Conjugate Gradient Computations
- Factorized Sparse Approximate Inverse Preconditionings I. Theory
- Hermitian and Skew-Hermitian Splitting Methods for Non-Hermitian Positive Definite Linear Systems
- Numerical Treatment of Defective Boundary Conditions for the Navier--Stokes Equations
- Spectral Properties of the Hermitian and Skew-Hermitian Splitting Preconditioner for Saddle Point Problems
- Iterative Solution Methods
- Uniform preconditioners for the time dependent Stokes problem
This page was built for publication: A Comparison of Preconditioning Methods for Saddle Point Problems with an Application to Porous Media Flow Problems