Continuous approximation techniques for co‐simulation methods: Analysis of numerical stability and local error
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6065044
DOI10.1002/ZAMM.201500196MaRDI QIDQ6065044
Publication date: 11 December 2023
Published in: ZAMM - Journal of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics / Zeitschrift für Angewandte Mathematik und Mechanik (Search for Journal in Brave)
Dynamics of a rigid body and of multibody systems (70Exx) Numerical methods for ordinary differential equations (65Lxx) Mechanics of particles and systems (70-XX)
Related Items (4)
Energy-based monitoring and correction to enhance the accuracy and stability of explicit co-simulation ⋮ Co-simulation with variable approximation order: order control algorithm for solver coupling approaches ⋮ Implicit co-simulation method for constraint coupling with improved stability behavior ⋮ An automated methodology to select functional co-simulation configurations
Cites Work
- Coupled simulation of multibody and finite element systems: an efficient and robust semi-implicit coupling approach
- Multirate linear multistep methods
- Stabilized index-2 co-simulation approach for solver coupling with algebraic constraints
- Multirate ROW methods and latency of electric circuits
- A Memory Based Communication in the Co-simulation of Multibody and Finite Element Codes for Pantograph-Catenary Interaction Simulation
- Explicit-implicit staggered procedure for multibody dynamics analysis
- Convergence and stability in the numerical integration of ordinary differential equations
- Stability analysis of the BDF Slowest-first multirate methods
- Characterization of integration algorithms for the timing analysis of mos vlsi circuits
- Two Methods of Simulator Coupling
- Modeling, simulation and control of mechatronical systems
- Multi-Rate Time Integration for Large Scale Multibody System Models
- Preconditioned dynamic iteration for coupled differential-algebraic systems
- Multirate partitioned Runge-Kutta methods
This page was built for publication: Continuous approximation techniques for co‐simulation methods: Analysis of numerical stability and local error