High-order adaptive finite-volume schemes in the context of multiresolution analysis for dyadic grids
From MaRDI portal
Publication:291357
DOI10.1007/S40314-014-0159-2zbMath1338.76074OpenAlexW2327347180MaRDI QIDQ291357
Sônia M. Gomes, Jorge Stolfi, Douglas A. Castro
Publication date: 7 June 2016
Published in: Computational and Applied Mathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s40314-014-0159-2
Finite volume methods applied to problems in fluid mechanics (76M12) Hyperbolic conservation laws (35L65) Numerical methods for wavelets (65T60) Data structures (68P05)
Related Items (2)
New Jensen and Hermite-Hadamard type inequalities for \(h\)-convex interval-valued functions ⋮ A parallel modular computing environment for three-dimensional multiresolution simulations of compressible flows
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- An adaptive multiresolution method on dyadic grids: Application to transport equations
- Adaptive multiresolution methods for the simulation of waves in excitable media
- An adaptive multiresolution method for combustion problems: application to flame ball-vortex interaction
- Finite elements on dyadic grids with applications
- Space-time adaptive multiresolution methods for hyperbolic conservation laws: Applications to compressible Euler equations
- Efficient implementation of essentially nonoscillatory shock-capturing schemes
- On essentially non-oscillatory schemes on unstructured meshes: Analysis and implementation
- Weighted essentially non-oscillatory schemes
- A conservative fully adaptive multiresolution algorithm for parabolic PDEs
- Adaptive multiscale schemes for conservation laws
- An adaptive multiresolution scheme with local time stepping for evolutionary PDEs
- Adaptive multiresolution methods
- Wavelet Methods in Computational Fluid Dynamics
- Fully adaptive multiresolution finite volume schemes for conservation laws
- Multiresolution Representation of Data: A General Framework
This page was built for publication: High-order adaptive finite-volume schemes in the context of multiresolution analysis for dyadic grids