High Resolution Schemes for a Hierarchical Size‐Structured Model

From MaRDI portal
Publication:5449041


DOI10.1137/050638126zbMath1144.65059OpenAlexW1972384162MaRDI QIDQ5449041

Jun Shen, Mengping Zhang, Chi-Wang Shu

Publication date: 10 March 2008

Published in: SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1137/050638126



Related Items

Analysis of an efficient integrator for a size-structured population model with a dynamical resource, A toxin-mediated size-structured population model: finite difference approximation and well-posedness, Characteristic line based schemes for solving a quasilinear hierarchical size-structured model, A second-order high resolution finite difference scheme for a structured erythropoiesis model subject to malaria infection, High order positivity-preserving finite volume WENO schemes for a hierarchical size-structured population model, Finite difference approximations for a size-structured population model with distributed states in the recruitment, A second-order characteristic line scheme for solving a juvenile–adult model of amphibians, A second-order high-resolution finite difference scheme for a size-structured model for the spread ofMycobacterium marinum, Numerical integration of a hierarchically size-structured population model with contest competition, A structured model for the spread of \textit{Mycobacterium marinum}: foundations for a numerical approximation scheme, Finite difference approximations for measure-valued solutions of a hierarchically size-structured population model, Second-order finite difference approximation for a nonlinear size-structured population model with an indefinite growth rate coupled with the environment, Finite difference schemes for a structured population model in the space of measures, A Second-Order High-Resolution Scheme for a Juvenile-Adult Model of Amphibians, Analysis of a Characteristics Scheme for a Quasilinear Hierarchical Size-Structured Model, A second-order finite difference approximation for a mathematical model of erythropoiesis