Uncertainty Quantification for Hyperbolic Conservation Laws with Flux Coefficients Given by Spatiotemporal Random Fields
DOI10.1137/15M1027723zbMath1416.65288arXiv1506.07660MaRDI QIDQ5739802
Publication date: 20 July 2016
Published in: SIAM Journal on Scientific Computing (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1506.07660
finite volume methodMonte Carlo methodOrnstein-Uhlenbeck processuncertainty quantificationgaussian random fieldrandom flux functionspatiotemporal random fieldstochastic hyperbolic partial differential equation
Monte Carlo methods (65C05) Hyperbolic conservation laws (35L65) First-order hyperbolic systems (35L40) Finite volume methods for initial value and initial-boundary value problems involving PDEs (65M08) Probabilistic methods, particle methods, etc. for initial value and initial-boundary value problems involving PDEs (65M75)
Related Items (3)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Uncertainty quantification in computational fluid dynamics
- Multi-level Monte Carlo finite volume methods for nonlinear systems of conservation laws in multi-dimensions
- On the linear advection equation subject to random velocity fields
- Multi-level Monte Carlo finite volume methods for uncertainty quantification of acoustic wave propagation in random heterogeneous layered medium
- On the evaluation of moments for solute transport by random velocity fields
- A finite volume method for the mean of the solution of the random transport equation
- Statistical moments of the random linear transport equation
- The probability density function to the random linear transport equation
- Intrusive Galerkin methods with upwinding for uncertain nonlinear hyperbolic systems
- Long-term behavior of polynomial chaos in stochastic flow simulations
- Uncertainty quantification for systems of conservation laws
- Uniformly high order accurate essentially non-oscillatory schemes. III
- Efficient implementation of essentially nonoscillatory shock-capturing schemes. II
- Numerical solution of SDE through computer experiments. Including floppy disk
- Towards the ultimative conservative difference scheme. V: A second-order sequel to Godunov's method
- Spectral polynomial chaos solutions of the stochastic advection equation
- Uncertainty analysis for the steady-state flows in a dual throat nozzle
- Numerical approximation of hyperbolic systems of conservation laws
- A stochastic collocation method for the second-order wave equation with a discontinuous random speed
- A numerical scheme for the variance of the solution of the random transport equation
- Classification of stochastic Runge-Kutta methods for the weak approximation of stochastic differential equations
- Predicting shock dynamics in the presence of uncertainties
- Strong Stability-Preserving High-Order Time Discretization Methods
- Sparse tensor multi-level Monte Carlo finite volume methods for hyperbolic conservation laws with random initial data
- Time-Dependent Problems and Difference Methods
- Multi-level Monte Carlo Finite Difference and Finite Volume Methods for Stochastic Linear Hyperbolic Systems
- Fast simulation of Gaussian random fields
- Stable upwind schemes for the magnetic induction equation
- A Study of Some Finite Difference Schemes for a Unidirectional Stochastic Transport Equation
- Finite Volume Methods for Hyperbolic Problems
- Multilevel Monte Carlo method with applications to stochastic partial differential equations
- Multilevel Monte Carlo Finite Volume Methods for Shallow Water Equations with Uncertain Topography in Multi-dimensions
- Convergence Analysis for Stochastic Collocation Methods to Scalar Hyperbolic Equations with a Random Wave Speed
- Random Fields and Geometry
- The stochastic piston problem
- Numerical Solution of Scalar Conservation Laws with Random Flux Functions
- Stochastic differential equations. An introduction with applications.
This page was built for publication: Uncertainty Quantification for Hyperbolic Conservation Laws with Flux Coefficients Given by Spatiotemporal Random Fields