Discontinuous Galerkin methods on \(hp\)-anisotropic meshes. I: A priori error analysis
From MaRDI portal
Publication:968314
DOI10.1504/IJCSM.2007.016533zbMath1185.65208MaRDI QIDQ968314
Paul Houston, Emmanuil H. Georgoulis, Edward J. C. Hall
Publication date: 5 May 2010
Published in: International Journal of Computing Science and Mathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)
finite element method; error analysis; FEM; discontinuous Galerkin methods; partial differential equations; \(hp\)-adaptivity; anisotropic mesh adaptation; finite element spaces; PDEs with non-negative characteristic form
65N30: Finite element, Rayleigh-Ritz and Galerkin methods for boundary value problems involving PDEs
Related Items
A Goal-Oriented High-Order Anisotropic Mesh Adaptation Using Discontinuous Galerkin Method for Linear Convection-Diffusion-Reaction Problems, $hp$-Version Space-Time Discontinuous Galerkin Methods for Parabolic Problems on Prismatic Meshes, High order discontinuous Galerkin methods on simplicial elements for the elastodynamics equation, An a-posteriori error estimate for \(hp\)-adaptive DG methods for convection-diffusion problems on anisotropically refined meshes, A class of domain decomposition preconditioners for \(hp\)-discontinuous Galerkin finite element methods, Discontinuous Galerkin methods on \(hp\)-anisotropic meshes. II: A posteriori error analysis and adaptivity, Reliable anisotropic-adaptive discontinuous Galerkin method for simplified \(\mathbf{P}_{\mathbf{N}}\) approximations of radiative transfer, Spatio-stochastic adaptive discontinuous Galerkin methods, A goal-oriented anisotropic \(hp\)-mesh adaptation method for linear convection-diffusion-reaction problems, Multi-\textbf{hp} adaptive discontinuous Galerkin methods for simplified \(P_{N}\) approximations of 3D radiative transfer in non-gray media, Stability and convergence of spectral mixed discontinuous Galerkin methods for 3D linear elasticity on anisotropic geometric meshes, MIXED hp-DISCONTINUOUS GALERKIN FEM FOR LINEAR ELASTICITY AND STOKES FLOW IN THREE DIMENSIONS