Dynamical approach study of spurious steady-state numerical solutions of nonlinear differential equations. I: The dynamics of time discretization and its implications for algorithm development in computational fluid dynamics (Q1181869)
From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Dynamical approach study of spurious steady-state numerical solutions of nonlinear differential equations. I: The dynamics of time discretization and its implications for algorithm development in computational fluid dynamics |
scientific article |
Statements
Dynamical approach study of spurious steady-state numerical solutions of nonlinear differential equations. I: The dynamics of time discretization and its implications for algorithm development in computational fluid dynamics (English)
0 references
27 June 1992
0 references
This paper is part I of a series of research papers on a dynamical approach to study numerical methods for nonlinear differential equations and it serves as an introduction to the parts II and III. About 21 pages are devoted to the introduction, motivation and relevance of this approach, and the implications, recommendations and conclusions. On 30 pages it is demonstrated how differently differential equations and their discretized counterparts can behave. Numerical experiments for a scalar nonlinear ordinary differential equation \(u'=\alpha S(u)\) with \(S(u)=u(1-u)\) (the logistic equation) or \(S(u)=u(1-u)(b-u)\) are pictured in terms of fixpoint diagrams and bifurcation diagrams. Several two level and three level methods are tested. One of the findings is that spurious steady-state solutions can occur below the linearized stability limit. A rough outlook for partial differential equations is given on 9 pages. I close by citing the authors: ``Thus the mission of this paper is not to provide the answer or theory or to illustrate the connection of dynamical behavior of practical partial differential equations to their discretized counterpart, but rather to gain insight into the nonlinear features unconventional to this type of study and concentrate on the fundamentals. In order to bring out the new features, the illustrations concentrate on simple scalar differential equation examples in which the exact solutions of the differential equations are known.''.
0 references
time discretization
0 references
algorithm
0 references
dynamics of numerics
0 references
stability of methods
0 references
numerical experiments
0 references
nonlinear differential equations
0 references
logistic equation
0 references
fixpoint diagrams
0 references
bifurcation diagrams
0 references
spurious steady-state solutions
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references