A family of noniterative integration methods with desired numerical dissipation
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5246807
DOI10.1002/nme.4720zbMath1325.65116OpenAlexW1908726388MaRDI QIDQ5246807
Publication date: 22 April 2015
Published in: International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/nme.4720
unconditional stabilityaccuracynumerical dissipationnonlinear dynamic analysisstructure-dependent integration method
Lua error in Module:PublicationMSCList at line 37: attempt to index local 'msc_result' (a nil value).
Related Items (4)
Assessment of explicit and semi-explicit classes of model-based algorithms for direct integration in structural dynamics ⋮ Load aliasing—A new additional test concept for effective control of nonhomogeneous high‐frequency behavior in linear multistep methods ⋮ A family of second-order fully explicit time integration schemes ⋮ An unusual amplitude growth property and its remedy for structure-dependent integration methods
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Exact energy-momentum conserving algorithms and symplectic schemes for nonlinear dynamics
- On the stability of symplectic and energy-momentum algorithms for nonlinear Hamiltonian systems with symmetry
- Evaluation of numerical integration methods in elastodynamics
- A Time Integration Algorithm for Structural Dynamics With Improved Numerical Dissipation: The Generalized-α Method
- Algorithms by design with illustrations to solid and structural mechanics/dynamics
- An explicit method with improved stability property
- Extended state-space time integration with high-frequency energy dissipation
- An alpha modification of Newmark's method
- Design, analysis, and synthesis of generalized single step single solve and optimal algorithms for structural dynamics
- Unconditional Stability in Numerical Time Integration Methods
This page was built for publication: A family of noniterative integration methods with desired numerical dissipation